Searching for Tina Turner By Jacqueline E.
Luckett
Chapter One
On
their first date more than thirty years ago, Randall
took Lena to an Ike and Tina Turner concert. From the minute they sat down in the fifth row from the stage,
she knew he wanted to impress her even though he hadn’t needed to. She would have sat with him in the
park, gone to the drive–in, eaten Wheaties in the narrow half–kitchen of his studio apartment, done
whatever he wanted; she’d been that eager to be with him.
The Ikettes
crowded onto the narrow stage while Ike’s deep
bass warmed up the audience; like a chant his words tumbled soft and low. A hush fell over the auditorium
as the guitar riff brought down the house lights. Blamp. The trumpets spit. Up, down, left, right. Blamp
blamp. Suddenly, Tina pranced across the stage swinging her store–bought hair, the mike, the fringe on her
sequined dress. Her taut legs pumped like a runner about to hit the finish line, her short dress came close
to revealing all that was underneath. The music increased to a faster, throbbing tempo. Girls cried. Men
beckoned to Tina. The Ikettes moved with Tina, step for step, pounding the stage in three–inch heels.
Lena inched
toward the crowded center aisle along with everyone
else to get up on the stage and dance with Tina. Randall caught her by the waist, leaned down and pressed his
lips against her ear. “You’re as cool as Tina Turner,” he whispered, him as cool in a hip,
sixties way as he meant she was. Trembling from the heat of his body, the ripple of his chest, the fuzz of
his moustache, Lena kissed him. The clamorous crowd and loud music disappeared into the distance, and for
years she remembered thinking that, as corny as it seemed, they were the only two people in the auditorium.
Now, those
memories rush back as she watches a wrinkled
TV personality melt in Tina Turner’s smile. Lena lifts her glass; it would be nice to ooze
such charm and self–assurance in a way so subtle and subdued that it ought to be bottled. Randall believes
that good liquor deserves a toast. So here’s to Tina. And Randall.
Tina looks
directly into the camera, poised and
straightforward; her eyes twinkle with humor and self–confidence. She is a perfect combination of wild
and sexy. Of secure and comfortable freedom. The reporter sees it, remarks on it, and asks if it comes from
celebrity or the people around her, and Tina lets him know that it comes from within. He goes over her
history: regaining her place at the top of the pop charts, her refusal to focus on color or race, a
misunderstanding with Elton John. Tina smiles again and changes the subject.
She talks of
life, faith and love for her man. Her
brownish–blond hair softens her ageless face, accentuates her full lips. The camera captures the warm
beige and gold of her skin in a tight close–up and pans her hilltop home and the royal blue Mediterranean
beyond. A happy blue, Lena thinks—the opposite of the blue she feels right now.
Listen
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and
incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to
actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2010 by Jacqueline Luckett–Johnson
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976,
no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means,
or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
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