– Not a contest
entry, because I wrote it as she told me the story. But a good family story, so
here goes.
Many of us older people have trouble
remembering what happened yesterday. Or this morning. Or, often, five minutes
ago. But often, we still have a pretty good long term memory.
Take me for example. I have memories of
several things that happened to me when I was two years old. And, I can
sometimes remember what my thought processes were, long before I could talk at
all. Although I do have to admit, I couldn't talk a bit until I was nearly
four.
We pretty well like to tell our old
stories, and when we run dry, we just start repeating. Again and again. Or
maybe you noticed.
Most all of us have a few, or at least
one, really good story mixed in. If
one just takes time to listen to a person who has lived a long time. Such was the case with Dorothy Bell.
Dorothy, as a young girl, lived near
Gurdon, Arkansas. It was December of 1942. (Dorothy Bell, you see, has an
amazing memory of dates, times, places.)
She was living with her mama, Artie Mae, and her father. Things weren't
going well between her parents along about then. She knew her Papa had just
started having an affair with that big, red haired woman that lived out that
way.
Papa and Dorothy Bell were sitting at the
kitchen table one day. Artie Mae, just recovering from a miscarriage, had gone
out to the well to get a bucket of water. The well was right beside the kitchen
door. When she walked back in, something just set her papa off. Dorothy Bell didn't
know what set him off at that moment, but both Dorothy's parents had pretty
well been on a short fuse for some time, ever since his dallying about had come
to light. Well, Papa just jumped up and hit Artie Mae really hard with his
fist, breaking his little finger. He knocked her clear across the room and up
against the wall, and she was unconscious for a time. Papa sat back down.
Artie Mae finally came around; she slowly
picked up a piece of stove wood, and set in on Papa. As Dorothy Bell said, “she
just totally beat him into a pulp.”
They lived together three more years, but
things were different after that. For one thing, Papa never hit Artie Mae
again.
After the divorce, Artie Mae and Dorothy
Bell lived together for a long time. They move to Dallas, to a house with six
apartments. They had a neighbor, Dewey, who came to see them from time to time.
One day, he showed up with a sorta mean looking young feller, who they had
never seen before. Seems his name was Malcomb Wayne. In the course of the
conversation, a neighbor lady walked by, and Malcomb Wayne made an off color
remark. Artie Mae didn't seem to care for that, and let him know it.
Malcomb Wayne never came back with Dewey
again. Time rocked on. On Halloween night of l957, Dorothy Bell had the Asian
flu, and they had both gone to bed early. Both their beds were in the same
bedroom.
“I just heard a screen being cut,” Artie
Mae said. Then, they listened hard. They both heard it. They quietly got up,
Dorothy Bell was given a claw hammer. “If you get a shot at him, try to hit him
real hard right in the head,” her mother told her.
There was only one other weapon in the
apartment for Artie Mae. Seems the last tenant had left a really big, long,
custom made butcher knife. They tiptoed to the door of the room the sound was
coming from. It was dark, but in the moonlight, they could see a figure
climbing through the cut screen of the back porch. He flipped out a switch
blade knife.
Artie Mae and Dorothy Bell started running
for the front door, then headed down the stairs; they could hear him running
behind them. They were nearly at the bottom of the stairs when he caught them.
The switch blade flashed, and a long, deep gash was cut in Dorothy Bell's
forearm. That scar is still visible today. Blood was spurting. Artie Mae took a
swing at him with the big butcher knife, and cut off an ear, barely hanging on
by a little skin. Blood was gushing from him too, even worse than Dorothy Mae's
slice. As Artie Mae was taking another long stab at him, his fist hit her arm,
and the knife went sliding across the floor in the dark. Dorothy Bell knew she
just had to beat him to it, as she ran and slid across the floor.
He turned his attention to Artie Mae,
knocking her down, up against the wall, hitting her again and again with his
fists. When Dorothy Bell found the knife, she headed into the fray. Her Mother
was getting beaten badly. Dorothy Mae swung hard, not stabbing, just whacking
hard with the blade, right between the shoulder blades. Every time the blade
landed, she said, “Let her loose.” She swung again. And again. When each one
landed, she ordered “Turn her loose.” After about ten blows, he was losing a
lot of blood, getting too weak to continue. The Police had been called by a
neighbor who heard the fuss. The police were accompanied by a long black
hearse. The hearse doubled for an ambulance in those days.
Artie Mae told Dorothy Bell later, “You
really hit him hard. I could feel every lick you hit, jarring his body into
mine!”
From
the ambulance lights, they could see him. It was Malcomb Wayne. He was put on a
stretcher, none too gently, and slid into the hearse/ambulance. Then Dorothy
Bell was loaded into the front seat.
They were taken to Parkland
Hospital, on Harry Hinds Blvd., the same hospital President Kennedy would later
be taken to after he was shot.
Dorothy Bell waited outside a long time,
while Malcomb Wayne was being attended to. Then they sewed her up too. Artie
Mae, though beaten badly, didn't get a ride in the hearse. Not enough blood on
her, and the hearse was pretty well full.
Later, in court, Dorothy Bell was filmed
testifying. She got to see herself on TV that night, Pony tail and all. A very
rare thing in those early days of TV and video cameras. The judge said to Malcomb Wayne, “If those
two women had killed you, there's not a thing I could have done about it. You
weren't supposed to be there.” Turns out, that was the extent of his
punishment.
A few days later, Dorothy Bell and Artie
Mae went to get the stitches out. As they sat in the waiting room, Malcomb
Wayne came in, sat down right behind them. Dorothy Bell watched him out of the
corner of her eye. He was pulling out his switchblade; he held it a few
moments, looked at her hard for awhile, but then he thought better of it, and
started cleaning his fingernails. He never bothered those two ladies that day.
They had a shock when they got home. The
landlord told them to move out. The only time ever, Dorothy Bell says, they
were evicted.
In
1976, Dorothy bell moved to Denton, Texas.
Her mother later moved up to join her in a large apartment complex. In
1980, they saw a new tenant move in one day. Artie May asked Dorothy Bell, “Did
you see who that was?”
Dorothy Bell shook her head. They both
knew. Malcomb Wayne and his Mama. But he never got anywhere close to those two
women again.
Dorothy Bell and her mother later moved to
Arkadelphia, Arkansas. Artie Mae passed away a few years ago. Dorothy Bell now
lives alone, quietly. She still has many good stories to tell. A long life and
very sharp long term memory makes her well worth visiting, especially if you
like good stories!
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