The Love Prison Made and Unmade, page 1

Dedication
To Sekou,
for reminding me that love is
the greatest healer
Epigraph
Love recognizes no barriers. It jumps hurdles, leaps fences,
penetrates walls to arrive at its destination full of hope.
—MAYA ANGELOU
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Epigraph
Author’s Note
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Copyright
About the Publisher
Author’s Note
I looked up to the Black couples I read about. Like Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz. Like Ossie and Ruby Dee. Like Kathleen and Eldridge Cleaver and Winnie and Nelson Mandela. Theirs was a love rooted in the Black struggle for liberation. A love that had purpose. I wanted to have what I called a Black power fairy tale. So when I found Shaka, a brother who reminded me of Malcolm and Eldridge and Mandela, I fell in love. Never mind he was locked up.
But, this story started long before I met Shaka. It started in the cradle of my parents’ marriage. It is there that I learned what women must do for the sake of having love and what we must do to keep it.
1
I grew up fantasizing about my knight in shining armor. There were white knights and white horses and white picket fences in the books I read and I bought into the hype. But my knight was a Black boy.
I was a Black girl trying to find my way in a world that assaults Black girlhood before we even become women, that tells us the fairy tales we read aren’t for us. I longed to be saved by a boy who would love me, who would fight for me, who needed me as much as I needed him. A boy who would give me happily-ever-after.
I didn’t know any Black girls with real-life Black fairy tales and happily-ever-after endings. Not even the Black girls on TV had happy endings. But that didn’t stop me from dreaming. Then The Cosby Show aired, giving my nine-year-old self a peek into a Black world that was abundant.
The Cosby Show was as far from reality for me as white horses and white knights, and I was captivated. The Huxtables weren’t poor like the Evans family, and the children weren’t adopted like Arnold and Willis. Cliff and Claire Huxtable were idyllic parents and the perfect couple, living the American dream. I envied Theo and Vanessa and Rudy, who had everything I didn’t have. I wanted their scripted lives.
I even envied J.J. and Thelma and Michael. Though their project apartment was worlds away from the Huxtables’ Brooklyn brownstone, their parents clearly loved each other.
Sometimes I couldn’t tell if my parents even liked each other.
At home one day, sitting in the living room pretending to watch television, half listening to my mama and daddy argue in the dining room, I heard my mama say calmly, “Bill, put that away.” I turned from the TV to see my daddy pointing a gun at my mama, her eyes wide with fear.
It wasn’t the first time I’d seen Daddy’s pistol, but it was the first time I’d seen it pointed at anyone. Mama looked at the gun and then back up at him. He stared right through her. “I ain’t putting shit away,” he snapped, tightening his grip on the .357 Magnum as he planted his 5'5" body firmly into the floor. His eyes were red with rage and his already pale skin looked more pallid. He grinned at her as she pleaded.
“Please, don’t do this,” Mama cried, inching backward toward the front door, her eyes locked on the gun. Fear rose in my chest. My twelve-year-old eyes watched, my mouth wide open, as Daddy lifted the pistol more. Higher and higher the mouth of the gun rose, meeting Mama’s eyes.
Without a word, she turned and bolted toward the door. He followed behind her, chasing her out of the house.
I jumped up and ran behind him, screaming, “Daddy, don’t!” I screamed and screamed some more, then fell to the vestibule floor as he pushed opened the screen door, pleading with him, “Please don’t! Noooo . . .”
He ignored my cries. His anger, or maybe it was the vodka, made me invisible to him.
And then, “Boom!” The gun exploded with gunfire.
The sudden sound of the bullet leaving the gun’s chamber echoed in my ear. I rushed outside. Time slowed as my eyes scanned the front yard, frantically searching for my mama. When my eyes finally found her, she was halfway across the street running toward our neighbors’ house, her bare feet slapping against the hard concrete. The bullet had missed her. My daddy stood on the porch watching her run to safety, still cursing her. I stood beside him, tears streaming down my face.
That day, I retreated further into my shell. I found sanctuary in books and Black family sitcoms and vowed to find a love I didn’t have to run from.
My parents were high school sweethearts. She was fourteen, he fifteen when they met at the Graystone Ballroom, one of Detroit’s most storied musical landmarks. Teenagers gathered there every Sunday afternoon to dance to the Motown sounds of The Supremes, The Temptations, and The Miracles. It was my uncle, Sherman, my daddy’s younger brother, who introduced them.
“I wish you had a taller, older brother,” my mama joked with Sherman.
