Saturday, November 2, 2024

Book Tour ~ The Missing Girl & Jessa is Back by Stacia Moffett

 


Historical Fiction

Date Published: Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Publisher: Peanut Butter Publishing

 

 

In rural Radford, Tennessee, in the 1950s, a white family is killed in an automobile accident.

Upon hearing the news of her parents’ and grandfather’s deaths, Jessa runs away with her dog, creating problems for her town, especially for the sheriff, her parents’ friends, and the Black community that falls under suspicion. Racial distrust shapes the town’s response to Jessa’s disappearance, and as the weeks stretch out, the weather poses increasing challenges for Jessa as she shelters in a hollow tree while attempting to provide for herself and her dog, Cassie. Help appears from an unexpected source as a family mystery is revealed.

The Missing Girl and the second book, Jessa Is Back, are placed right in the midst of “the good old days” and serve as a reminder of the unabashed nature and danger of white supremacy in the 1950s. These provide us an opportunity to examine the parallels in events unfolding today

 

Excerpt:

The Missing Girl

 

It was already dark in the forest, but Jessa and Cassie knew the way to the hollow oak,

Jessa’s secret tree, where she had a hideout. The tree had been her mother’s secret tree, too, and

of course her grandparents had known about it, but it had only gotten better since her mother had

played there. The entrance into the hollow tree bore the mark of a lightning strike. The gap

opened as a split between two massive roots, revealing the hollow core. Leaves had blown in

and cobwebs caught at her face as she crawled inside, but she brushed them away and collapsed

on the crisp, fragrant leaves. Cassie curled beside her, pressing her body in mute consolation for

the great hurt, and Jessa sobbed until she fell asleep

 

As she turned to leave, Jessa noticed Grandad’s jacket hanging on the back door. She lifted

it off the hook and buried her face in it, absorbing scents that evoked memories of riding on his

shoulders and being boosted into an apple tree. As she stood there, hugging the jacket,

Grandma's warm presence seemed to flow down the hall towards her. For a moment, everything

was whole again, and Jessa was wrapped in love. Then the magic was broken, the house cold

and empty, and Jessa in a panic to get out. She shoved the jacket through the open window and

slid through herself onto the porch, dragging the paper bag across the counter after her. She

surveyed the kitchen. Nothing seemed out of place, so she pulled the window nearly closed and

pushed the screen in firmly.

Gradually, Jessa was formulating a plan. She thought: I have lots of skills. If I live here and

take care of Cassie, it’ll prove I don’t need foster parents. After a while, I’ll go back to town and

show them I can cook, keep house, and go to school. I’ll carry on Daddy’s work with the school

board and tell them how much we’ve learned from Mr. Alton’s music program. I’ll convince

them to keep music in the white schools and add it to the colored school. I know I can do it!

 

“Rick, when you came to our house yesterday, asking about the girl, we both said we hadn't

seen her. That was true, but at breakfast, reading the paper, I recalled something. You see, I

went home for lunch with Laurene yesterday, as I always do, and I drive right by the Olsen

place. There was this old black pickup ahead of me. It stopped and Mr. and Mrs. Olsen got out.

They turned around, like to thank the driver, then rushed to their garage. Laurene and I figure

that must have been before they set out to get the old man. But the point is, as I was driving by

the truck, I noticed the truck driver was a colored man and I thought that was kinda unusual. It

wasn't until I read the Landsdowne paper that I realized there was suspicion of foul play, and

thought maybe I should report it.”

 

“Time to wash up,” she announced. Cassie dashed over, muddy and wet, and they went

down the bank together.

Along this stretch, the water spread out in a wide bend, creating a gravel beach that

extended far into shallow water. Cassie walked out and lapped, but Jessa waded out without

reaching water deep enough to scoop up a drink, so she ventured further. As she scooped up the

cold water her shoes sank deep in the sand. Chilled inside by the cold drink, miserable and

exhausted, she stood there, shaking, realizing there was no one to tell her to get out of those wet

shoes or run her a hot bath. She could hear Mommie’s gentle voice urging her to come in,

Grandad’s concerned admonitions, and Grandma clucking over how she was sure to catch her

death of cold. Nobody was left – Nobody cared… At home, her mother would have stripped off

her shoes and steam would already be rising from the bathtub. At her grandparent’s house, the

bathroom heater would have been turned on and warm water would be running in a tense stream

into the high claw-foot bathtub. Jessa’s teeth chattered. She was alone, frightened, and nobody

cared.

