Vickie is the only friend I’ve ever slapped. Hard. So hard her glasses went flying off her face and into the busy traffic of New York’s 23rd St. And she was more upset about her glasses than the slap. I was stunned, wondering how someone could’ve pushed me far enough to get physically violent. But first, let me tell you about Vickie.
A friend like Vickie was good to have. She was wild, loose and wasn’t ever afraid to cross the line. Just hanging out with her made me feel like I was wild too, pushing me further than I ever would’ve gone on my own.
Vickie’s younger sister, Linda, was my best friend. When she introduced me to Vickie, we clicked immediately. She was twenty-one, only a few years older than us but she was experienced, she knew about life; she’d been married, she’d had a baby and given it up for adoption, she’d lived on her own and she was fun. There was an energetic impulsiveness about her that was contagious. She’d get a crazy idea -- and we’d go do it. No hesitation or discussion, we’d just act. There was definitely a lot I could learn from Vickie.
One of our first escapades was hatched while driving around the Richmond California Hills in Vickie’s beat-up Volkswagen Beetle. She decided it was a great idea to go by her ex mother-in-law’s house to look to see if she had some kind of drugs we could take. Once we got those, we could attain the proper state-of-mind from which to decide what to do next. When we got there, the house was empty. It was then that I found out that her mother-in-law had died earlier that week and everyone was out attending the poor woman’s funeral. Since she'd been old and sick for some time, Vickie was sure there would be some kind of ‘downers' or 'uppers' lying around that we could take. She reassured me that rifling through the dead lady’s belongings was perfectly okay, because the woman had liked her and had given her a key. The thought that Vickie had purposely not returned the key to her ex after their divorce, never entered my mind. You see, Vickie had a talent for making everything she did seem logical and believable. You didn’t want to question her. You just accepted it because it was going to be fun.
At the dead woman’s house, we began a full scale search for prescription drugs that would’ve made a precinct full of police with a search warrant proud. The house was stuffy, dark, and reeked of illness. It was a little eerie to be looking through a freshly dead woman’s belongings. I tried to be neat, as I searched through drawers, putting things back as I had found them, as if anyone would know.
We found pills alright, lots of them, but all with names outside the limits of our recreational pharmaceutical knowledge. We put them back. The thought of taking heart or kidney medicine or whatever old people panacea she had lying around was far too risky. We were out to get high, not die. We snooped around a little more and left, empty-handed. At least, I had left empty-handed.
I found out later about Vickie’s proclivity for stealing. It became a familiar scenario to leave a party, only to have Vickie display some trinket she had ‘found.’ Found of course in the house we’d just left. But to her it wasn’t stealing, it was a party favor put out especially for her as a gift.
Vickie and I had plenty of adventures and I was a willing accomplice in them all. After a while, some were even my idea. There was the night we got drunk and drove around San Francisco stealing street signs. Any sign - restaurant valet parking signs, construction signs - if it wasn’t chained down, it got thrown in the back of my car. We’d scream hysterically, filled with that “getting away with it” rush, as I sped off. We were so cool. We were so stupid.
When we tired of cruising the city and congratulating ourselves on our brazen accomplishment, Vickie decided we should dump the signs in front of the apartment of a boyfriend who had recently dumped her. Vickie was big on ex-boyfriend revenge. Once she had even talked a carload of us into driving forty miles to an ex’s house, just so she could sneak out and spray paint penises all over his van.
We were lucky we escaped any run-ins with the police, well, major ones. During the summer, it was not unusual for me, Vickie and another friend, Kathy, to drive an hour and a half away to spend the day at Lake Beryessa. This particular time, on the drive home, we were pulled over by a Highway Patrolman who promptly handcuffed Vickie and took her away for unpaid parking tickets, leaving us two non-standard-shift-driving accomplices stranded in the car on the side of the highway. After sitting there for an hour, trying to decide whose parents would be less mad, we made the long walk to a phone booth. Kathy’s parents arrived to transport us back home. Her father didn’t say a word as he drove, but his face was redder than normal and his breathing was loud and wheezy. We sat in silence, listening to Kathy’s father breathe, all the way back to Richmond. That was the last time Kathy joined us on one of Vickie’s little road trips.
