Afraid to Love Read online




  Afraid to Love

  Copyright 2013 Leona Jackson

  Chapter 1: Cynthia

  It was my first day at the hospital and it seemed even here I was going to be surrounded by white people. The type of white people that my father had warned me about. The type that only want to keep you down. It's something that I had instantly noticed when I moved here two weeks ago. Faces of color seemed to be few and far between. I found myself searching every street and every crowd to see if I was truly alone, and at the moment it seemed I was. I had hoped that the hospital would be different. After all, there had been two women of color on the interview board. Their presence had given me false hope.

  Other morning workers were gathered around cars, talking and laughing, but I didn't want to join them. I wasn't one of them and because of my skin color I knew I'd never have the opportunity to be one of them. I had been told to network once I moved, because it wasn't what you knew, but who you know that made the difference. I didn't care. I wasn't going to pretend to be someone I wasn't. I was going to succeed on my own merits and the rest of the world could kiss my black ass. I wasn't here to socialize and make friends. I was here to earn a living and help people. I took a deep breath and headed to the nurses' station.

  “Hi, you must be Cynthia,” an older white woman greeted me.

  “Yea, that would be me,” I said.

  I tried to fake a smile, but my expression turned into a grimace. I've never been a good liar. What you see is what you get and today I wasn't liking what I was seeing.

  “It's nice to meet you,” she smiled and held out her hand, “I'm Heather.”

  “It's nice to meet you, too,” I said and shook her hand

  “I'll show you around,” she said standing up, “I know they took you on a tour, but so many new nurses forget because they're nervous.”

  I was silent as she showed me all the places that would be important to my new life here. I hadn't forgotten what I had seen on the tour, but I didn't tell her that.

  By lunch time, I was wondering what the hell I was thinking when I decided to go into nursing. So far, my first day was going quickly to hell without even stopping for the hand basket. A bratty five-year-old named Sammy had kicked me in the shin as a thank you for giving him his school boosters, an older woman blamed me for the blood pressure cuff being too tight for her obese arm, and I spent much of the day being almost completely ignored by my coworkers. When Heather told me to take lunch I nearly ran to the break room. I poured myself a cup of coffee and took a deep breath.

  “They'll all try to keep you down, baby girl,” my father's voice said in the back of my mind, “You gotta face 'em every day, but you don't have to let them stand on you.”

  “I won't let them,” I answered the phantom voice silently.

  I wasn't hungry, so I skipped lunch and hung around the break room, hoping for a chance to socialize with a few of the other nurses. A gorgeous brother who looked strong enough to carry me over the threshold entered the break room. I had to bite my cheek so I didn't swoon.

  “Hey,” he said with a smile and poured himself a cup of coffee.

  When he turned to face me, I glanced at his name tag. “Derek,” it read, and then I glanced at his left hand. Even though I wasn't really looking for a relationship, it was a habit Sasha, my best friend in college, had instilled in me. Always check the brothers for wedding bands. Sure enough, a shiny gold band was on his left ring finger. I almost frowned, but didn't because I wasn't some desperate ho fresh out of the ghetto. Besides, everyone knows that all of the good black men are married.

  “How's your first day going?” he asked.

  “Not great,” I admitted.

  “It gets easier,” Derek said and then asked, “Do you have kids?”

  I shook my head, thinking it was a weird question to ask when you just met someone.

  “If you did, you'd understand why Sammy kicked you,” he said with a laugh. “They get turned into a pin cushion at his age. They seemed to have a shot for everything. He's afraid of needles, too, so that doesn't help, either.”

  “Do you have kids?” I asked him.

  “Yeah, three little girls,” he said pulling his wallet out of his pocket and showing me a photo, “Lyssa, Natalie, and Shani, three, six and eight respectively.”

  His daughters were mixed. Why did the good black men always marry white women? I shook my head and didn't say anything else.

  After lunch, I walked back to the nurses’ station.