Cassie approached, seeking her hand with her cold nose.

 

Also in the Series


Historical Fiction

Date Published: Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Publisher: Peanut Butter Publishing


 

Jessa is a different person when she returns to her hometown.

The integrated schools in Oregon allowed her to form a friendship with a Black girl, and now she sees the local Jim Crow practices in Tennessee with new eyes. Supported by her Oregon relatives, she becomes an advocate not only for the inclusion of music throughout the school system of Radford, but also for friendships that cross racial lines. While she becomes a gadfly to the school board, her interactions with other members of her town precipitate crises that uncover support for her position as well as staunch opposition.

In the South, and also in the rest of the country, a long road stretches from the 1950s to the present, and we must judge how well we have lived up to the vision that Jessa’s discovery of interracial friendship revealed to her.


Excerpt:

Jessa is Back

 

Jessa wanted her new-found family to experience all the wonderful things that Tennessee

had to offer. Her parents had run a music store and loved all kinds of music, but they had never

been to the Grand Ole Opry in the few times they’d traveled to Nashville. It was always

something that they would get around to doing someday. Now, that would never happen, but

Jessa thought this would be a good opportunity for the Acrees to get to know Tennessee better, so she persuaded them to plan the train trip to arrive for the Saturday event.

They sat near the front of the bus for the ride downtown. The bus chugged its way up the

hill, made a turn, and stopped in the traffic. April tapped Jessa’s shoulder and pointed out the

window where they had a view into an alley. Halfway down the alley, colored children were

lined up by the fire escape stairs.

Jessa grimaced as she recognized what was going on – Negro children and some teenagers

were waiting in line to pay to see the matinee. The main line was in front of the theater, but they

couldn’t join that line or sit in the main auditorium. Instead, they would pay to climb the fire

escape stairs and be hidden in the balcony, out of sight from the main auditorium. Jessa thought

of Janie, and how much fun they had the last day of math class, beating out the boys in the

teacher's version of a spelling bee for geometry. If Janie were here, she would see that line…

Jessa began to count all the ways that Tennessee would separate Janie from her, just because Janie was Negro. She wondered whether Portland had laws that she didn’t know about and decided to write Janie and ask.

 

Jessa recalled evenings when her father had come home from a meeting of the School Board

so discouraged that he was ready to resign. They’d even insulted him, suggesting that his interest

in getting instrumental music on the curriculum was only a way to drum up business for the

family’s music store. That argument made sense to the other school board members but Jessa

knew why he dreamed of music in the schools. Among his fragmented memories of his parents,

his fondest were of his father playing a hammer dulcimer and his mother and father singing

together. After they and his sister and brothers died of the Spanish flu, he’d been transferred from one foster home after another, and after that, he’d worked to support himself and put himself through school. He’d never gotten a chance to play an instrument, and it had been many years before he even learned the name of the instrument his father had played.

 

Fran handed the jar to Jessa, who darted out the door. She turned to watch the two women

happily working elbow-to-elbow at the sink. There was an element of disbelief at the sight of the

white and colored woman talking and laughing together in her kitchen, and the topic, she

gathered, was their children. She felt left out. Soon, a stack of clean dessert plates stood waiting

for Fran to put away. Margaret was saying, “I do hope he’ll be able to go on with his music. He

really loves it! I don’t know what Sarah will want to do, but you should watch her dance when

Papa and Eddie play together – she’s a whirling dervish!”

“Well, she ought to have a chance to pursue whatever she wants to,” Fran found herself

saying.

“That’s right kind of you,” said Margaret, turning to her.

Fran looked as if she would burst out crying. Margaret said, “What’s the matter, honey?