***
We were never bored. We would always make up some game to play. Some way to shock and thrill people then make a hasty escape. Sometimes it would be the car game. We’d drive up next to a car full of guys at red light, get them to roll down their window and shout, “Can we suck your dicks!” Then we’d speed away, laughing hysterically. This had to be timed right, of course. You had to make sure the light was about to turn green before you shouted at them. I was good at it. Vickie’s timing was always off and she’d end up yelling, “Can we suck your dicks!” while the light was still red, leaving us sitting there with a car full of horny guys ready to pounce. It was a stupid game but it made a night out exciting.
Another game was the fainting game. We’d go to a heavily populated tourist area in San Francisco and pretend to faint, just to see who could get the most people involved. Usually we’d get odd looks, or slight concern, at which point we’d “come to” and help the other to walk away. Although we took turns, Vickie never committed to the fainting game as much as I did.
We were in Fisherman’s Wharf one afternoon when we decided to play. Vickie went first and did a half-ass faint, which didn’t garner any reaction. Then it was my turn. As we walked toward a busy area, I began my performance. My legs slightly buckled and I let my body go limp as I dropped ever-so-gently onto the sidewalk. A cable car that had been moving downhill next to us then squealed to a halt. I was about to “recover” when I noticed the conductor jumping from the cable car and rushing over to me. Oh Shit! He ran to my side and took control from Vickie, who stood there muffling a laugh. A crowd gathered, the cable car passengers where upset, I figured at that point I couldn’t just jump up and say I was kidding, so I closed my eyes and “passed out.” I heard the conductor ask Vickie if I was on drugs or medication. As he fumbled to check my pulse, I felt it was time to wake up. I pretended to be dazed and opened my eyes. “What happened?” I mumbled. He helped me up and made Vickie and I promise to go see a doctor. We agreed. Then my hero ran back to his cable car full of anxious passengers, clanged his bell and continued down the hill. We walked about a block in the opposite direction, with Vickie helping to support me. Once out of sight, we ran, screaming, high off the success of our prank. I had won the game but it had scared us both a little. It wasn’t going to get any better than that performance. So it was the last time we played the fainting game.
***
Vickie moved to Lake Tahoe the next summer. Encouraged to come up often and visit, I would get up at 6am and drive from the San Francisco Bay area to Lake Tahoe, arriving by nine, spend the day partying, and leave by 6pm to get home by nine.
Vickie had a great A-frame cabin that she shared with two friends and worked as a waitress in a local Italian restaurant. Lake Tahoe was a party town and full of teens who would sneak up to the mountains and have parties in their parents’ cabins. There were always parties; daytime beach parties, night-time cabin parties, in the winter we would climb the fence of the closest hot springs and have parties. And then there were the casinos.
I grew up in a family that gambled. Every week my parents, my aunts and uncles would get together and play poker till the early morning hours. They loved to gamble. Every year, our family would drive across the country to visit relatives in Michigan. It was tradition to stop in Reno, where my parents would leave my sister and I at a Greyhound bus station, buy us enough hamburgers and comic books to keep us occupied, while they ran off to gamble. I would always wander off to watch the cowboys in the bus station play slot machines. I’d stand nearby reciting “Hail Mary’s” to bring them luck so they would win. I remember one time my mother returned to find me praying fervently for this cowboy, and as she tried politely yet forcefully to drag me away, I screamed that he needed me. I was helping him. But she won that fight, made me give back the silver dollar he had given me for my prayers, and dragged me off. But from then on, I longed for the day when I could play the machines myself.
