She was almost as white as ivory and more valuable than ebony. A pale diamond of abolitionists dreams draped in a plaid trimmed dress with lace, curls surrounding her face like any other plantation girl.
She exists at the edge of color at the point when light could be captured as day edges into shades of night, somber hues of black and gray.
The notebook on the cloth covered table suggested richness and more away from the whipped harvest gatherings, something stolen away to be the pride of a Boston heir. The daguerreotype could never shake free its sense of death caught still.
Mary Mildred Williams was her white name. The black one died when she was sold on the Virginia square for 900 dollars. Senator Summer bought her freedom and then enslaved her image for the abolitionist sway. The first poster child for black liberty, for the fugitive slave needing an open air railroad.
She got her last white name, little Ida May, (same as the imagined white girl kidnapped and dyed black to be put in peril for another white right cause) to highlight the fact that Mildredβs complexion was the result of generations of white ****.
She was paraded unshackled from podium to podium, leaflets of her face passed out, as common as reward posters for those who dared run and stray.
She was the next to last speaker to Solomon Northrop, also an ex-slave with a best selling freedom story.
The passing of her image was a political act, for a swarming media enchanted by someone who looked just like them but wasnβt.
America loves black stories that need white saviors to be reassured of their separate but equal vision.