Destiny's Daughters Read online




  Destiny’s Daughters

  Donna Hill Parry “EbonySatin” Brown Gwynne Forster

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  http://www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  PROLOGUE

  MORE THAN THIS

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  LIFE’S LITTLE MYSTERIES

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  THE JOURNEY

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  EPILOGUE

  DESTINY’S DAUGHTERS

  Copyright Page

  PROLOGUE

  Essie Mae Holmes wiped dime-sized sweat beads from her forehead as she pulled the third and final baby from Minnie Lou. Her sixteen-year-old great niece stopped pushing when the second baby girl failed to yield to her efforts and had appeared only halfway out of the birth canal. Thirty-three hours of labor had left Minnie Lou Holmes limp and incoherent. “Lord, child, I tried to tell you, but your head was so hard, you wouldn’t listen to a soul.”

  Essie Mae finally freed the precious little pink thing from the birth canal and severed her connection to her mother. Midwifery with one baby was hard enough. Tending to the mother and baby always left her exhausted; she needed at least one other set of hands to help her with these three screaming little ones. After cleaning their air passages, she placed them side by side on the clean white sheet that she had spread on the floor next to the makeshift delivery bed. She rubbed her hands up and down her sides as the three of them screamed, each in a slightly different pitch, while the child/woman who gave them life lay still.

  She moved as fast as her feeble body would carry her to the other side of the small kitchen where she had boiled a large pot of water and laid out clean towels. She had known Minnie Lou’s belly was too round for her to be with only one baby.

  That first baby didn’t need any help cranking up her lungs. Her little voice started off slow and mellow like a clarinet and was soon going full blast like a tuba in a marching band. Essie Mae took another look at her oldest sister’s baby girl and saw that she still hadn’t moved. “I think your mama should name you Clarissa Mae, she said to the one with lungs like a tuba. I bet you gonna be a singer.” She bathed Clarissa carefully and wrapped her tight in the towel that felt too stiff and hard for the new baby’s tender skin.

  She moved to the next baby and bathed her with the same care. “Now, weren’t you the stubborn one. It was like you were jammed up in there. I think your mama should name you Jamilla.” She kissed the baby as she fell asleep sucking her tiny fist. “I bet that’s not going to be the last time you’re in a tight spot before it’s all over for you.” She wrapped Jamilla in the towel and laid her next to her sister on the table.

  The tired old woman picked up the last of the beautiful baby girls. Her skin was thin and seemed as fragile as a lettuce leaf. She washed her with more care than the others. She worried about wrapping her in the rough towel, but circumstances and energy prevented her from doing anything different. “Well, little one, I guess I’m gonna have to name you Leticia.” She began to hum “Amazing Grace” as she took Leticia to her bedroom and placed her in the center of the small bed.

  She took the twenty steps back to the kitchen, refusing to look in the direction of Minnie Lou as she picked up Jamilla and Clarissa, and then placed them next to their sister. She said a short prayer before she went back to the kitchen to do what she knew she had to do. “Lord, these here babies gonna have a hard row to hoe. You know my condition, and you know I just can’t take care of them. Help me find them a good home. In Jesus’ name. Amen.”

  Essie Mae’s weakened condition and fatigue weighed her down. She looked around the kitchen. Beneath her feet the daylight found its way through the naked floorboards. The shelves around the wall held meal, flour, sugar, a grease can, and a few jars of canning from her friend and neighbor, Gertrude Jefferson. The two chairs neatly placed at the wood table looked like even a child’s weight could make them collapse.

  “Lord, I just don’t have no means to take care of these babies. She finally moved to where Minnie Lou lay on the soiled old bunk bed, her legs still in the birthing position. Essie Mae gently put them down and covered her. She touched her skin. It felt cool, the sweat long ago dried. She was still, too still. She placed her left index finger beneath her niece’s nostrils and confirmed what she already knew. Those three little girls were orphans.

  “Lord, what am I going to do with these babies? I can hardly feed myself, and I’m too sick to take care of one, much less three,” she said aloud again. Now she spoke to Minnie Lou. “I told you to leave that no-count Hosea alone. I knew you’d end up with a heap of trouble. Now your trouble’s my trouble.” With much effort she picked up the rags from the floor, went back to the table and retrieved the washcloth she’d used on the babies, and began to bathe Minnie Lou. She didn’t have the strength to move her body so she could change the bloody bottom sheet, so she simply covered her with a clean one.

  She heard a faint whimper from the other room and thought she’d have to find something for nourishment. She went to her change purse and counted out forty-three cents. Even if she had money for baby’s milk, she had neither a way to get to a store nor the strength to carry three babies. Gertrude had gone to town and wouldn’t be back until after dark. She boiled some water in a clean pot and added a teaspoon of Karo syrup. She didn’t have a baby bottle, so she found a dropper from a bottle of iodine, washed it, then boiled it in another pot and prepared to feed her charges.