He didn’t say a word. He disappeared into the crowd of dancing teenagers, and moments later returned with Daddy. Mama says she wasn’t impressed. Daddy was older, but he was short and almost white with straight, dark hair. A pretty boy. Mama didn’t like pretty boys but she smiled and told him her name. “I’m Carolyn,” she said over the music.
“Name’s Bobby,” he lied.
They talked and danced and then exchanged numbers. Daddy called her the next day and they made plans for him to come over on Wednesday. They sat on the tattered sofa in her family’s front room and gabbed about school and music, her mama in the next room within earshot. He visited every week and charmed his way into her mama’s, my grandmother’s, good graces, bringing her a strawberry Faygo, her favorite soda, every time.
Each week Daddy showed up in a different car he had stolen pretending to be a valet at Joe Muer Seafood, an exclusive whites-only restaurant near downtown Detroit. He would lie to Mama whenever she asked about the stolen cars. “That’s my cousin’s car,” or “That’s my friend’s car,” he’d say with a straight face.
Over time, he grew on her, cracking jokes and spoiling her with gifts he’d stolen from his mama’s Avon orders. Later that year when Mama’s mama died, Daddy was right by her side. “What you want to do?” he’d ask, and then take her wherever she wanted to go.
They started talking marriage after Mama finished school. That’s what young couples did in the sixties—graduated high school and got married. But after asking her father’s permission, Daddy found reasons why they weren’t ready, so Mama broke things off and moved to North Carolina.
Daddy called her almost every day, trying to get her back, and by the following June, they were married. It was 1967 and the United States was two years into the Vietnam War. Daddy was drafted months later and sent across the country to an army base in Tacoma, Washington, with Mama by his side. He ended up being one of the lucky few who never went to Vietnam.
Daddy strayed early and often. Mama knew about the other women, but she stayed. She’d grown up in a big, loving family and wanted what her parents had. They had raised eleven children together—six girls and five boys—and were married until my grandmother’s death. My grandfather worked on the assembly line at Ford, a good factory job that took care of his family. He’d fled the racial terror of the South in the 1920s like many Black men, first moving to Chicago, and then Detroit. Whatever he ran from, he never spoke of and he forbade his children from going south. But Mama didn’t heed his warnings. Once she and Daddy married, she went with him to Mississippi nearly every year to visit his people.
I loved when Mama told me stories about her childhood. She t
Just four years into their young marriage, my parents broke up and the house they bought together as newlyweds went into foreclosure. Mama had planned to move in with my grandfather until she found an apartment of her own and Daddy planned to stay with a friend, but days before they were to move, Mama found out she was pregnant. They decided to try to make their marriage work. The next year, they had a boy and named him after my daddy, but spelled his name Billy instead of Billie, the way Daddy’s was spelled.
The baby changed nothing.
Two years later, although Mama didn’t have any hopes of my daddy straightening up, she decided she wanted another baby. “You were the fattest baby I’d ever seen,” she told me all the time. “You slept so much I had to put a mirror up to your face to make sure you were breathing.”
Now with two kids and a husband who didn’t come home at night, Mama turned to food. She’d gain weight, he’d joke about the extra pounds, and she’d lose it, only to gain it all back. Then one day when I was four years old and my brother was seven, Mama packed a bag of clothes for herself, for me, and my brother, and we left. She’d plotted for months, saving what money she could for the first month’s rent and security deposit on a townhouse in Royal Oak Township, a working-class suburb north of Detroit. Daddy didn’t know where we were.
The cockroaches were merciless in the way they took over our two-bedroom townhouse. They crawled on the floors, on the ceilings, on blankets, and sometimes on me. No matter how many times Mama “bombed” our house with insecticide, the bugs returned.
A few months later, Mama broke down and told Daddy where we were. That became their pattern. Breaking up and getting back together. A year later, the four of us moved into a small brick ranch on the corner of Seven Mile Road and Marlowe. The man who owned the Buick dealership just beyond our backyard also owned this house and rented it to us for $275 a month as a favor to my uncle, who worked for him.
The house is in an established neighborhood on Detroit’s west side with mature trees and large brick houses, some colonial, some ranch, but all much bigger than ours. Mama had prayed about that house. It only had two bedrooms but the neighborhood was nice and the rent was something she could pay on her own if things didn’t work out with Daddy again.
2
I was a daddy’s girl. Everybody said I looked just like him—fair complexion, wild, bushy eyebrows, and a space between our two front teeth so big it looked like they were never meant to be together. The only difference, his skin was so light and his hair so thin and straight that he could have passed for white. Not me, I had tight, nappy curls like Mama.