  “Having a rough first day?” Heather asked me, startling me out of my thoughts.

  I nodded in response and clocked back in.

  “I heard that Sammy kicked you. He's been like that since he learned to walk. He hates needles, but his dad was the same way when he was a little boy. Nurses take a lot of abuse, it's true, but don't be too mad at them.”

  I nodded, grabbed the next chart and left. I seriously doubted that she would have taken it with a smile.

  The rest of the day passed without any more incidents, but I was still ready to throw my shit back into my car and head home. On the drive home, I spotted a coffee shop that looked like it served sandwiches, too. Since I hadn't eaten lunch, I was starving. I parked my car and walked to the shop. The cashier was a high school student who was distracted by a pretty group of young white girls sitting across the room.

  “Excuse me, Justin,” I said after reading his name tag.

  “Sorry,” he said, but his tone didn't match his words, “what can I get for you today?”

  People never realize that their tone gives away their thoughts and emotions, even the ones they believed weren't for polite society, feelings that endangered relationships, friendships, and in this case, this young man's employment.

  “I'll have the turkey and cheddar, with mayo, but no mustard,” I told him, “and a cherry cola.”

  “Twelve sixty-two,” he said.

  My eyes nearly popped out of my head. Almost thirteen dollars for a sandwich and a pop? I sighed and slid over my debit card.

  “You can sit down and we'll bring it out,” the cashier said.

  “Thanks,” I said and headed to a table in the corner of the room that faced the wall.

  I pulled out my cellphone and fiddled around with it. I hated being alone in a restaurant and looking bored. I glanced around the room and noticed a black couple, but everyone else was white.

  The hair on the back of my neck stood up and I knew someone was staring at me. I looked around without trying to hide it. My eyes settled on a man a few tables away. He didn't look much older than my twenty-five years and his blue eyes reminded me of the lake we had visited once or twice when I was a child. He was sitting down, but if we stood side by side he would tower over my five-foot-five frame. He grinned at me, but I looked away and turned back to face the wall. I didn't know what blue eyes was thinking, but he would have to keep his thoughts to himself because I wasn't in the mood for pickup lines. His lean muscular build and goofy smile made him attractive, but I wasn't about to get involved with some white man. It would never work out. Our races wouldn't allow it and my father sure in the hell wouldn't have allowed it. I was old enough to make my own decisions, but knew he had been right on this one.

  When the waiter finally brought my sandwich out, I had to force myself to eat slowly. My stomach was growling, but I didn't want to look like someone who had been raised in a barn. I might have grown up poor, but I had manners.

  While I ate, dark clouds began to form in the clear blue sky. The weather hadn't mentioned rain, but it seemed that Mother Nature planned on downpours, not caring if she made the weather man into a liar. I ate quicker, trying to beat the storm that was moving in quickly. Lightning lit up the sky and a few seconds later thunder crashed
. I jumped in my chair and nearly knocked over my drink. Fuming at myself for acting so childish, I ate the last bit of my sandwich and stood up. As I turned towards the door, I heard the rain moving across the pavement and onto the roof. I sighed and looked at the ceiling. I’d parked four blocks away in the parking garage. I was going to be soaked by the time I made it to my car.

  “I'll walk you to your car if you like,” the man who had been watching me a few minutes ago offered, holding up an umbrella.

  For a moment I considered taking him up on his offer, but decided against it. I didn't want to be indebted to anyone. I certainly didn't want to be indebted to the white man who had been checking me out.

  “I'll be fine,” I said and turned towards the door.

  “Here,” he said, quickly covering the space between us and held out his umbrella, “I don't need it.”

  “It’s okay. I'll be fine,” I said again.

  He smiled and the corners of his eyes crinkled. “I insist.”

  “Fine, if you wanna get caught in the rain without it, be my guest,” I said and took the umbrella.

  “Thank you,” he said and disappeared back to his table.

  What in the hell was he thanking me for? He had just given up his umbrella and he thanked me?