  God being merciful to an old woman with a big heart, the babies only woke up once, and all at the same time. At daylight she fed them again before she walked the quarter-mile to Gertrude Jefferson’s. Moving around the mud puddles put there by the previous night’s rainstorm added steps that Essie Mae just couldn’t afford to take.

  “Minnie Lou’s dead,” she told Gertrude as she opened the screen door, “and she left three little girls.”

  “For the Lord’s sake!” Gertrude grabbed her chest as though to protect her heart.

  With almost no emotion, Essie Mae asked, “Can you ask your husband to take her to the funeral home in his wagon?”

  “Three?” Gertrude needed to catch up. “Uh . . . he sure will. No need to even ask such a thing.”

  “Much obliged.” Essie Mae swayed a little.

  “Come on in and sit a spell.” Gertrude moved to the side so Essie Mae could enter the kitchen. “Let me make you some tea.”

  Essie Mae stepped inside. The neat house had splashes of color throw
n in with the modest furnishings. Gertrude took in laundry, and her husband, Willie, was a blacksmith in town. Far from rich, or even well off, Essie Mae would guess that Gertrude had more than forty-three cents to her name.

  Gertrude set a cup in front of her friend, and then sat in the chair across from hers. “If you knew who the father is, he might give you a little help.”

  “Ain’t no fathers in this family—yours, neither.”

  Ignoring Essie Mae’s sarcasm, she said, “Too bad. I wish there was something we could do, but you know how it is with us. We’re just making it.”

  Essie Mae blew on the hot liquid as she looked around the room and grunted, “Humph.”

  “You want me to let Miss Jennifer, the town clerk over in Dale, know so she can make up the birth certificates?”

  “Yeah, I reckon. Can’t do it myself, ’cause I don’t want to leave ’em alone long enough to go into town, and I sure can’t carry three babies.”

  “I understand.” She touched her friend’s hand. “You don’t worry none now, ya hear? You gonna be blessed.”

  Essie Mae only sighed.

  “Let me get a pencil and paper so I can write down the names,” Gertrude said as she got up from the table.

  “Leticia, Jamilla, and Clarissa Holmes,” Essie Mae said as soon as Gertrude sat down. “Please put it on their birth certificates that they’s triplets.”

  Gertrude handed her a box of Farina and a five-dollar bill. “What are you going to do with them?”

  “Thanks, Gertrude. Nobody wants three babies.” Essie Mae pushed herself up with both hands. “People ain’t got that kind of money, and especially nobody around here. If you hear of anybody who’ll take a baby girl, let me know.”

  “I will.” Gertrude looked closely at her. “You look as if you need to see a doctor.”

  “Ain’t no doctor coming out here in these Georgia sticks, and I can’t leave these children by themselves.”

  As the days dragged on slowly, Essie Mae became despondent over her rapidly deteriorating health; she asked Gertrude if she could watch the babies overnight so she could get a full night’s sleep. “I don’t have the strength to even feed them tonight,” she said weakly. The kindness of her neighbors had brought bottles and a few baby clothes, which she had packed for the girls’ night with Gertrude. As she left, Essie Mae hugged and thanked Gertrude. That night she died peacefully in her sleep.

  Alarmed at the fact that she now had Essie Mae’s burden, Gertrude set out to rid herself of the children as quickly as possible. Through a neighbor she found out there was a woman in California who wanted a baby in the worst way and would pay. Gertrude gave the woman one week to come get the baby. If she played her cards right, she’d be able to collect more than two thousand dollars. When the woman came with her husband and less than the bounty she required, she sold her only Jamilla because she was the fussiest. Within a week she’d found a woman at her church who worked in a group home in New Orleans who had space for only one of the sisters, and she took Leticia.

  After more than a month, she hadn’t found a home for Clarissa, so she took her to Atlanta and left her in the bathroom of the courthouse. The Department of Children and Family Services was notified, and Clarissa became an entity in the Georgia Foster Care system.

  MORE THAN THIS

  Donna Hill

  Chapter 1

  Leticia turned gently onto her side. Slowly her eyes fluttered open against the early summer sun that pushed its way through the slits of the bronze-toned blinds. She emitted a slow, deep sigh. The call from her friend in the police department warned her that her days were numbered. They were close to shutting her down, and she needed to make herself scarce—and fast.

  Car horns and the sound of sirens floated up from the street ten stories below, overlooking fashionable Central Park West. Even at six A.M., the city was wide awake, pulsing with energy. Her city, the one she’d made her own fifteen years earlier. Today she would put it all behind her. She had no choice.

  The left side of her bed bounced slightly with the movement of weight from the body next to hers. She glanced over her shoulder. Too bad she would have to leave Norman. He was one of the nice ones. Generally she didn’t allow her clients to stay overnight. Once she’d been paid and they’d had their evening together, she sent them smiling on their merry way with promises of more. It had been that way since she took up residence in New York, having moved her “business” from Atlanta. She’d foolishly believed that she could finally make a home in the Big Apple, but that was not to be. Last night she’d made an exception, and Norman couldn’t have been happier. It was the least she could do, since she knew they would never set eyes on each other again.

