The horn at the Sugar factory signalled the end of the day’s shift. The last donkey cart
stuffed with sugar cane rumbled down the dirt track to the factory. Boys
playing a game of bat and ball in the road scattered out of its way. Alma
Alleyne, a resident of Porter Village, stepped out of the house, and checked
for her seven-year-old daughter Cora.
“Cora,” Alma called. “Where are you?” Then from the far side of
the next-door neighbour’s house, she heard the familiar sound of hands
clapping. Alma raised her voice.
“Listen, Cora, you better get inside, or I’ll have to tell your
father when he comes home.”
Cora, who simultaneously adored and feared her father, ran towards
Alma.
“I here, Mummy,” said Cora, offering her best angelic face. Alma
ignored her, marched into the house with a sulking Cora behind her.
“Go wash your face,” said Alma, turning to look at the clock.
“Your father will soon be home.”
While Cora washed, Alma peered through the window at the sky
painted in brilliant oranges and reds. Although she had witnessed many sunsets,
no two were ever the same. Unwilling to miss a moment of the sunset’s surrender
to dusk, she remained at the window.
Then, she glanced at the clock on the corner table.
“He should be here by now. I wonder what happened?”
Cora, hugging her rag doll, ran to Alma, nestled her head within
the folds of Alma’s skirt. “Mummy, light the lamp, I scared.”
Alma lit the lamp in the front room, carefully replacing the
lampshade with its Home Sweet Home etchings on the chimney. She recalled the
Saturday afternoon he surprised her with it. They had butchered a hog, and she
had just returned from delivering the final package of meat to a customer. Entering
the house, Ralph said, “You home already?”
She did not reply. She kept moving towards him. “What you hiding
from me?” she asked.
“Nothing,” said Ralph as he beeped and bopped in front of
her.
“Let me see,” she said. Laughing, she pushed him aside to find a
“fancy lamp with a fancy shade.”
“Wait,” she said. “You didn’t get you self in debt with that
peddler?”
“No, man,” Ralph said. “You know it’s crop season and I save a
little extra money to buy this for you.”
Cora, unimpressed by her mother’s giggling, pouted.
“Mummy, are there sweet and sour homes? Is our home sweet like the
Home Sweet Home lamp?”
“Why would you ask such a thing?” said Alma. “The things you ask.
You must be going to be a lawyer or something.”
“But Mummy, you sure you can’t taste a home like sugar cakes or
sweet bread?” asked Cora, looking curiously into her mother’s eyes.
“What do you think Cora?”
“I think we have a sweet home, and you and Daddy make it sweet.”
That had been last year. Now Alma went into the kitchen, lit the
kerosene stove to boil fresh cow’s milk. From a shelf she removed two enamel
cups for cooling the milk. And from the larder she retrieved a tin of Ovaltine.
“Can I have a biscuit with my tea?” Cora asked. Alma handed her
two biscuits. Cora broke them into pieces, added them to the milk.
“Sit down,” said Alma. “Say your grace. Thank God for ya meal.”
Alma returned to the front room, checked the clock, the street.
“Mummy, where’s Daddy?” Cora whined.
Alma ignored her. “Don’t worry,” said Alma. “He coming home soon.”
Under her breath she whispered, “I hope this home still sweet.”
Finally, Cora pushed the chair aside, said, “I hear footsteps, I
hear footsteps, it’s Daddy.” The two rushed to the door. Instead, it was their
next door neighbour. Alma stepped outside. Cora rested on the doorpost.
“Good night, Mr. Jackson, you see Ralph anywhere?”
“No,” he said. “Don’t worry, you know how it is. Maybe somebody
tek real sick at the factory and Ralph had to fill in.”
“I never thought about that,” she said. “Thank you. I was here worrying all dis time.”
“Looka dat full moon, wunna women does worry about everything,” Mr. Jackson said.
“I was so lost in muh thoughts,” she said. “I didn’t think bout
dat. I forgot it was a full moon tonight.”
“Cora,” she shouted. “Come and see the man in the moon.”
Sucking her thumb, Cora stood with Alma in the middle of the
gravel road. Cora tugged at her mother’s skirt.
“I know you dey, Cora Ann,” Alma said. “The moon too pretty and
bright. If your father was home, we all could have taken a moonlight walk to
the end of the road. Next time.”
“You think any duppees out there in the cane fields?” asked Cora.
Mr. Jackson laughed. “Who tell you dat? With all the canes cut down, the one ting out dey is de big rats running round looking for a new home.” He rubbed Cora’s braided hair. “Better go in before the duppees get ya,” he teased.
Alma grasped Cora’s hand. “Come,” she said. “Your father should
soon be home. Sit and play with your doll. I going to check things.”
After Alma had completed her evening housekeeping ritual of sweeping, cleaning, she opened the kitchen window, grabbed the searchlight, flicked the switch. She pointed the light around the yard to check the livestock. Everything was still. Finally, she latched the wooden windows, proceeded to the front room.
She lifted the lamp, called to Cora. “We going in,” she said. “Come.”
Cora’s eyes weighed heavily with sleep. Alma lit the bedroom lamp. Cora, fading fast, crawled into her nightie. On cue, she dropped to her knees, while Alma sat on the bed.
“Close your eyes,” said Alma. At the end of the Lord’s Prayer, Alma lifted Cora into bed. For a moment, she watched over Cora. Ralph sometimes stayed away for a few days and came home stinking. What would become of the two of them if Ralph disappeared? What would life be like without Ralph? There were endless what ifs she said to herself. She sighed, kissed Cora, hurried out of the room.
Stillness enveloped the house. Only the creaking sound from the
rocking chair intruded on Alma’s silence and exhaustion. Occasionally, she
jumped out of the chair to peep through the front door’s wooden jalousies. No
Ralph. Where was he? How could she sleep?
She had to be “just in case” ready, she thought. Just in case he
needed a cup of tea and biscuits. Or just in case he needed a shot glass for
his rum. Alma was unsure about the final “just in case.”
After a few shots, a new, crude Ralph would emerge. A Ralph who
didn’t even know himself. When she’d tried to explain to Ralph, or told him how
she hid in the bushes outside, he’d said, “You lie, Alma. No way. Sometimes, I
need dat drink It help me to rise every morning to face the back breaking work
at the factory from sunup to sundown.”
If only it were one drink. If only, if only, … and with that going
through her mind, she drifted into sleep.
***
At first, Alma thought she heard a knock. She threw her head back,
dozed off again. As the knocking rose to a crescendo, she opened her eyes,
yawned.
“Ralph? Is that you?”
A man’s voice said, “Alma, it’s Sergeant Haynes from the district
police station. You know me.”
Alma stumbled to the corner table, retrieved a flashlight. She
opened the window, shone the light on the policeman. He covered his eyes.
“Turn off the light. It’s me, George. You remember me from school
days? I’ve bad news, Alma.”
Evena (or Avivi) Gottschalk is a Barbadian Canadian writer who lives in Toronto. She has previously worked in Not-For-Profit and Corporate Communications. She has recently started writing fictional short stories inspired by her childhood in Barbados. Her hobbies include reading, writing and traveling.
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