Her name is Joeann. She works at the Hampton Inn in Jackson. She tends the dining room, making the breakfasts, and cleaning off tables.
She is easy to talk to.
“I learned how to be friendly from my mama,” Joeann says, warming up my coffee. “My mama believed in being kind to everybody she meet.
“But don’t get me talking about my mama. Won’t be a dry eye.”
Joeann is mid-fifties. Cheerful. With an armor-piercing smile. She has rich mahogany skin, short dark hair, and a face that seems to glow.
“My mama was humble. She went to a little country Baptist church out in Pochahontas. She had 10 kids, and we were all crazy. Daddy was a brick layer.
“Everyone in Jackson knew Mama. They knew her as the woman who’d help anyone who was hard up.
“She’d take anyone in. You know, strays. Didn’t matter who they were or what they done.
“One time, some local kids didn’t have nowhere to live, ‘cause they parents died. They was orphans, overnight. So my dad went and collected the
children, five of them kids. He brought them all home to live with us. Even the little baby who was still nursing.
“My mama raised’em all. Just like they was her own. And just like that, she had 15 kids in her house.
“People’d always ask her, ‘Ain’t you tired of raising kids, Bernice?’ She’d just say, ‘I don’t have time to be tired, I’m too busy trying to get to heaven.’”
“Another time, she was babysitting for a family up in town, they had a son who had some bad problems. When he became an adult, he struggled with addiction and drugs. Whenever he came home from rehab, his own mama wouldn’t let him in her house, on account of his problems, and his stealing.
“So, my mom would take care of him. She’d cook him hot meals, give him…
