Read His First Wife Online

Authors: Grace Octavia

His First Wife (2 page)

“Kerry, she didn't do anything to you. Just go home and I'll be right behind you.” He was whispering like a schoolboy on the phone with his girlfriend late at night.
“I'm not going home. You come out here now or I swear I'll bust the windows in your car and set it on fire if I have to.” I couldn't believe the things I was saying, but I felt every syllable of them. At that moment I was willing to do anything, and Jamison must've felt it too. He hung up the phone.
The door opened fast, like he'd been standing on the other side the whole time. Jamison stood there alone, dressed in a pair of boxers I'd bought him.
“Did you really think I was going away?” I asked. Through the corner of my eye, I could see an old lady standing in her doorway next door wearing bright pink foam rollers in her hair and a flowery nightgown. I wanted to lower my voice, but I was beyond caring about embarrassing myself. “What is this? What is this?” I started crying again, but I didn't bother to wipe my tears. I just wrapped my arms around my stomach and held tight. The baby felt heavy again, like he was feeling the weight of the moment.
“I can explain it—” He stopped mid-sentence and reached for me. “It's nothing. I'm just . . .”
I stepped away.
“Just what?”
“Look, Kerry, I think you should go. I'll put on something and then come too, but I need to get dressed.”
“I'll be damned if I let you walk back into that house with that woman,” I hollered. “Does she know you're married? That you have a son on the way? Why can't she come out here and face me? Don't be embarrassed. I'm here now.” I tried to push my way through the doorway, but Jamison held me back.
“Let me in,” I said, pushing my way in farther. “I just want to see her. I just want to see her. I want to see the woman you chose over me.”
“Don't do this,” he said, pulling my arms. “Don't do anything foolish.”
I pulled back and looked my husband in the eyes. We'd known each other for twelve years. He was my first love. The only man I'd ever imagined marrying. He looked so naked standing there in front of me. So defenseless. He had pale, milky white skin, looked almost white sometimes in pictures, and the centers of his cheeks were beet red, the color they turned when he was sad or angry.
“Don't do what?
Anything foolish
?” I cried. “
Foolish
? You jerk. You fucking jerk.”
I practically jumped into Jamison's arms and started pounding my fists into his face. He was 6'5”, well over a foot taller than me, but I was towering above him then. Every bit of anger and frustration I felt grew me taller. I was swinging and screaming and hitting to make him feel the pain I felt. I was beat down and beat up by his lies and now I wanted him to feel the same thing. It didn't stop what I was feeling, but it felt good, like I was releasing something. Letting go, or at least loosening up my anger.