The money Vickie made on a waitress salary was barely enough to cover her rent. We learned to be resourceful in Tahoe. I’d drive up for the weekends and we’d dress up and hit the casinos. The Sahara was the most lax of all the gambling establishments, rarely checking ID’s or hassling underage patrons. We would play nickel slot machines all night long, taking advantage of the free cocktails to drink ourselves into a Tequila Sunrise stupor. Vickie, the more experienced gambler, would play blackjack and often win, handing me her winnings and making me promise not to give it to her later, no matter what she said. Inevitably there would come that 2am desperation plea, which turned to anger, and then she would drunkenly scream at me to give her her money. I’d always give her half and convince her that’s all there was. And she was always happy that I didn't give it all to her the next day.
When we were hungry we would take the elevator up to the casino hotel rooms and search the hallways for room service trays, grabbing bites of uneaten hamburgers and desserts, pocketing ketchup and condiments, anything we could take back to their poorly stocked kitchen. We rationalized the thefts because of our gambling losses. Basically, we had paid for the food playing slot machines. I’d drive back home Monday mornings, hung-over, bank account emptied, and with barely enough change in my pocket for the gas to get me home.
***
Vickie was uninhibited. So it didn’t surprise me when she started making porno movies. She and her roommate had hooked up with this celebrated director, Alex DeRenzy. DeRenzy had frontiered the somewhat fashionable pornography movement in the seventies with his award winning documentary on Swedish sex festivals. I remained friends with Vickie as she pursued her “acting” career, although I silently disapproved. It was an odd choice to me, but one Vickie was excited about because the money was good. They were making a whopping one hundred dollars a day. A fortune at the time. And I benefitted by remaining her friend with free dinners, invitations to parties, and a completion of my sexual education. I was totally lacking knowledge in that area. All the things my mother or sister should’ve, but never told me about sex, I learned from Vickie and her roommate. Their perspective was probably a bit twisted, but it was all I had.
I met Alex DeRenzy at one of Vickie’s parties. When he asked me out, I was frightened. He was this older man, who made porno movies and I was supposed to go on a date with him? Would he be coming to my house to pick me up and chat with my father while I finished dressing? He didn’t seem like my type of guy, but he seemed nice enough. Besides, I wasn’t getting asked out much by any guys my age in those days. Vickie reassured me, and vowed that Alex was indeed trustworthy, so I went.
DeRenzy picked me up at Vickie’s, and took me to dinner. It was an expensive restaurant and I ordered lobster. That made me happy and relaxed me more than the wine he ordered. We drove around afterwards in his foreign sports car and he asked if I’d like to see his ranch. By then, I was feeling safe enough with him so I said yes. We drove to Marin County and he showed me around his house. It was impressive and clean, and not at all like I’d imagine a Porn King’s house to look. While touring his home theater and office, he told me I was pretty. Was this a ‘come-on’ starting? I never dared for a second to think that I might really be pretty. I became uneasy. He smiled a warm, calming smile. I relaxed. Then he told me he thought I would be perfect for porn. Huh? First of all, it was nice to think someone thought I would be perfect for something. But was this to be my special calling in life? I started laughing. He said it again. “You’d be perfect for porn.” Twenty years of Catholic upbringing and ten years of pubescent body insecurity welled up in me. I imagined it for half a second, then thanked him and told him no. I couldn’t see myself doing movies that my parents couldn’t watch. And although they didn’t always succeed at it, my parents did do their best to try to be supportive of me. I imagined my mother sitting in a theater watching close-ups of my private parts being penetrated by some oversized male organ and remarking, “Look at my baby. I am so proud.” And my father: “She's perfect. Just like her mama.” Yeah, that was not going to happen. It wasn’t in me to be a porn queen. But it was nice to be asked. DeRenzy didn’t push the issue. He drove me home, got out of the car and opened the door for me. I thanked him and went inside. There was no goodbye kiss, no lecherous touching. The Porn King had been a perfect gentleman. I never heard from him again.