Daddy had a big heart and an even bigger personality. He was every bit country as he was city slick. He rode motorcycles and horses and would eat anything on four legs. He wasn’t afraid of anything.
But me, I was afraid of everything. He’d always tell me, “Ah, you’ll be all right.” He was my hype man, rooting me on as I pedaled down the street, bike wobbling, the first time I rode my bike without training wheels, or I hopped on the scariest rollercoasters, heart pounding, stomach in knots.
Whenever we visited my great-grandparents’ Mississippi farm, I’d watch him, peeking through my little fingers, as he slaughtered the animals that would be dinner. One time I remember him standing bare-chested and red from the sun with a butcher knife in one hand and a beer can in the other as two goats dangled from my great-grandmother’s clothesline, squealing. Without ceremony, Daddy raised the knife and slit their necks open. Blood gushed and squirted everywhere. Daddy laughed in amusement, the sound of his laughter hanging there in the thick Mississippi heat.
He was a man’s man. He did what he wanted, when he wanted, and he never took no for an answer. If he wanted something, he got it, and if it didn’t work out, he’d dust himself off and get right back up.
I wished I could be that brave.
I wished I had been brave, that I had said no when a family member, someone I loved and trusted, led me into his dank, dark basement. “I want to show you something,” he said.
I followed him into the bathroom tucked behind the staircase. He sat down on the toilet and pulled me near. He told me not to be afraid. I can still remember the smell of his musty unwashed balls as he revealed his big, black penis to me and told me to touch it. He smelled of dirty hair and cars, his hands covered in oil from the engines he worked on. I did not say a word. The words would not have come if I had tried.
My memory ends there. The screen in my mind goes black. I replay the scene over and over and it always ends there. I was five years old.
I didn’t understand what was happening, but I knew it was wrong. I knew because he took me into the basement, into the half bathroom that no one ever used. I knew because he whispered. I knew because my body froze when I saw his big, black penis standing straight up like a tree.
But I didn’t tell my daddy any of this. I didn’t tell anyone.
Those days, I didn’t talk much. I was the quiet child. I watched and listened and tried not to get in the way.
By the time I was nine, resentment started to creep in. I don’t know if it was because I was maturing and could see things for what they were or because Mama started telling me what Daddy was and wasn’t doing, but the father I knew and loved was disappearing.
Daddy’s drinking had gotten worse. Now there were seizures.
The first time I saw my daddy have a seizure I had gone with him to the liquor store. We were standing in line when his body suddenly started jerking back and forth. My body stiffened with fear as I watched him fall to the ground, his body still convulsing. “Put something metal in his mouth!” someone yelled. I stood there, helpless, as the bodies around me hurried into action. Someone grabbed his legs and tried to hold them down. Someone else held his head. “Step to the side, baby,” a woman muttered to me.
I stared at his almost white body flailing against the almost black carpet, dirty from being stepped on so many times, my eyes fixed on his broken, erratic movements. Eventually, the shaking slowed then stopped. He laid there for a moment and then stood up as if everything were normal. He paid for the alcohol he’d come to buy and we left. We didn’t say a word on the walk back home.
I don’t know if the seizures were connected to Daddy’s drinking, but it’s all I ever saw him doing. Vodka or gin straight was his preference—and directly from the bottle. His eyes glassed over and red, he’d lay there on the couch half-sleep or half-watching television, sipping on the bottle all day. I wanted to help him. Tell him, “You’ve had enough.” Sometimes I’d hide his liquor bottles. I knew better than to throw them away.
I was his babysitter on those drunken days, keeping my eye on him whenever he was home so I could call for help if he had a seizure, or help him if he stumbled and fell in a drunken walk from one room to another. I would watch him as he moved through the house, his steps broken and unsteady. When I could no longer see him, I’d listen for his feet shuffling against the carpet. Sometimes he’d stop and lean on the wall or the furniture and the shuffling would stop. “You okay?” I’d call to him. He’d mumble something, and I’d hear the shuffling again.
Daddy’s thin, pale skin bruised easily, and I’d count the purplish-blue spots on his arms and legs. I’d ask him about the injuries I hadn’t seen. “Daddy, what happened here?”
“Eh, I don’t know.”
Sometimes he’d show up to our school inebriated. “That’s my baby,” he’d say enthusiastically to anyone who would listen. I’d watch him walk down the halls trying to stand upright, pretending to be more sober than he was, smiling and nodding at other parents. But I could tell. His eyes always betrayed him. They told the story we all tried to hide.
I felt a mix of resentment and embarrassment whenever he came to our school events. I knew he was proud of me and my brother, but I didn’t want him there. School was my refuge from the drama at home.