Foolish
,” I screamed. “I'll show you
foolish
.”
“Ma'am, stop it!” I heard an authoritative voice before I felt a hand pull at my shoulder. “Ma'am.”
My body was being lifted up. I felt two hands on both of my sides.
“She's pregnant,” Jamison said, reaching for me as the hands pulled me farther back. I turned to see two police officers standing beside me, while two others were holding me. Suddenly, I could see the flashing lights from their cars in the street, the flickering blues hitting small groups of people huddled in different places along the curb. There had to be at least six cars out there, and all I could think was where they'd come from and who they were there for.
“He ain't worth it,” one woman said in the crowd.
I turned to look at Jamison. There were so many people there, so many people I didn't know, and I felt like adding Jamison to the list. He seemed a part of this place, farther and farther away from me than I thought.
“Do you live here, ma'am?” one of the officers asked me. She was the only woman and she was so small the blue uniform seemed to swallow her up.
“No,” I said.
“That's Coreen's house,” someone called from the crowd.
Then, as if the person had summoned her, Coreen Carter came shuffling out the door. Her face was streaked with tears that seemed bigger than mine. Her eyes were red and she was visibly shaken. She stepped outside and stood beside Jamison in front of the door.
Seeing the cops had brought me back to reality, but seeing Coreen stand beside my husband sent me into what I can only call an out-of-body experience. Baby and all, I twisted out of the police officers' hands and charged after her. The word “nerve” was echoing in my head and if I had my way, I wanted to cut it into her chest with my bare hands. I was filled with rage. With disbelief. My life wasn't supposed to be like this. My marriage wasn't supposed to be like this. And love wasn't supposed to feel like this. All I could do was blame her for all three.
The female cop and another tall, white cop caught me and pulled me farther down the walkway, away from Jamison and Coreen, who were standing together.
“Ma'am,” the female officer said, standing in front of me. “I'm Officer Cox. What's your name?”
“Kerry . . . Kerry Taylor.”
“Ms. Taylor, I can see that you're upset, but I need you to calm down, so I can talk to you and figure out what exactly is going on here.” Her eyes were soft and brown like my Aunt Luchie's. The look on her face was sincere, kind, like she was the only person out there who understood what I was feeling. “Now we don't want anything to happen to your baby. You understand?”
“Yes,” I said. I wiped a tear from my eye and looked over at Jamison. He was talking to two male officers, a fat white one and a black one who seemed like he was in charge. Coreen was standing beside him with her hand over her mouth.
“You don't live here?” Officer Cox asked me again.
I shook my head no.
“Were you sleeping here?”
“No,” I said, looking at Jamison. He was looking back at me. Tears were in his eyes. The other officer was telling him not to come over to me.
“Is that man with you?” the other, tall officer asked me.
“He's my husband.”
The weight of my words must've surprised both of them. Officer Cox stopped writing on her little pad and looked at the other officer.
“Yes,” I said, confirming what they were both thinking.
“Hum,” she said and looked over at Coreen. “He's here with her?”
“Yes,” I said again.
“Should've told us that first,” the tall cop said. “We would've given you more time on him.” They both exchanged glances and a short, nervous laugh.
“I know what you're feeling. We see this all the time,” Officer Cox said, writing again. “But you have to control yourself.”
“And not let the cops see you hit your husband,” the tall cop said.
“Cox,” the officer in charge called, coming toward us as he adjusted his holster.
Jamison turned toward the house when the officer walked away, but I could tell he was crying. He punched the door so hard it sounded as if a gun had gone off.
“Ma'am, I need you to go on in the house,” the white officer said to Coreen. “We'll come in and speak with you after we're done out here.”
Coreen turned and looked at me quickly, her eyes still wet with confession. She went to walk into the house, reaching first for Jamison, who stepped away from her immediately.
The older officer signaled again for Cox to walk toward him.
“You just stand here, calm, and I'll be right back,” she said, stepping away.
“What's going on?” I asked. I could see some trace of dread in her eyes.
“She's just talking to our captain is all,” the other officer said. “Standard procedure.”
“Am I in any trouble?” I watched as Officer Cox talked to the captain. Her eyes dropped and she placed her hand over her mouth just like Coreen had.
“Probably not,” the officer said. “They'll probably let you go.”
“Let me go?”
I looked back at Jamison.
“Baby,” he tried, his voice filled with desperation.
“Sir, I'm going to need you to stay where you are,” the fat officer said, putting his hand over his gun.
“Jamison?” I called. “Jamison.”
“She's my wife. You can't take her.” He kept coming toward us. Two other cops ran to him and held him back from either side. Suddenly, there were at least ten cops between us.
“Take me? What's going on?” I asked. I looked back to Officer Cox. She was obviously pleading now with the captain, but he kept shaking his head, and then finally she looked me right in the eye and mouthed the word “sorry.”
“Just be patient, ma'am,” the officer beside me said timidly. “They'll be back over in a minute.”
“Can't I just speak to her before she goes?” Jamison yelled. “She's pregnant. She can't go to jail.”
“Jail?” I said. The word slapped me so hard my bladder dropped and urine came flowing from between my legs, wetting the front of my nightgown. “Jamison!” I cried. “Stop them!”
The female officer came toward me, pulling handcuffs from her hip.
“Mrs. Taylor,” she said, her voice deep and throaty, as if she was forcing it to be stern. “I'm going to have to place you under arrest—”
“No,” I hollered. “No! I didn't do anything. I was just here to get my husband. He's my husband.” I began crying again. My adrenaline was wearing thin and the thought of being arrested for the first time in my life suddenly made me feel desperate and ugly. Not who I was. Not Kerry Taylor who'd grown up privileged, on the right street, in the right part of Atlanta. Not me. Jail? I looked at Jamison, for him to do something. To stop them from taking me away. This thing wasn't for me.
“Baby,” he said, still being held by the officers, “just go with them and I'll come get you. I promise.”
“But I didn't do anything.”
“Mrs. Taylor,” Officer Cox said, “because we all saw you assault your husband, we're going to have to take you in for domestic violence.”
“Domestic violence?” I couldn't trust the echoes vibrating through my ears. “But he's here with that woman cheating on me.” My spine began to twitch as the baby shifted, panicking, from side to side.
“I know. But because we saw you and our captain is with us, we have to do this. If the captain wasn't with us, we could let you go, but we have to protect ourselves. You understand?” Her voice turned to reason for a second and she slid the cuffs on and began to read me my Miranda rights. The crowd, which had grown even larger, stood silent in fear and amazement.
“That ain't necessary, officer,” one woman said, “She's pregnant. Just let her go.”
“Yeah,” other people agreed. But it was too late. My hands cuffed on top of my belly, I watched them all desperately as the officer began walking me to the car. I turned again to see Jamison still standing there, looking at me helplessly. He'd done this to us, to me. I was being sent to jail for hitting a man who had beaten my heart to a pulp.
“You'll be out quickly,” the female officer said, helping me into the car. The rainbow of lights went shining again and we were off.
Inside Out
C
