What is it about a wedding?
Here I was, at 75, dancing with a Black woman and thinking pretty hard that I would be an adulterer before this night was over.
Okay, I could blame the alcohol. I was at least four beers into the post-wedding party, not really a formal reception, more a party. At my age, I figured I was at least twice as old as most of the people here and more like three times the age of many of them.
And the pot had something to do with it. I was flattered, actually, when I walked out, smelled the special aroma of a joint burning, and had been invited to join the group. So I was buzzing from the alcohol and the pot when this Black woman approached me and asked, "Care to dance, White Man?"
I looked her up and down, and she was worth the look.
I have no idea what you might call that garment she wore. It was all bright patterns and colors, something you would expect to see in a formal tribal dance of celebration somewhere in the Africa of Tarzan. It covered every square inch of her skin except her face and hands. Well, the tops of her feet peeked out from time to time, big feet with the sandals she wore showing the dark skin and interesting little tufts of hair at the tops of her toes.
It was her face, though, that had me thinking adulterous thoughts. I can't say that she was pretty, but she was striking in that way any exotic creature draws the eye. This was the face of a woman whose genetic lineage had never been corrupted by a randy overseer. Her skin was the color of cocoa, so dark the word Black actually made sense. She had the broad nose and thick lips of her race and when she smiled, ivory teeth looked bright white but that was only the contrast with her skin. Her eyes were so dark they could be called black too although if you looked closely there was a hint of brown. I tried to imagine the strength in her arms it had taken to use a hairpick for God only knows how long to fashion kinky hair into that beautiful round cap.
I had a quick memory of some silly rom-com movie I had seen once where one of the white actors kept referring to his Black love interest as his "Nubian Goddess."
I was looking at a Nubian Goddess.
So I took her hands in mine and said, "Care to dance, Negress."
She smiled at that, a good smile, and said, "Very good."
The diction, the way she formed her vowels, the tone she used, and the pitch of her voice said a lot. This was an educated woman. I could picture her behind a well-tooled wooden desk reviewing written reports or, I thought more likely, standing in front of a classroom, no, a graduate-level seminar, sharing rather than lecturing. She had that look to her.
In the flat sandals she was a couple of inches shorter than my 5'10" and my hand on her back quickly discovered that there was nothing but her under the, dammit, what is that thing.
Hang on while I google it.
Okay.
In the flat sandals she was a couple of inches shorter than my 5'10" and my hand on her back quickly discovered that there was nothing under her Kanga but, well, her.
And I liked, very much, that she didn't seem to object to my hand's wandering.
"You like what you're finding there, White Man?" she asked. And her voice, no, that's not right, her diction changed subtly. This wasn't a question asked by the business executive or the college professor, this was a woman who might wait tables or assemble boxes in a factory.
"I do, babygirl," I said, trying for the tones I heard from time to time in movies featuring Black actors and dialogue.
"Mmmmmmm," she hummed and it felt like I had struck some sort of a nerve even if I wasn't sure exactly what it was.
She leaned back enough to meet my eyes with those deep black pools of her own eyes.
"Do you want me, Phillip?" she asked and there was the business executive or the college professor again in her words, not to mention the superior knowledge she had since she knew my name and I had no idea what hers was.
"Oh yes, my Nubian Goddess," I said, dipping into my film lore.
She stopped suddenly, making me almost stumble.
It was one of those timeless moments and I just knew everyone in the place was looking at us. In a movie, the rest of the dance floor would have been darkened subtly and an equally subtle spotlight would have illuminated us for the conversation that followed.
"No, Phillip, not a Goddess. Just a nigger slave to be bought and sold and used as my master chooses," she said, her voice still that of the professor but her words shocking my child-of-the-Civil-Rights-Movement sensibilities.
When I didn't say anything her face fell.
"I understand if you're not interested," she said, starting to turn away.
I caught her hand and pulled her back to face me.
"Yes, girl," I said, meeting and holding her eyes, "I want you. Now knock off the bullshit or I'll strap your black ass."
Once more the change was subtle, but it was there. I had said the right thing and she was, well, happy.
"Yassuh," she said, and suddenly I felt like it was 1860 and I had just come from the slave auction.
And for the first time in years, I suddenly got hard without taking one of my Viagra pills.
"Ah'll be yo good girl," she said, her back arching, pressing herself against my surprisingly hard dick.
My breath caught.
"What is your name?" I managed.
She looked up at me, pure sex incarnate, and said, "What do you want it to be?"
So I thought. What slave names had I heard in the movies, or in books?
"Okay, Eliza, let's go congratulate Stephen and Meg and slip out of here," I said.
"And slip into me?" she said, looking at me sidelong and giggling.
"If you're a good girl," I said.
She stopped at one of the young black men who had been in the wedding party, Taylor was the name that came to me of the hundred or so I had been introduced to that weekend.
"Honey," she said, and it was the college professor again, "Phillip here has offered me a ride and I think I'll take my tired self home. You young folks have fun now, okay?"
He hugged her, and said, "Okay, Mama, thank you so much for coming." When he released her he shook my hand and said, "Mr. Morgan, you be careful now, you hear. She's my Mama."
I grinned, shook, and said, "I'll keep her safe."