A love for music and words so deeply stained in your soul that all could see your life's blood coloring the brick wall you had painted so that any artist who made you stop the tatting and applaud could leave their autograph. Not that you'd exclude the hangers-on and wanna-be's from the stage. That would not be kind. But you'd get that distant look as your hands would keep stitching, knotting, tying off until the talent showed up. The hands needled and weaved without pause; Only a shift in focus let the musician or poet know that they indeed were heard.
Your words at once lovely and incisive, inobtrusively lethal when you chose to create; pointed as the tatting needles and strung together as thoughtfully, carefully and beautifully as table runners and doilies.
Too few remember your dedication to your coffeehouse, how you bled paycheck after paycheck to keep a stage lit to keep the magic of a new discovery who would soon become a new friend.
It was a hole in the wall, a converted brick storefront on a nondescript main street of a small Florida city. It lit the lives of many who needed a place to bare their souls. It... and you... were great.
R.I.P. Billie Noakes, founder of C.A.M.S coffeehouse and a friend of 30 years. Sorry it took me so long, Billie.