Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
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Thank you
The People in the Park
Margaree King Mitchell
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
The People in the Park
COPYRIGHT 2013 by Margaree King Mitchell
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
eBook editions are licensed for your personal enjoyment only. eBooks may not be re-sold, copied or given to other people. If you would like to share an eBook edition, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with.
Contact Information: [email protected]
Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated are taken from the King James translation, public domain.
Cover Art by Nicola Martinez
Watershed Books, a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC
www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410
Watershed Books praise and splash logo is a trademark of Pelican Ventures, LLC
Publishing History
First Watershed Edition, 2013
Paperback Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-304-9
Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-303-2
Published in the United States of America
Dedication
To my nieces Christina, Zariah, Kristin & Morgan—
Thanks for sharing your world with me. Keep God as the center of your life and you will achieve great things.
1
I had my front-page story, finally!
I talked to the majority of junior and senior students, and after two years and one semester of working on the school newspaper, I had a front-page story. “Students Travel the World for Prom Attire” by Lauren Moffit. My schoolmates proudly told me where they were shopping for their prom dresses, from the salons of Paris to designer showrooms in New York, from private dressmakers in Kansas City to vintage clothing stores online, everybody was excited to share their dress plans for that special evening. Me? I was going to Chicago to shop with my cousin Tiffany, along with Mom and Aunt Ira, of course.
The newspaper rested in the passenger seat of my car as I entered my neighborhood. Mom and Dad would be so proud. Ever since I joined the newspaper staff my freshman year, Mom had said it would only be a matter of time before I was writing front-page stories. A sidebar in my story featured the boys, some of whom had plans for their first custom tailored tuxedos. They were going to their fathers’ tailors for measurements now, in order for the tuxedos to be ready by prom. When your family had a gazillion dollars, getting a tuxedo from a rental shop wasn’t an option. At least three quarters of the boys planned to purchase their own tuxedos, even if only from a department store.
I pushed open the mudroom door. Mrs. Robinson, our cook, had the week off, cruising the Caribbean with her sister. Usually when I reached this area, smells of dinner wafted from the kitchen. Today I didn’t smell anything, which was unusual because on Mrs. Robinson’s days off, Mom took over and cooked favorite meals from her childhood. Being in the kitchen was natural for her, having been taught by my grandmother to cook up a batch of collard greens, pork chops and gravy, fried corn, salmon croquettes with rice, fried chicken, barbecued deer ribs, macaroni and cheese, black-eyed peas, fried okra, you name it, Mom could cook it. Sharing meals from her childhood was her way of keeping me in touch with my African-American heritage, since otherwise I didn’t come in contact with many black people in Fairfield.
None of the familiar smells greeted me today. Maybe we were going out to dinner.
I knew something was wrong when I walked into the kitchen and saw big ugly tears flowing from Mom’s eyes as she sobbed uncontrollably. She quickly wiped her eyes. Without saying a word, she beckoned for me to sit down at the table with her. With my eyes, I questioned her. But she didn’t say anything. Instead, she grabbed the TV remote and pointed it at the television set that was mounted on a wall in the kitchen.
I sat there mesmerized as the news anchor said, “Peter Williams, Founder of Williams Ortiz L.L.P., was arrested this morning. He is accused of bilking clients out of millions of dollars. An early estimate puts the figure at $300 million. Arrested along with him were other top officials of the law firm, including Samuel Ortiz, Chief Financial Officer, and Roger Moffit, Managing Director. It is not clear the role they played in the fraud, what is known…” the anchor continued.
But my mind stopped when the reporter said Roger Moffit. My dad. Roger Moffit. It couldn’t be. There had to be some mistake.
Roger Moffit, who always taught me right from wrong. Roger Moffit, who always told me that stealing is wrong. Not that Roger Moffit. It must be somebody else.
I sat there in a stupor. Mom reached out her hand and touched mine.
“Your father will be home soon,” she whispered. “He called right before he went to the police station. His lawyer will take care of bail.”
Bail. Roger Moffit. Those words did not belong in the same sentence.
As I processed the breaking news on TV, I switched to HLN and saw the same thing. MKMBC, KLMBC, Midwest Business, all the channels carried the same news.
I would never be able to show my face in public again. I never thought my dad would bring shame to our name. He always warned me against scandalizing our name. When I went out with my friends, he always told me, “Remember, you are a Moffit. Act like it.”
Then the telephone started ringing. Grand Meré called first. Mom talked to her and said all the right words. Dad was innocent. He would never do what they were accusing him of on TV.