***
Vickie wasn’t one to look back with regret. Years after her foray into the world of pornography, she was on to a new career as an artist. I had known this guy named Mikey through mutual friends. He was a friendly guy, prematurely balding and slightly overweight, and he had just broken up with his girlfriend. He asked if I had any friends I could fix him up with. I figured he’d be good for a date. He was sweet, with enough of a wild streak to make him not entirely boring. I had heard a story about how he had to rush his ex-girlfriend to the emergency room one night. After some particularly festive Christmas holiday sex play, a large peppermint candy cane had gotten stuck up her… Anyway, I figured he and Vickie might hit it off.
Since it was a fix-up, I went with Vickie over to Mike’s house. She was apprehensive and she made it clear to me that she wasn’t going to have sex with him. He offered us wine and we drank until all the awkwardness of the situation had melted away. It seemed to me, Mike and Vickie were getting along okay and I tried to bow out. But they insisted I stay with them. Ready to move the merriment to a new location, we got in my car and drove around the city.
San Francisco is a great city to drive around. It’s like an obstacle course with blind hills, dips, crooked streets and cable car rails throwing your car’s traction off. As we neared the North Beach area, we decided to get out and walk. I parked the car and we checked out City Lights Bookstore, teased the Broadway shills outside the strip clubs, and drank more wine. Mike suggested we go to a movie. In North Beach, there weren’t any regular movie theaters, only porn. Not being new to the idea, Vickie agreed, and I went along with it. We found a theater on a side street, checked out the marquee and poster and decided it would be a kick to see a porn movie together. Mike paid for us all and we settled down in the dark theater. You didn’t get movie previews, ads, or the cartoon with the little popcorn guy who buys his date candy, just a blank screen. We joked about being there and drank from a screw top bottle of wine I had stuffed into my purse.
A beam of light hit the screen from behind us. The music began, the credits rolled and the opening image appeared. As our giggling subsided and our eyes focused on the screen, I adopted a nonchalant “okay-I’ll-check-this-out attitude.” Suddenly, Vickie let out a loud, spontaneous “Uh-oh!” I looked at her and she laughed nervously. “This is my movie,” she whispered to me. It sure was. Not only was she in it, she was the star of the movie and it was filmed at her house. Not sure how to respond, I started laughing too. Mike sat there confused by our reactions. Then Vickie told Mike. He looked surprised yet intrigued. Vickie explained that in the porn world, many times movies are redistributed as new works from a director by changing the movie title and actors names. The more she talked about the business, the madder she got. She felt she had been cheated and should’ve gotten paid more if they were going to do that. I was amazed at how easily she turned an embarrassing situation into a righteous diatribe championing the rights of underpaid porn actresses.
Anyway, with all the awkwardness cleared, we decided to stay and watch the movie. Although I had been around Vickie during her “acting” days, I had never seen a porno movie. It was horrible. The acting, I mean. Plus a thinly contrived plot, which was about a swinging couple that kidnaps a young girl (Vickie) and tries to get her to have sex with them. In one scene, Vickie sat at the foot of the bed with her back to the couple while they screwed away. Occasionally, she would glance over her shoulder to look at them and remark in badly feigned disinterest, “I’ve seen that before.” Eventually the couple engages her in their fornication and a threesome happened. If I was Vickie, I would’ve been more embarrassed by my bad acting than my full-on sexual exposure. We all laughed through the whole movie. Thankfully, it was short, and we decided to skip the second feature.
Mike put the moves on Vickie after the movie. And what was she going to say after he had just seen her do everything in the book. The two of them made out in my car while I drove them back to his place. I drove home feeling shock, amusement, and a little bit sad for Vickie. But then again, I knew never to be surprised. It was just another wild night out with my crazy best friend.
