“You’re Joan of Arc now, are you?” Mom said.
“I want to go on strike, Jack—”
“Loreda,” Mom said sharply. “It’s Mr. Valen. Now go upstairs and let me speak to him. I’ll deal with you later.”
“You can’t make me—”
“Go, Loreda,” Jack said evenly. He and Mom stared at each other.
“Okay, but I’m striking,” Loreda said.
“Go,” Mom said.
Loreda turned away and trudged up the stairs. She didn’t care what her mother said. She didn’t care how much trouble she got in or how dangerous it was.
Sometimes a person had to stand up and say enough was enough.
* * *
“HOW LONG HAVE YOU been back in Welty?” Elsa asked Jack when they were alone.
“A week or so. I was going to send word to you.”
“Oh, I’d say you sent word.” She stared at him, wishing that things were different, that she was different, that she had her daughter’s fire and courage. “She’s a fourteen-year-old girl, Jack, who snuck out in the middle of the night and walked a mile to get here. You know what could have happened to her?”
“What does that tell you, Elsa? She cares about this.”
“What does that prove? We all know it’s wrong, but your solution won’t make our lives better. You’ll just get us fired, or worse. Our survival hangs by a thread, do you get that?”
“I get it,” he said. “But if you don’t stand up, they’ll bury you, one cent at a time. Your daughter understands that.”
“She’s fourteen,” Elsa said again.
Jack lowered his voice to match hers. “A fourteen-year-old who is
picking cotton all day. I assume Ant is, too, because it’s the only way for you to feed them.”
“Are you judging me?”
“Of course not,” he said. “But your daughter is old enough to decide for herself about this.”
“Says the man with no children.”
“Elsa—”
“I’m making the decision for her.”
“You should teach her to stand up for herself, Elsa. Not to lie down.”
“And now you are definitely judging me. If you thought I was a brave woman, you’ve misjudged me.”
“I don’t think so, Elsa. I think you believe it, though, which is tragic.”
“Stay away from Loreda, Jack. I mean it. I won’t let her be a casualty in this war you’re playing at.”
“No one is playing, Elsa.”
She walked away.