Grand Meré and Granddad, Mom’s parents, lived in Memphis. If they had heard, the whole world had heard. My life was ruined. How could I go back to school tomorrow? Ever?
Then reporters started calling. Mom didn’t answer the phone, letting all calls go to voice mail. She didn’t even want to talk to her friends. I could see the fear in her eyes. I couldn’t comfort her. She was supposed to be comforting me. Instead, we just sat there staring at the TV, not saying a word. Mom had muted the voices when Grand Meré called. The voices of the people on the screen were still muted; their faces contorted as they worked their mouths and smirked as they rehashed the story over and over. My n
ewspaper story didn’t seem important anymore. I didn’t even mention it to Mom, even though it lay on the table.
We heard Dad’s car when he entered the garage. We waited for him to come through the door and make everything all right.
Dad enveloped Mom in his arms when he came into the kitchen. He took one look at the flickering images on the TV and turned it off. He led Mom back to the kitchen table where I sat. He pulled out a chair between us.
“I did not do what they are saying,” he said.
What a relief! It felt like a big weight had been lifted from one side of my body. But the other side still had a heavier weight—shame.
How could I hold my head up at school tomorrow knowing my dad’s picture was broadcast all over the world as being a crook? There’s no way I could go back to school. But my friends were there. What would they think? I was planning to run for treasurer of my senior class. The election for next year’s officers was in a few weeks.
“This is so messed up,” I cried.
“Kitten,” said Dad, “I will make this right.”
Kitten. My dad’s pet name for me. Whenever he used to call me kitten I always felt better. Not this time.
“Why are they saying those things about you?” I asked.
Dad looked me in the eyes. “I have always been straight with you. Somebody in the firm has probably not been above board with the finances of their clients. Because I’m a senior officer of the firm, my name gets dragged through the mud, too.”
“Can’t you clear your name?” Mom asked.
“I’m going to do everything I can,” he said. “But…”
He stopped.
But.
But what?
Somehow I knew I wasn’t going to like what came after but.
He looked at Mom, and he looked at me. I could see the pain in his eyes.
“All of our assets are frozen. At least most of them, everything that’s in my name and everything we hold jointly,” he said to Mom. “Kitten, everything in your name is free and clear.”
“What does that mean?” I asked.
“It means we’re going to have to downsize for the moment,” he said. “I’ll need whatever money I can scrape together to hire lawyers. Kitten, you still have your personal savings account. Use it wisely, because I don’t know how long it’s going to be before I can clear my name. Try not to use over one hundred dollars a week.”
One hundred dollars a week? That was nothing. I couldn’t get by on one hundred dollars a week.
“And don’t use your credit cards. Give them to me.” He held out his hand. “I’ll return them when it’s OK to use them again.”
Stunned, I opened my wallet and handed him my credit cards. “My gas card, too?”
He nodded. “You’re going to have to pay for gas out of the hundred dollars.”
“After paying for gas and lunch I’ll barely have any money left.”
“This is only temporary. We all have to make sacrifices.”
“What about our house?” Mom asked.
“We might have to move,” he said.
“Move where?” I asked.
“I haven’t put any plans into place yet, Kitten,” he said. “It also means we’ll have to let Mrs. Robinson go, the gardener too, and the housekeeper. We’re going into survival mode.”
He turned to me, “Can you excuse us? I need to talk to your mother.”
As I left the room I heard Mom say, “What have you gotten us into?”
I heard something in her voice I hadn’t ever heard. It scared me. I wanted to hear Dad’s answer, yet I didn’t stick around.
I went to my room and closed the door. My iPhone was filled with text messages from my friends. I couldn’t bring myself to look at them. I flopped down on my bed and just lay there. Numb.
This evening wasn’t supposed to turn out like this. We should be celebrating my front-page story. The newspaper with my story came out this morning and the story about Dad’s firm came out this afternoon. How ironic was that? My day of glory had turned into a nightmare.
Suddenly my pity party was interrupted by the sound of the doorbell. Since Mom wouldn’t answer the phone, the reporters must be trying to get a face-to-face comment from us. What nerve!
A knock on my door. “Kitten, may I come in?” Dad said, as he came through the door. “Reverend Jones is here to pray with us. Please come downstairs.”
I frowned. “Do I have to?”
Dad held out his hand. “Yes, we are still a family. And we will pray as a family.”