***
I lived in New York for three months before Vickie followed. She moved with a photographer friend, into a fourth floor walk-up in Chelsea. Our life went into high gear. It was all about going to parties, reading about parties in the Post, planning our wardrobe for parties, and crashing those parties. We were never turned away. We became cocky about it, always daring to push the limits of the type of parties we’d crash; hundred dollar benefits, private birthday parties, designer fashion shows. I don’t know if it was the unflappable confidence we had, the good looks, or my increasingly more imaginative excuses for forgetting our tickets, that got us in. But it always worked.
My wardrobe was lacking, so I’d always end up getting ready at Vickie’s. She had more clothes and a gay roommate who would help us dress, making sure we looked fabulous! Vickie’s bedroom faced the back of the building, with large multi-paned windows spreading across the entire wall. The only problem about dressing in Vickie’s bedroom was that she had no window covering and a Peeping Tom. Considering Vickie’s background, it didn’t bother her much. So, picking up her cue, I didn’t let it bother me either. We called him Tom. He was a pale, skinny guy who’d wear a robe and let it hang open so we'd see his pale, skinny penis. He seemed harmless enough and we thought it was funny. I didn’t mind letting him see me in my underwear, but that’s as far as I took it. He was her Peeping Tom, not mine.
After a few weeks, Tom became more and more attentive. Sightings were more frequent and his existence in Vickie’s life became more intrusive. He came to her building, figured out the name and apartment number and looked up her phone number. Then the phone calls started. Between the live show and the calls, Vickie was becoming Tom’s full time obsession. The phone would ring at all hours. At first it was the heavy breathing routine, then he graduated to basic obscene phrases: “I wanna (bleep) you” “I’m touching my (bleep)!” You know, nothing too clever or original. Tom was a hack. But the constant phone calls started to bother Vickie. Not one to let things get her down, she screamed at Tom the next time he called. She was struggling, she had no money and she didn’t need this pervert harassing her. A weak, apologetic voice came from the other end of the line, “I’m sorry. Do you need money?” Vickie was taken aback, yet greedy enough to quickly recover. She answered, "Yes!" And for the next two months, my best friend was supported by her Peeping Tom.
This was the perfect New York arrangement: a symbiotic relationship between predator and prey. Everyday he would put money into Vickie’s mailbox, provided she promised not to cover her windows.
Whenever we were going out to a crash a party, first we’d do is check her mailbox. It was fun to find twenty or forty bucks of mad money waiting there. Sometimes he left cash, and sometimes bags of groceries. After a while, “Tom” became more demanding. He called and asked Vickie for a piece of her underwear. Vickie thought about it, then decided maybe it was time to cut the guy off. When Tom called the next time, Vickie “broke up” with him. After that, we never saw him in the window again. We figured his feelings had been hurt and imagined he’d killed himself out of despair. Vickie took the last forty dollars Tom had given her and put up curtains.
***
I’m not clear about the specifics that caused our argument on 23rd Street. I guess I’d grown up and the novelty of Vickie’s antics had worn off. After returning from yet another party, we got out of a cab and stood in the street. I was mad because she had obviously lied about something in front of some people we'd been with, and made me look stupid. The argument got heated. As she babbled and lied and tried to cover and defend her behavior, I lost control. The rage rose up in me and my arm flew up and I slapped her hard on the side of face. Her black-framed glasses, which gave her a deceptive intelligent and bookish look, flew in slow motion into oncoming traffic. A yellow cab sped by, narrowly missing them. I turned to walk away as Vickie yelled about how much the glasses cost. She missed my point entirely.
I walked up Sixth Avenue and home to my little place above the flower shop. We spoke the next day. To her, the argument was forgotten, there was nothing wrong. Vickie just didn’t go that deep. But I knew something had changed. And although we remained friends, our contact lessened in the next weeks and months, then completely stopped.