  I glanced back at him to see if he was still watching me, but he was scribbling away in his notebook. Shrugging, I headed out and opened the umbrella. The howling wind blew the rain in all directions and made me grateful that I had swallowed my pride and taken the damn umbrella.

  A pang of guilt hit me in the gut. That guy's notebook would never survive the gusts of wind and downpours. I was a block from the parking garage when I turned back around. I wasn't raised to be a completely ungrateful bitch. I quickened my pace hoping to catch the man before he left the coffee shop. I'd let him walk me to my car and then return his umbrella so that he wouldn't get soaked.

  When I arrived back at the coffee shop, I didn't see him. I looked around the street, but he wasn't anywhere in sight. I went back in and asked Justin when he had left.

  “Dunno,” he shrugged, “I don't keep track of customers.”

  “Are you talking about the writer?” one of the waitresses asked.

  “You mean the guy scribbling in the notebook?”

  “Yeah, he left not too long after you did. I think he hailed a taxi,” she said.

  “Thanks,” I said and walked out.

  While I was fighting against the wind to open the umbrella, a car full of teenagers sped by me. Water that had been pooling on the side of the street splashed high, soaking my hair and scrubs. I flipped my attackers a bird, but they just laughed.

  Hot angry tears fell down my cheeks, making me thankful for the rain. The wind pelted raindrops against my face and they mingled with my tears. I closed the umbrella and let the rain pour down upon me. There was no use in trying to stay dry now. I was soaked in muddy water. My wet socks squeaked against the soles of my shoes with every step I took and I would have to get up extra early in the morning to ensure my weave didn't look like a bird's nest.

  I pushed the button on my key chain and heard the familiar beep that told me my car door was unlocked. I slid into the driver's seat and sighed. I was shivering as I stripped off my socks and shoes. As I drove home barefoot, my feet rubbed against the pedals and the little sting under my big toe informed me a blister was forming. I was grateful when I pulled into the driveway.

  I sat shivering in my car and looked up at the two story house before me. I would be paying it off for the next thirty years or more, but eventually it would be mine and mine alone. That's what I had been working my ass off for. To have a place to call my own.

  Once inside, I stripped naked of my wet clothes and threw my clothes into the washing machine before the muddy water had time to set in and leave behind stains. After starting the washing machine, I settled in on the sofa and wrapped my favorite fleece blanket around my shoulders because I was too tired to climb the stairs yet.

  I stared up at the ceiling and sighed. The longer I lay there, the angrier I became. I was angry at the patients I encountered, the people I worked with, and the kids who had drenched me. I was angry because I had never felt as alone in my life as I did laying on the sofa of this big empty house. I finally climbed the stairs, still wrapped in my fleece blanket, and crawled into my bed. I was just dozing off when I realized I needed to set my alarm at least half an hour earlier to give me time to repair my hair.

  When sleep finally claimed me, my dreams only served as a reminder of my bad day. It began innocently enough, I was standing on the dock at the lake looking down at my tiny childhood feet. My toenails were painted a bright shade of magenta and I was about to cannon ball into the water. I looked over my shoulder at my parents and my dad gave me a smile of encouragement. I grinned back and held my nose. I closed my eyes and tensed, my body to jump. My feet left the dock and I soared through the air. From my childish perspective, I was flying higher than some birds dared. I began my descent and waited to be consumed by the cool lake water, but it never came. Instead, I landed on my feet on a crowded city street. I look down at my now adult feet and frowned at my chipped toenail polish and white bathing suit that made me stand out in the crowd of busy business people.

  My dad stood on the other side of the street. He was yelling something I couldn't hear, but it made me panic. Something wasn't right. Suddenly, two large white men approached me and lifted me off my feet. I struggled against them, but they were too strong. They dragged me into the backseat of a police car and sped off. My father chased behind the car, but soon was unable to keep up.