Don’t cry – tell me what’s the matter.” She brushed her hands on the apron and reached out to

Fran, who was blubbering.

“Sometimes it just overwhelms me. We’ve always wanted to have children – I’d give

anything to have a lovely family like the two of you have!”

“You poor dear! It is sad when it’s that way! Aunt Helen and Uncle Adam never could

have children, and they just seemed to adopt the whole family to fill the gap.”

Karen felt a pang of conscience, remembering that they had taken Jessa away when Jack and

Fran had been ready to provide a home for her.

At that moment, Eddie and Michael burst in the kitchen door with Cassie, eager to show the

jar crawling with lightning bugs. “We collected them for Sarah – she can have them in her room

for a lamp to watch until she falls asleep, just like Jessa used to do!”

 

Mr. Wexler said, “I’m sorry, Jessamine. “There’s no way we can stretch the budget to add

music to Overbrook’s curriculum. We’re still struggling to cover the salary boost we gave the

Overbrook teachers.”

At the back of the room, Ted Hufford rose. “Mr. Chairman, may I be recognized?”

Everyone turned to look at the reporter.

“Certainly. The Radford Post’s reporter, Mr. Hufford, is recognized by the Chair.”

“As you know, as part of my job, I attend the board meetings and report on the deliberations

and actions taken. I seem to recall the discussion about the salaries at Overbrook, which were

hiked to bring them into line with those at the white schools, after many years of differential pay.

The action was adopted to meet the stipulations of Plessy vs. Brown. At best, it was a halfway

measure that didn’t address the real needs of the students and teachers at Overbrook.

Furthermore, it cannot have escaped the attention of the Board that last year’s Supreme Court

ruling supersedes Plessy vs. Brown. It will no longer be enough to maintain a ‘separate but equal’status for the colored and white schools.”

The board members stirred or leaned back in their chairs but nobody responded.

They were startled when Jessa spoke up. “It isn’t ‘separate but equal’ if the white kids have

music instruction and the colored kids don’t. If you have to have salaries that are the same then

don’t you have to have instruction that is the same?”

 

Looking through the kitchen window, Fran watched the team working on the deck and

carried on a conversation with herself. It definitely took some getting used to, the sight of her

husband, his sleeves rolled up, working and laughing with a black man, and Michael and Eddie

smoothly coordinating their end of the job. The deck work was half completed when Fran called,

“Coffee break! Cookie break!

They brushed sawdust off their arms and knees and scuffed their feet on the doormat before

entering the dining area, where Fran had set out coffee, milk, and a platter of warm cookies.

“I’ve been smelling these cookies for a while, and when the odor of coffee reached me, I

knew we were in for a treat, Fran.” Jack hugged his wife, appreciating how smoothly she seated

everyone and dismissed their concerns about getting sawdust on the carpet.

Again, by welcoming Jacob and Eddie into their home, they were breaking rules that had

bound her behavior her whole life. She found her heart swelling with amazement that it didn’t

hurt at all. Furthermore, Jack was obviously enjoying himself as a member of the work team, and

that was what mattered most to her.

 

Jessa continued down the path with Cassie cavorting by her side. “You think we’re going to

go back to living in the tree again, don’t you, girl?” She sat just outside the tree and stroked the

dog. Everything felt so different, now. Warm instead of cold, safe instead of hunted, loved

instead of lonely. Jessa buried her face in the dog’s wooly head. If she cried, now, it would be

with a full heart, a happy heart. The previous day, she’d been overwhelmed with memories of

the tree, her refuge when she was cut off from everyone. Now, she could see the beauty and

wonder of it through the eyes of others, and love for her tree and her grandparent’s land swept

over her. Leaning back, she looked up at the trunk spreading its strong branches high into the

sky. She addressed it, “I love you! I love you!” Cassie squeezed past her into the interior and

Jessa followed her and caught the dog in her arms and hugged her. “I love you too, Cassie!” She

opened the tin of cookies and got a couple each for herself and April. “Cassie, here’s one for you,too! – there’s plenty!”

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Purchase Links

The Missing Girl on Amazon

Jessa is Back on Amazon

 

 

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