I saw Vickie in San Francisco several years afterwards. She said she was married to a painter named Jack, and had a kid. She looked good and I was happy for her. We made plans to get together for dinner so I could meet her husband and her kid. As I walked away, she chased after me and said, “Oh, Bernadette. Jack doesn’t know about the porno thing, or any of that other stuff we did, so don’t say anything. Okay?” “Okay, Vickie,” I promised, and then hugged her. We never had dinner. We never had any more wild, crazy times together again. Our lives had gone in separate directions and we had outgrown each other. Neither of us wanted to admit that we weren't best friends anymore. But we both knew. We both knew.
STUFF Bernadette wrote
I've written a lot of stuff: stories, poems, letters, lists. Some stuff is poignant. Some stuff is racy and raw. Some stuff is gentle and uplifting. Some stuff is bitchy and not very PC. Some stuff is light. Some stuff is dark. Some stuff is true. Some stuff is plain old made up. Lots of stuff is like driving down the freeway and taking an exit, getting lost, then finding your way back to the freeway again. I loved writing it. Enjoy!
Saturday, October 22, 2016
FAIRYLAND
My parents took my sister and me to funerals a lot. More often than they took us to Fairyland. Fairyland was this magical, ten-acre children’s park in Oakland. It had lots of trees and a lake, picnic areas, children’s rides, animals and storybook people who wandered around and shook your hand. But my parents’ friends, the Fouche's, owned a funeral home, so that’s where we went the most. My father said he wanted us to learn about death. I earned my PhD in death by the time I was eight.
Whenever someone died, an acquaintance, a co-worker, a relative, whoever; mommy and daddy would dress us up and cart us off to Fouche’s Funeral Home, which was sadly, only a few blocks away from Fairyland. Sometimes, I could hear the calliope music from the merry-go-round as we walked to the funeral home door. It put me in a bad mood, which I guess was appropriate for going to a funeral.
My parents liked to follow the deceased through the entire mourning process, starting with the wake, or rosary. Then we’d attend the funeral the next day, go to the cemetery for the interment, and end the day with a visit to the family’s home for food. My father was especially delighted when they’d serve smoked ham. That was his favorite and really topped off the day nicely for him.
I was six years old and the idea of looking at dead bodies was horrifying. But I was also daddy’s little girl and I was brave. In the chapel, we’d kneel in a pew while the priest would give the eulogy, then we’d pray. I’d finger my rosary beads and mechanically recite ‘Hail Mary’s’ while my eyes remained fixed on the dead body lying in the half open coffin. When you stare at a dead body for the length of time it takes to say a rosary, the body can start to look like it’s breathing. I swear I could see the corpse’s chest rise and fall. At any moment I expected him to sit up, climb out of the coffin and chase us with his hands outstretched, just like in every zombie movie I had ever seen. Whenever my parents took us to the funeral home to view the body of some “poor soul” who had just died “bless his heart,” my father was never content to just look at the body of the person we came to see. He thought it was fun to explore the place and see who else was lying around dead. We were used to this and it was easier to just go along with it rather than risk displeasing him.
But one time was different. It was a gray and rainy day when my father led our morbid little tour group down the halls of the Porter’s funeral home. I followed my father, my mother came next, and then my sister, who lagged behind with her arms folded close to her body and taking cautious steps. Daddy led us into a viewing room, urging us to come get a look. It was filled with white roses and a small metallic blue coffin was against the wall at the far end of the room.
I walked over to it with the same solemnity we were taught to march to the altar for our first Holy Communion. It scared me to think who might be inside. The coffin was too small for a regular adult so I figured there must be a dwarf in there, a small person, like Mr. Collins who lived down the street with his four wiener dogs. I peeked inside. It wasn’t a dwarf. Inside the pretty blue metal box was a little boy, holding a rattle. He must’ve been about five. He had on a ruffled white shirt and a blue suit that matched the color of the coffin. His skin was smooth and soft looking, as if he had just taken a bath and his mother had rubbed oil on his face to keep his skin moist, the way my mother did with us. He looked like he was sleeping, not dead. And I had seen enough dead people to know what they looked like, all dried, pasty looking and scary. But he was dead.