  She turned onto her back and stared up at the mirror set in her ceiling. At thirty-three, she still looked good, she absently mused. Her thighs were toned, her breasts still sat up firmly on her chest, her stomach was flat and devoid of any stretch marks. Her face was ordinary by most people’s standards, but she knew all the tricks of makeup and the magic that they could wield. As a result, she was more than attractive.

  However, it wasn’t her looks that got her through life—it was her street smarts and natural charisma. Leticia knew the potency of a smile, a look, the right word, a touch in the perfect spot—all as powerful as manna from heaven. She used them to her advantage.

  Everything many dreamed of, she possessed: important friends, a sizeable bank account, the ability to travel at will, live well, drive a new car every year, and more clothes and shoes than she could wear in a lifetime. Yes, she had everything—and nothing at all.

  The life she lived was filled with excitement, surely, but the secrets and the loneliness outweighed the benefits. The women whom she worked with couldn’t be considered friends, merely business associates, and the men—they were simply ships passing in the night. Most days she didn’t think about it much, but as she’d grown older, the desire to have something tangible grew with each passing year.

  She stared at her reflection and wondered if her estranged sisters had fared as well as she over the years. A heaviness settled in the center of her stomach. Did they have families? Were they happy? Did they ever think about her? Did it even matter after all this time? Never once did her sisters try to find her. They’d probably forgotten all about her years ago. Most of the time she forgot about them as well. Truth be told, she really knew no more about them than their last name Holmes and that their mother died in childbirth. At times she wasn’t really certain if the story the case worker at the group home told her about her family was the truth or some hurtful fiction. It had to be a lie, she often told herself. She couldn’t allow herself to believe that she had two sisters somewhere out in the world and each of the three had been sold off like cattle. If that was true, then Leticia certainly lived up to her heritage: she was sold for money and she was still selling herself for money decades later. Damn shame.

  She eased up and reached for her silk robe at the foot of the bed, careful not to disturb Norman. Standing, she slipped into it and went into the master bath, one of her favorite rooms in the spacious loft. It was a tropical paradise—a riot of brilliant colored flora and white orchids graced the sills and corners of the white walls. It was equipped with a Jacuzzi, sunken bathtub, double sink, and shower stall. It was her haven, where she went to think as her body was massaged by the jets of the Jacuzzi and she listened to the soft music piped in from hidden speakers. She turned on the water and poured in a cupful of jasmine-scented oil. Jazz saxophonist Kurt Whalum played discreetly in the background.

  As she slipped into the water and relaxed her head against the pillow, she closed her eyes. Quickly all the steps she’d put into place ran through her mind like a grocery list. She’d all but emptied her bank accounts. Her car was in storage. Her passport and identity papers were in order. She would leave most of her clothes and buy what she needed when she reached her destination. She had enough money to tide her over until she found something adequate to
do with her time. Yes, everything was in place. The water pulsed around her.

  Quietly reentering her bedroom, she pulled her two packed suitcases from the closet and sat them by the door. Her carryall contained her paperwork, and her money was sewn into the panels of her suitcases. She dressed soundlessly, put the right touches of makeup on her face, took her dark glasses from the dresser, looked once over her shoulder. Norman wouldn’t wake up for a few more hours from the sedative she’d slipped into his drink in the wee hours of the morning; by then she would be long gone. She hated good-byes. She’d said too many of them over the years.

  With suitcases in hand, her bag over her shoulder, she walked out and would never look back. Yet another new life lay ahead of her. What she would make of it only time would tell. But she was ready for the ride.

  Several hours later, the plane touched down in Florida. After retrieving her bags, she went directly to the car rental console and picked up the car that awaited her. The two-door Ford sedan was not what she was accustomed to, but it would have to do for the time being. Settling behind the wheel, she pulled out her map and studied her course. She would be in the heart of South Beach in less than an hour, barring any heavy traffic. South Beach, the East Coast getaway for the wealthy and wanna-bes, was the perfect place to get lost. Anytime of day or night the streets teemed with people, the hotels were constantly filled with stars of every ilk, and the concert halls and theaters couldn’t keep up with the number of shows and events that vied for space. Yes, she would fit right in. Smiling, she eased out into the traffic and wondered for a moment what Norman would think when he woke up and found her gone.

  As she drove along the streets of Miami, the array of hard, young, beautiful bodies filled the avenues. Color bursts before the eyes. Palm trees swayed ever so gently in the balmy breeze. High-end boutiques lined the streets, music blared from lounges, cafes, and clubs. The city vibrated with a barely controlled energy. Hot, hot, hot was the only thought that ran through her mind. She bobbed her head to the music of it all.