![]() ![]() The Hussy Shoes By Nancy Beeler |
|
When I
was a child, I sometimes visited my Aunt Rita. She was my godmother and
because of this I was afforded special privileges. One of the most
enjoyable was playing in her closet. It was crammed with shoes and
clothing I knew she would outgrow shortly.
Rita
would buy her clothing about three sizes smaller than she wore and would
wear an item at least once to prove she could wear that size. This always
made me a happy camper because I knew it would soon be mine.
Getting into the much-too-small clothing required that she squeeze her
body into three rubber Playtex girdles. These were the ones that had small
holes in them so the skin could breathe. We would struggle with those
girdles until her face was red and sweat poured down her body. By then, it
was impossible to pull the girdles up where she said. She wore a bra that
went down over her hips and the girdles.
After
all of this, I would shove the flesh down from her large breasts and tuck
as much loose flesh from her legs as possible up under the girdles. After
all of this, a Scarlett O’Hara she wasn’t.
Aunt
Rita could barely walk with all of this paraphernalia, but she would go to
work and tell all her co-workers, “Look how much weight I’ve lost! I’m in
a size eight. Look at the tag!” as she would turn around and pull it out
for them to see. Sadly, I used to watch them laugh behind her back when I
was allowed at work with her.
It
didn’t seem to bother her that her feet were larger than average, and it
is a wonder that I didn’t fall and break a leg playing in those gunboats,
but seldom do little girls fall when they are playing grown-up.
My
favorite pair was the black patent leather ones. Rita would always whisper
to me, “Now don’t take them outside where anyone can see them.”
I
asked her why, one day, and she told me, “Only colored people are allowed
to wear black patent leather, and HUSSIES are all who wear straps like
those.”
I only
knew a few colored people, but one man was my favorite person. He worked
for another aunt, and sometimes he would play like he was Bo Jangles and
dance up a storm in his black patent leather shoes with the big steel taps
on them. I always thought he should be in the movies.
I
played with those hussy shoes for years until they actually fit me. I knew
that Rita had been wearing them but she would never talk about it. It
surely must have been out of town because the family would have laughed
her silly if they had ever seen her in them.
Those
shoes were all straps, little tiny ones that wrapped around the ankles.
The heels were spiked and high.
During
the years while I was growing up, it gave Rita great pleasure trying to
teach me how to be and act like a lady. She taught me all the social
graces: how to dance, dine properly, how to dress, how to speak, and which
people to hang out with. I guess she succeeded because I turned out pretty
good. I appreciated all of this.
In
spite of everything, I did grow up and become a likable person. I was
socially accepted and busy during my high school years. There were many
occasions where I was to be formally dressed and Rita was always the first
one to my rescue.
On one
such event, when I was a senior in high school, I was invited to a formal
tea being given by a friend of Rita. She insisted I go even though I did
not want to.
She
had picked out and bought me a beautiful pink dress that I loved and a
pair of black shoes I hated. As soon as I could, I went into her closet
and put the hussy shoes in a brown paper bag and slipped them out in the
car, where I hid them under the seat.
The
big day finally came. I was dressed up in my frilly pink frock and those
ugly black shoes she had so carefully picked out.
Rita
drove me there. While she was not paying any attention, I put the bag with
the shoes under my coat.
When
she let me off, I went straight to the restroom to change my shoes. Those
hussy shoes were noticed immediately. Everyone was stating at them and
finally someone asked me where I had bought them. The girls were sincere,
not sarcastic as I had first thought. I told them that my aunt had bought
them and I didn’t know where.
When
all of the formalities were over, there were a lot of pretty young girls
bored to death. As with any occasion, some of us thought it was time for
the boys to break into this shindig. The tea would be a good time ball in
spite of the society dames who had so carefully maneuvered it. All of a
sudden, the doors opened up and a whole lot of guys appeared with stereos
and music. My hussy shoes were all over the dance floor and ended up being
the talk of the tea I had dreaded so much. |