  Shocked, I sat in the back seat as the car moved. The drive seemed to last for hours and I shivered as the sun sat and darkness consumed the world around me. Suddenly, the car screeched to a halt and one of the men opened the door and wrapped my weave around his hand, jerking me from the car. He shoved me hard and I landed face down on the concrete. My knees ached and I felt blood pooling around them. Looking around, I realized the police officers had brought me back to the street where I had grown up.

  “Keep your black ass in the ghetto!” one of them laughed as the car drove away.

  The high pitched squeal of my alarm clock pulled me out of the dream, but my whole body still trembled. I lay still and tried to calm my nerves, but the screaming alarm clock made my heart race faster. I sprinted across the room and tried to make the noise stop, but it was too dark to see the buttons. I fumbled with them for a second before the room was submerged in sweet silence.

  I slid down the wall and took a deep breath. I had to pull myself together. In less than two hours, I would be greeting my first patient of the day and if I didn't get it together they'd eat me alive. After taking a few moments to gather my wits, I forced myself to stand. My knees popped and my feet still ached from yesterday.

  I flipped on the light and headed into the bathroom. I quickly covered my hair with a shower cap and stepped into the shower, shivering as I waited for the water to warm up. I washed quickly, not taking time to enjoy the soapy loofah gliding across my skin like I normally would. I rinsed and turned off the water. I grabbed for my towel only to realize I had forgotten to grab it out of the dryer.

  “Shit!” I hissed when I realized I had forgotten to switch my laundry over the night before.

  “Damn it! Damn it! Damn it!” I cursed as I sprinted down the stairs.

  My wet feet slipped and slid on the hardwood of the stairs, but somehow I managed not to fall. I grabbed my towel from the dryer and restarted the washing machine. I dried as I walked back to the upstairs bathroom. I had the time, but lacked the patience to pull off anything spectacular with my hair. I brushed it out with styling gel and wrapped it into a bun. It didn't look great, but it would work until I found a salon that knew what to do with a weave.

  I slipped into a pink pair of scrub pants and a floral patterned scrub top. The colors complemented my dark chocolate complexion and the contrast made me smile at my r
eflection. I spun around and looked at how the scrubs fit tightly against my ass. They didn't look bad. I had tried on three different sizes of scrubs when I went shopping, but this was the only one that fit correctly. The next size up fell from my small waist if I walked too quickly.

  I popped two pieces of bread into the toaster and scrambled an egg. I ate slowly, killing time, because I had gotten ready in far less time than I thought it would take me. After I ate, I brushed my teeth and did my makeup. I usually didn't wear it, but it helped kill time.

  “You show 'em, baby!” my father's voice echoed around my skull.

  Sometimes I found it hard to believe it had only been two years since he lost his battle with cancer. He had been diagnosed when I was only twelve and had battled it for eleven years before he finally drifted off to sleep and didn't wake up.

  I bit my lip and shook my head. I couldn't allow today to be another day of mourning. I had to get out there and fight my own battle, and every day was a battle. My father had told me that again and again. As I lined my lips, I thought of my makeup as war paint, something to disguise how miserable my new job was making me.

  My second day wasn't much better than my first. I was thrown up on twice by the same ill child and had an old man yell at me for pronouncing his foreign last name wrong. Fortunately, Heather loaned me the extra top she always kept in her locker. It was a navy blue and it didn't suit my skin color, but at least it wasn’t covered in chucks of what smelled to be a child's meal from a fast food restaurant.

  When I clocked out, I decided to drop by the coffee shop again to see if I could return the borrowed umbrella. Besides, I could do with some conversation, friendly or otherwise.

  Chapter 2: Mark

  Normally, I used my time at the coffee shop to find inspiration and make notes, but today I was hidden behind my laptop. Inspiration had finally struck and I was in a hurry to get the words down before they drifted away. Yesterday, inspiration wrapped her velvet fingers around my soul and was yet to release me. It had come to me in the form of a beautiful ebony woman. There was something unique about her. There was something more and I wanted to know what that something more was.