Reverend Jones is the pastor of a small church across the river in Kansas City, Kansas, that Dad attended sometimes. Easter was the only time Mom and I went there, and that’s only because Dad awarded us with brunch on the Plaza afterwards. Mom called Reverend Jones a “jackleg preacher” because he has no seminary degree, but he still goes by ‘Reverend Doctor Jones’ because of his honorary degrees. I was too busy laughing at how he talked and acted to pay attention to his sermons.
I rolled my eyes as I walked down the steps. I certainly didn’t feel like praying and from the look on Mom’s face, she felt the same. Our world had been turned upside down and we didn’t feel like hearing some long, drawn-out prayer from some tired preacher.
“I called Reverend Jones on my way home. I know we don’t go to church as we should, but he was still willing to come and pray with us,” Dad said.
“Before we pray,” said Reverend Jones, “I’d like to tell each of you to not feel that you are alone in this situation. God is with you, and He’ll get you through it.”
Reverend Jones opened his Bible, “I’d like to share a scripture with you that can be a source of comfort in the days ahead. Psalm 46:1-7 says: “‘God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore, we will not fear, though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; though the waters thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof…The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge.’”
We then all held hands, and Reverend Jones prayed, “Our great and mighty God, ruler of heaven and earth. Lord, I lift up this family to you tonight. Heavenly Father, a day that started on a mountaintop full of sunshine and brightness for them has ended in a valley full of darkness and despair. Lord, help them understand that you have not forsaken them. Strengthen them, Father, as you lead them through this storm. I pray that Brother Moffet’s innocence will be proven. Give his wife and daughter the faith to see that this will pass and the sun will shine again in their lives. In Jesus name we pray, Amen.
“Don’t despair,” said Reverend Jones as Dad walked him to the door. “Know that God will show up for you. He’ll come through. Just trust Him.”
I turned towards Mom. I felt no different than before our visit from the Right Reverend Doctor Jones. She didn’t appear to feel any different either.
****
Mom and I ate dinner together, mainly in silence. Dad was in his study on the phone with lawyers.
“He’ll straighten this out,” Mom said. “But it will take time.”
She had ordered pizza because she wasn’t in the mood to cook. Then she had felt sorry about doing that, saying she had to stop being frivolous with money.
We had never had to be concerned about money ever in our lives. This had to be a horrible nightmare.
I felt bad that Mom felt guilty about spending twenty dollars for a pizza. We couldn’t even enjoy it because now spending money was somehow forbidden in some unwritten rule that had invaded our lives today.
I cried myself to sleep. No homework. No nothing. Sleep blotted out everything about today. If I could only sleep forever, maybe the pain would go away and along with it the shame I felt.
Even though I had done nothing but live and exist in this family, my entire world was shattered.
2
Mom didn’t feel like going to the park today.
Loretta Moffit, a strong woman w
ith grit and backbone, who grew up in Memphis, the new South, when the shackles of segregation had been destroyed and the world was waiting for her to conquer it, stood before me in hair rollers and a cashmere robe. She moved zombie-like as she nursed a cup of coffee and stared out the kitchen window. The TV purred in the background, voices going over the same story from yesterday, this time naming victims whose trust had been violated.
The change in her had happened overnight. She was still in shock, I suppose, as was I.
Walking in the park every morning before school was our special time together. Then we would have breakfast at Starbucks before I headed to classes and she started her day with her club meetings and fundraisers. At Starbucks, with her day planner in front of us, we would go over our schedules for the day and make sure nothing conflicted with anything important to me.
Today I was on my own.
I drove to the park anyway. River Landing. A small but beautiful, scenic park with huge sprawling trees that stood guard over the playground and gazebo and lined the winding walking path was tucked into a natural preserve off downtown Fairfield. One side of the V-shaped three-mile walking trail meandered along the Missouri River. The other side bordered the railroad tracks. In the middle of the ‘V’ were playground equipment, picnic pavilions, soccer fields and the gazebo. A grove of trees of all sizes filled in the rest of the ‘V.’
There were regular walkers and runners who came here every day. Mom knew all the regulars by name. On our morning walks she stopped and talked to them while I waited impatiently for her to finish so I could have her to myself again.
I had nicknames for the people in the park. There was Mr. Jones, who was a track star in the 1970s and still dressed like one, with his short shorts flaring in the wind as he ran. I called him the Hale and Hardy Guy. His legs, blush red in the cold weather, took lengthy strides as he ran to keep up his stamina.
Then there was Dr. Smithfield, who always ran with his dog and had earplugs in his ears and his cell phone clipped to his belt. I called him Man with White Dog. Every now and then, he stopped running and walked briskly when he got a call regarding a patient. He talked with a serious demeanor and then resumed running when the call was finished.
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