“Sadie Jo”


LOCATION: Terrell, Texas, Shreveport, Louisiana
PERIOD: 2015-2019
DRAMATIS PERSONAE: Jacob “Jake” Tyler McLemore (1959); Pearl Boone Robison (1973); Sadie Jo Robison McLemore (2015)


It didn’t take long for Jake to become bored with retirement, and he bought a diner in Shreveport where Pearl Robison happened to enter one day in January 2010 (see song, “Pearl and Jake”). For five years Jake and Pearl had a turbulent romantic relationship,  before Pearl took to the road again (see song “Hit the Road”), heading west on U.S. 80, leaving Jake heartbroken at 56  (see songs, “The River and Jake” and “The Red River Flows”).

Unbeknownst to him Pearl was pregnant when she left, and gave birth to a daughter, Sadie Jo Robison.  Pearl initially had no intention of letting Jake know about this child, but she eventually did tell Jake (see song “Terrell”), however, nearly two years after she had left Shreveport.  Jake immediately proposed to Pearl, and they got married and moved back to Shreveport to raise Sadie Jo together.


SADIE JO
(F. D. Leone, Jr.)

Sadie Jo, I love you so
For the rest of my days, I’ll keep you safe,
Watching you grow
Your mama, Pearl, and my baby girl
Everything is brand new since you
Entered my world

Lost my first wife
To a damn drunk
He blew through a light
In a rusted out truck

I lost my son
In a pointless war
What your mama done, she gave me a someone
To love once more

Sadie Jo, I love you so
For the rest of my days, I’ll keep you safe,
Watching you grow
Your mama, Pearl, and my baby girl
Everything is brand new since you
Entered my world

I’m a tough old cob
To be a new daddy now
Wanna do a better job
This time around

A new baby and wife
Were not in my plans
I thank God every night for blessing my life
With this second chance

Sadie Jo, I love you so
For the rest of my days, I’ll keep you safe,
Watching you grow
Your mama, Pearl, and my baby girl
Everything is brand new since you
Entered my world

© 2019 Frank David Leone, Jr./Highway 80 Music (ASCAP). The songs and stories on the Highway 80 Stories website are works of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

“A Waxahachie Funeral”


LOCATION: Whitfield MIssissippi; Waxahachie, Texas
PERIOD: 2015
DRAMATIS PERSONAE: Louanne Murray Bowden (1967); Constance Maddox Haynes (1913-2015, 102); Helen Haynes Murray (1947)


While at CMCF, Louanne developed an exemplary record of good behavior including mentoring several other young female prisoners. For example, about half way through her sentence, a young woman, Lucy Cooper, was sent to CMCF on a drug charge, given eighteen months. Lucy was a funny, bright, and street smart but fragile woman who simply could not do the time for her crime. Despite being taken under Louanne’s wing, Lucy became increasingly more and more despondent, eventually suiciding from an overdose – within weeks of her release (see song, “When Louanne Met Lucy in Prison“).

Not long after this tragedy Louanne’s case was reviewed by a judge who ruled that hers was a case of justified homicide and her sentence was commuted to time served. These events coincided with the death of her grandmother in 2015, when she was released after serving about 60% of her original sentence. She returned to Texas for her grandmother’s funeral and remained there with her mother, to live once again in Highland Park, however, now in somewhat reduced grandeur.


A Waxahachie Funeral
(F. D. Leone, Jr.)

A call from that charity lawyer,
Words like “justifiable homicide”.
She heard him say the phrase “time served”;
Then a thirty hour Greyhound ride.
Twelve years in, Louanne walked out of prison;
In a blue dress and a brand new pair of shoes.
Destination: a Waxahachie funeral;
Her grandma dead at a hunderd ‘n’ two.

Standin’ with her people among weathered stones;
Stiff new shoes powdered with red dirt.
Back home to witness a tough ol’ Texas woman,
Laid into a plot of Texas earth.

Her daddy died five years before;
That was a funeral Louanne had to miss.
It’s just her and her Neiman Marcus mother,
Left behind to make some sense of this.
They climb inside a shiny black Lincoln;
Go back to that big old empty house.
Their polite Highland Park friends,
Don’t know how to talk to her now.

Standin’ with her people among weathered stones;
Stiff new shoes powdered with red dirt.
Back home to witness a tough ol’ Texas woman,
Laid into a plot of Texas earth.

Louanne and momma sit in the kitchen;
Mute and surrounded by their ghosts.
They stare across a walnut table;
A cup of coffee and a slice of melba toast.
Louanne remembers another August;
That magic summer when she turned eighteen.
When her life seemed so full of promise;
Magnolias and September dreams.

Standin’ with her people among weathered stones;
Stiff new shoes powdered with red dirt.
Back home to witness a tough ol’ Texas woman,
Laid into a plot of Texas earth.

© 2018 Frank David Leone, Jr./Highway 80 Music (ASCAP). The songs and stories on the Highway 80 Stories website are works of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.