"My mother's wedding ring was aluminum," she says, showing me a ring.
The gray band is not a perfect circle, the metal is too cheap to hold its shape.
"I wish I had more pictures of Mother when she was a kid," she goes on. "They say she was a knockout."
A knockout and a tobacco picker. She and her sisters picked 'bacca during harvest seasons near Butler County. They'd been doing it since childhood.
They worked long hours, earned pennies, lived in bunk-cabins, and made new friends. Think: summer camp for poor folks.
By age seventeen, she was still picking each season. On weekends, she and her girlfriends hiked into the woods with the other workers. They lit bonfires, laughed. Some folks brought instruments and jelly-jars. Others wore Sunday shoes.
There she met a skinny boy. He caught her eye. There was something about him. He asked her to dance. She said yes.
It didn't take long to know him—they both worked in the drying barn. She'd string blanket-sized leaves onto pine
rods. He'd climb the rafters, hanging them.
He was her first boy. For two summers they kissed. And two summers they picked side by side. When he asked her to marry, her answer was no surprise.
Then, the worst.
Only one day before their courthouse wedding, she and her sisters went into town to buy a skirt-suit for the ceremony. She walked up a flight of steps, carrying her sister's baby. She slipped.
She dropped the infant on the pavement. The baby was fine, but she wasn't. She busted her neck. They sent her to Tallahassee. Doctors said she might never walk again.
They say he refused to leave her bedside. Not even for food.
After staying motionless for weeks, her temper wore thin. She hollered, told him to leave. She said he deserved a girl in good health, not someone who might need a wheelchair.
…