lassical piano. Ballet and tap. Etiquette. Jack and Jill. Private school for thirteen years and four years at Spelman. It seemed that my mother had spent my entire life trying to ensure that I'd never see the inside of a jail cell, yet there I was, her perfect little girl, sitting in a muggy, gray room that at once defeated all of her hard work.
I want to say the jail was like a nightmare, but really it wasn't. It was dark, musky, cheerless, and filled with every design no-no I'd ever observed in
Homes & Gardens
, but really the place wasn't anything like what I'd seen on television. Beside the fact that I was being held there against my will, it seemed like a regular office. There were computers and people on the phone. Folks eating breakfast at their desks and pictures of ugly children on the walls. Besides the “Most Wanted” signs, bars, and drunken prostitutes, you could pretend you were at a part-time job—one you never wanted to go to.
It's funny how when you're in a situation like that, when you feel you've completely lost yourself, all you can seem to do is think of who you are.
As a chubby-faced black woman with fake gold rings on every finger took my picture and fingerprints, I thought of how far I'd gone in my life, how far I thought I was from ever being booked into a jail, sitting beside prostitutes who had track marks up the insides of their starved arms, drunks who could hardly sit up, and just plain wild women who cursed and spit at their own shadows.
I was Kerry Jackson-Taylor, army brat daughter of a retired Desert Storm veteran. I'd been raised by a socialite and army wife who had old Atlanta money and a name that opened doors wherever we went. I'd had the best of everything in my life. Hadn't ever wanted for a thing. Had been taught to play by the rules: say your prayers, obey the law, love your country, and be a good citizen, wife, and mother. When I went to college, everyone called me “Black Barbie.” Even my professors. Girls groaned in envy when I pulled up in front of the dorm freshman year in my black Corvette. They wanted to ride with me, borrow my designer clothes, study with me at the library, go with me to the hairdresser where my long black hair was perfectly pressed, do anything and everything I did, because they all thought I was so perfect. I could lie and say I didn't feel the same way about myself. But it was hard. Things just came to me then. I'd never had a pimple in my life, had gotten straight A's throughout prep school and college, and by the time I saw my picture plastered in
Ebony
magazine when I won Ms. Spelman, my head was so swollen I actually went out and bought a T-shirt that said “Black Barbie” across the front. The back, of course, read, “Perfect 10.”
Thinking about those times, it seemed as if I was nothing like the women around me. Not even like the ones whose prisoner I'd suddenly become. But like them, I was there. Still in my nightgown and a jacket one of the officers had given me, I was there and feeling completely pitiful. A pitiful Black Barbie. No corvette or Ken in sight.
Finally in my cell alone, all I could think of was how I got there. Thick tears gathered as I thought and thought about this question. I couldn't answer it. All I could do was think it. Over and again in my mind I asked myself the same thing, but answering it just seemed so hard. Yes, Jamison was having an affair, but how did we get there? And then if we'd gotten to the place where my husband was having an affair, how did we get
there
? It didn't make any sense. I didn't make any sense. The pain of the circumstance was wearing me down and as I sat in the holding cell, searching for the courage to make my first phone call, I felt tired, and finally it seemed I was a pregnant woman who had no business being away from her bed so early in the morning.
I even grew tired of crying. I couldn't find another tear within myself, so I just sat there on a hard bench and rehearsed what I'd say to my mother. Yeah, I'd have to call my mother to come and get me.
One of the guards said that Jamison had come up to the precinct to bail me out but that they couldn't release me into his custody because I was being charged with hitting him. I asked how I was going to be charged for hitting someone who was trying to bail me out of jail, and she explained that Jamison didn't have to press charges. The state pressed charges in domestic violence cases. Apparently, it was standard procedure because most victims were afraid to press charges against their mates.
I listened to this information as if I was watching Court TV and she was talking about someone else. That Savannah beauty queen, who'd shot and killed her boyfriend. Lorena Bobbitt, who'd snipped off her husband's penis. Domestic violence? First offense? Counseling? Charges? Going before the judge? Bail? There was no way she could be talking to
me
. “Do you have anyone else who can come get you?” she asked. I didn't respond. There were only two people, besides Jamison, whom I could entrust with something so low as coming to bail me out of jail. One was Marcy, and I knew she was probably already on her way to work, and the other was my mother.
I know most people wanted to get out of jail as soon as possible, so they pick up the phone to call whomever and say whatever to get them there, but my situation with Mother was quite different.
She wasn't an overbearing or overprotective mother, like most. That would've been easy. My mother was a little more distant than other people. Shortly after my father came back from the Persian Gulf, he started showing signs of post-traumatic stress disorder. They tried to control it with counseling, but it just got worse, and soon my mother simply couldn't deal with it, so they put my father in a nursing home. While I was away in prep school when it all happened, the change affected all three of us, my mother the worst. She was so angry with my father for being sick that she seemed to pretend he was dead. She immersed herself even further into her social life, throwing these expensive parties, some even on weeknights, flying to Boca Raton for long weekends and going on monthlong cruises with groups of people she claimed were her “new” friends. “I'm alive again,” she'd say when I asked what was going on. “I lived for your father and the Army for too long and now I'm alive.” I knew it was a lie. My mother was simply trying to cover up the pain she was feeling inside for losing the best of the man she loved—his mind. He couldn't even recognize either of us anymore, had taken to calling her “the enemy” when she did find time to visit. I knew that had to hurt. It hurt me. So Mother kept burrowing within herself, pulling away from me, my dad, and even herself as she sipped overpriced wine and pretended everything would be okay in her “new life.” Now my mother was a bit of a shell, a disconnected, empty shell that I loved for who she once was and hated for who she was becoming. Nevertheless, I hated letting her down. She'd been let down enough in her life, and I never wanted to be that person who did it again. Together, we'd carefully planned my life, and I knew this would be a blow.
I wasn't sure how she might take the call. The old Mother, before Dad went to the nursing home, would've run to my rescue and been mad that I'd gotten myself in such a predicament. She might drag me home and try to take care of me and my baby, saying we didn't have to ever go home as we both swore Jamison off forever. It wasn't what I'd wanted, but it was what most daughters expected of their mothers. We all hated it, but in the end, it was comforting to know someone could care for you like only a mother could. Yet, I expected none of that from my mother now. She simply wasn't capable of it. I just wanted her to come bail me out and drop me off at home. But could she even handle that?
E-MAIL TRANSMISSION
TO: [email protected]
FROM: [email protected]
DATE: 3/17/07
TIME: 7:38
PM
 
