It's Just Lola (17 page)

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Authors: Dixiane Hallaj

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Biographical, #Historical, #Historical Fiction

BOOK: It's Just Lola
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Customers came in fits and starts,
some lingering
to admire the baby.  When Lola noticed the sky beginning to darken, she brought in the produce crates from the sidewalk
and wrapped Estela in her blanket
.  Javier helped close and lock the big doors.  Lola thanked him for the lunch and sent her thanks to his wife.  Javier said that his wife liked to cook, and she always sent enough lunch for himself and for Luis. 


Isn’t Luis married
?”  Lola saw a frown appear on Javier’s face and immediately added, “I’m sorry.  It

s not my place to ask.  I didn

t mean to pry.”

“No.  It just reminded me of why I

m locking the store.  Luis had to take his wife to the doctor again.”

“I’m so sorry.  I hope
the doctor
is
helpful.

“D
octors give him hope.  Without hope, a man has nothing.”

Lola nodded
, thinking of her own
hopes and
worries

She really had to find a new place to live.
  “Javier,
may
I put a sign in your barbershop asking about a room to rent?”

“What should I
write on it
?

“I’ll write it out and bring it tomorrow for you to see.”

IX. October 1908: Still age 14

 

“L
ola, I
saw your sign in Javier’s shop asking for a room to rent
.
  I see you’ve put another one here.

  Mehmet set her lunch on the counter and picked up Estela.  A broad smile lit his face as Estela responded to his attentions.


I’ve tried asking people, but I hate to bother the customers.  Our
living quarters are only temporary
, and now that I need to work all day, I
don’t
have time to look
.
  I hope the signs work.
” 


It happens
that I have to go
back to Turkey
for a few months on business

You and your sister are welcome to stay at
my place
while I’m gone.

“But what about your wife?”

“I live alone.  The apartment will be empty, and it would give me pleasure to have you and your sister live there.” 

“But you don’t know anything about us.”

“I know more about you than you think.  I know that my friend Luis is pleased with your honesty and has trusted you with his shop in this difficult time.

“I’ll show you the place when you close the shop this evening.”

Lola
shook her head,
rememb
ering
the last time she

d accepted such an invitation.  “No, I couldn’t
.

Mehmet looked at her for a moment and then burst into the deep warm laugh that Lola had learned to enjoy.  She did not enjoy it now.  She
felt herself blush
.  He was laughing at her
.
 

“Forgive me, Lola.  I was laughing at myself.  It

s been so long since I

ve been in the company of ladies that I quite forgot my manners.  I

ll ask Javier’s wife to accompany us.  Would that be all right?”

Lola
smiled
and nodded.  “Where do you live?  I always see you coming out of the barber shop.”

“Yes.  That’s where I live.”

“In the barber shop?”

“No,” Mehmet gave a small chuckle, “I live on the third floor.  Javier and his wife live over the shop, and I live above them.  I rent from Javier.”

“We
expect to
pay rent.”


No, y
ou

d be doing me a favor.  Empty houses attract insects and mold.  Come over with Javier when he locks the store.”  Mehmet smiled and gave a small bow as he left. 

Lola was amazed
at
the size of the
apartment
.
  It was palatial
.
  There was a central living room, a kitchen and bathroom, and three other rooms.  One was Mehmet’s bedroom; another was filled with boxes that Mehmet said were
trade
goods he was taking with him; the third contained a desk, a chair, and cabinets. 

“This is beyond our wildest hopes
,
” she
said
as she clapped her hands in excitement.  “Thank you, Mehmet
.
”  Impulsively she threw her arms around him and immediately withdrew as she realized what she had done.

“I leave in a week,” he said.  “The rent is paid for a year, but I expect to return in six to eight months.  I sail for San Francisco, and will take a train to New York.  If I can’t find a ship going to Constantinople, I’ll go to Europe and travel home from there.  I’ll stay there a few months.  I can’t tell exactly how long it

ll take, but I

ll be back.”

La Señora was relieved when they told her they would be leaving; she had heard that Magdalena would be returning soon.  They took Uncle to the new address and had him leave
most
of the uniforms there.

Lola was content.  She had a comfortable home with all the modern conveniences she had dreamed of having. 
Between her
job
and their
dressmaking,
she felt secure
.  Life was not perfect, but it was certainly improving
.

The morning after they moved, Lola went to work feeling happy—until she saw Luis.  Her heart
sank and tears sprang to her eyes.  “Oh, Luis.”  She didn’t know what else to say.

“The doctor says there’s nothing more he can do.
  He says it’s up to God now.
”  Luis rubbed his hand across his forehead.  “Damn!”  He slammed his hand on the
counter
.  “I’m not even sure whether there’s really nothing more he can do, or if it’s just that there’s no more money to pay.
  He comes every day, and charges us every day, and then walks away and says there’s nothing he can do.

“That’s terrible.”
  She wanted to comfort him and
tell him that God
would help him
—she didn’t believe it, but it sounded comforting.  She
wanted to
tell him
that
doctors were
greedy charlatans,
and they hadn’t helped her mother either. 
Well, maybe not all doctors were greedy charlatans.

“I know a
very nice
doctor.  He lets patients pay him later if they don’t have money. 
Maybe he can do something for your wife. 
At the very least, he can give you another opinion.”
  She felt almost guilty when she saw the hope flare in
Luis’
eyes.  What if Doctor Hernandez couldn’t help?  Was it cruel to give him hope?  No, he had to know if
money could have saved his wife or not.  She gave him directions to the clinic.