Coreen:
 
I just wanted to say thanks again for finding my PalmPilot and taking time to contact me. By the way, I was shocked when you answered the door this morning. I was expecting “Duane Carter” (the name on the e-mail). But I guess you were a more pleasant surprise. Thanks again. Have a great day.
 
Jamison
E-MAIL TRANSMISSION
TO: [email protected]
FROM: [email protected]
DATE: 3/17/07
TIME: 10:15
PM
 
HAHA! I knew something was wrong with you. When I opened the door, you looked like I wasn't wearing a shirt or something. You should've seen your eyes grow all big. Yes, I am a woman and my name is not Duane. Duane is my husband. Well, he's deceased. He died in 9/11 at the World Trade Center. He was a computer programmer. Anyway, one of the last things he did was install the Outlook on my computer so all of my e-mail has his old address on it. I never changed it. I guess I just didn't want to. Kind of like having a bit of him around. You know? And there's no need to thank me. Losing a PalmPilot could happen to anyone. I'm sure people find PalmPilots along the street every morning. LOL.
 
Coreen
E-MAIL TRANSMISSION
TO: [email protected]
FROM: [email protected]
DATE: 3/18/07
TIME: 6:57
AM
 
Try telling my assistants it's normal! They say finding things I've misplaced should be in their job description. Thank goodness they have backups for all of the data on my PalmPilot.
 
I apologize for bringing up the e-mail address thing. I can understand why you would keep your husband's address. And I'm sorry to hear he passed. I know it's probably hard on you, even after so long. My father died of leukemia when I was seven, and my mom had it pretty bad. Let me know if there's ever anything I can do for you. I do owe you one.
 
Thanks again!
Jamison

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