She was happy to see Luis smiling the next morning.  “Doctor Hernandez gave me some medicine.  He says she

s very sick, but he thinks this new medicine will help.  He also said that unless she gets worse, he only needs to see her once a week.”

Enriqueta
began building fantasies again. 
She dreamed of buying a place
of
their own and
made them save as much money as possible, saying they would need the money when Mehmet came home.    Lola
knew it was unrealistic
, but she went along with Enriqueta.  Concha turned out to be a good cook, and Javier’s wife visited often, helping them learn where to shop and how to deal with problems such as the trials of first teeth. 

Over the next few weeks, Luis’s wife improved enough that he could come to work for a few hours a day while the children were in school. 
Lola welcomed the time to help with the sewing.  She
talked Enriqueta into letting her buy some material to make new dresses for all of them. Lola even bought some old hats that she snipped and clipped until they looked stylish and attractive.  Enriqueta agreed it was time for them to begin looking like ladies again.  Lola
laughed
.  She would never be lady enough to satisfy Victoria and her other sisters. 

Enriqueta twirled and posed in her new stylish dress declaring that she now felt that she could show her face in public.  Lola
enjoyed seeing
her sister strut and simper just as she had before what Lola thought of as The Downfall.  Concha was flushed with excitement as she modeled her modest gray dress and put on one of the three white aprons she would wear over it.  She had never had anything so grand before—and the material was brand new
.
 

The following day Lola put on her new dress and hat, polished her worn shoes
, and
lined the thin soles with paper and felt from the old hats.  Satisfied with her appearance, she
walked
to the doctor’s office.  She waited until the last patient left before she went in to see him. 

She laughed when he
asked the nature of her malady

“I came to thank you for helping my friend Luis, and to ask if you

re still willing to let me look at your books.”

He stared at her for long seconds.  “Lola?”  She nodded, suppressing her laughter.   “I didn’t recognize you.  You look...you look...”  Then he started laughing.  “The last time you were here, I made sure your hands were clean before I let you touch my books—and I wouldn’t let you take them to the waiting room for fear you

d walk off with them.
  Today you’re a different person.

“No, I’m the same person, and I still want to learn more about medicine—especially birthing.” 
When she left, she had a precious medical book under her arm, a reading assignment, and an appointment to see him in two days.  The next appointment lasted much longer, and she came home with another book.

As soon as the door of the apartment closed behind her, Lola threw her hat into the air and let out a whoop of glee.  Enriqueta and Concha came racing to see what had happened.

“Guess what?  The doctor agreed to
train
me, and he
’l
l let me work with him
.
  Isn’t that wonderful?”  She
was
dancing with excitement. 

“Oh, Miss Lola, that

s wonderful
.

 
Concha grabbed her hands and had a twirl around the room with her.
  “
You

ll be a real nurse
.
” 

Enriqueta sniffed. 
“I
’ll
admit that it

s not quite as common as being a shopkeeper, but it isn’t very ladylike
.

Lola was
hurt
that her sister refused to share her triumph, but then she laughed until tears came to her eyes.  “Enriqueta, a few days ago we were all living in a single room in a…in a,” she was reluctant to finish the sentence.  She was laughing about Enriqueta’s airs of being a lady, but she still had trouble saying words she had been brought up to consider improper.

“A whorehouse?” asked Concha.

“Where did you learn that word?” asked Enriqueta sharply, causing Lola to start laughing again.

Enriqueta tried to frown, but she soon joined Lola in laughter.  “I wish you the best of luck with it—just promise not to tell me any details.”

The next
weeks
were exciting for Lola.  She spent her mornings with Estela in the shop and went home for the midday meal and to change clothes for her afternoon in the clinic.  She had made herself a plain gray dress and carried her white aprons.  Enriqueta chided her for dressing like a servant, but Lola replied that she had to wash it frequently so the plainer the better.

Rosita and Gabriela came
to see them.  Gabriela wanted a “day dress” to wear when she visited her family—even if she had to pay full price now.  Lola said they would sew the dress for half price, ignoring Enriqueta’s nudge.  Then Lola asked if they knew other “entertainers,” and if they could spread the word about their dressmaking. 
O
ther “entertainers”
began coming
to them as well. 

Javier’s wife was impressed by the dresses the girls had made for themselves
, but said that having trollops in the house all the time would discourage other customers.  Lola decided that they would schedule appointments for the working women on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, or Thursdays.  Enriqueta cut it to Wednesdays and Thursdays.

“When we have enough other customers, we can cut them out altogether.”


No we can’t,
Enriqueta
.
R
emember that without them we

d still be under Uncle’s thumb.”
T
hey soon had
a
steady
trickle of
work
sewing
for the women of the neighborhood.

Enriqueta loosened the purse strings, and everyone got new shoes and another dress.  The babies became cuter and cuter as they grew and developed their own personalities.  Lola had finally become a modern woman.  She and her sister were independent and comfortable.  What more could they want? 

Lola used the scraps from their sewing to make colorful pillows for the living room, and they embroidered a few samplers to liven up the bare walls.  Lola thought that Mehmet might like the additions. 
Sometimes
she
had a feeling something was lacking in her life, but she didn’t know what it could be.  Unlike Enriqueta, she did not think money was the answer.  Lola chided herself for worrying over nothing, and turned back to the latest book she had borrowed from the doctor’s library.  Dr. Hernandez had promised to take her with him the next time he went to a birthing.  She hoped she would soon be allowed to call herself a midwife.

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