My sister burst into tears and my mother rushed her out of the room. My father stood staring at the boy, so I stayed too. But my world was shaken. Up until this day, I didn’t know that children could die. In the perfect world of my mind, where I had figured out all of life’s mysteries, I believed that children were too innocent to die. They hadn’t committed any real sins. I thought you could only die when you were a grown up and responsible for your actions. I realized the grim error of my thinking. My foundation of belief started to crumble. Now, before my eyes was proof I had been wrong, that children could die, that my sister could die, that my cousins could die and that I could die.
I stared at the little boy. What bothered me the most was the rattle in his hand. It made me angry. He was too old to be playing with a rattle. After all, I was six and I wouldn’t be playing with a rattle. It was an indignity that I felt for him because he certainly couldn’t feel anymore. I wanted to take the rattle out of his hand, but I didn’t want to touch it. I was afraid to touch anything in the room. It was as if death was something that could jump from dead person, to object, to living person. Now that I knew I could die, I didn’t want death sticking to me.
I wondered what my father was thinking about. Probably his son, the one that my mother had miscarried before me. I didn’t know about my dead brother then, but maybe that’s why he stared for so long. Maybe that’s why I didn’t bother him.
After a few minutes, I said something funny and he laughed. It was these death house visits that gave birth to my dark sense of humor. I couldn’t stand the tension, so I'd make jokes and act silly so everyone would laugh. I'd joke around at the funeral home, at the funeral, in the funeral procession, at the cemetery. Maybe that's why they brought me along all the time.They figured I didn't mind and I made everyone laugh.
As we got into the car, my humor survival mode went into high gear. I made more jokes and acted sillier trying desperately to distract everyone from all the death we had just seen. My mother and father laughed while my sister chewed her fingernails and stared out the window the entire drive home.
When we got home my father sensed my sister’s moodiness and tried to lighten things up. He pretended he was dead and chased us around the house like a zombie. He was scary and persistent and wasn’t going to stop till he got us. My sister ran through the hallway screaming, tripped and fell on the floor heater and burned a grid-like mark into her lower leg. That was the last time my father played the dead man zombie game. I was sorry for my sister’s pain, but I was glad that this particular game of “fun” was finally laid to rest.
It took years for me to wipe the memory of death out of my mind. I never kept flowers in my apartment because they always reminded me of the funeral homes. I had to force myself to buy flowers every day until the smell took on new meaning.
Sometimes I think about my father dying. I used to not care. I used to be angry for all the cruelty. I used to feel that once he was dead, I would be free. I don't feel that way anymore. My father was uneducated, macho and stupid and he loved me in his own uneducated, macho, stupid way. When he dies I won't be happy.
And I won't walk around the funeral home and look at all the other bodies.
But maybe I'll make some jokes to cheer people up, 'cause after all, that's what I do best.
Whenever someone died, an acquaintance, a co-worker, a relative, whoever; mommy and daddy would dress us up and cart us off to Fouche’s Funeral Home, which was sadly, only a few blocks away from Fairyland. Sometimes, I could hear the calliope music from the merry-go-round as we walked to the funeral home door. It put me in a bad mood, which I guess was appropriate for going to a funeral.
My parents liked to follow the deceased through the entire mourning process, starting with the wake, or rosary. Then we’d attend the funeral the next day, go to the cemetery for the interment, and end the day with a visit to the family’s home for food. My father was especially delighted when they’d serve smoked ham. That was his favorite and really topped off the day nicely for him.
I was six years old and the idea of looking at dead bodies was horrifying. But I was also daddy’s little girl and I was brave. In the chapel, we’d kneel in a pew while the priest would give the eulogy, then we’d pray. I’d finger my rosary beads and mechanically recite ‘Hail Mary’s’ while my eyes remained fixed on the dead body lying in the half open coffin. When you stare at a dead body for the length of time it takes to say a rosary, the body can start to look like it’s breathing. I swear I could see the corpse’s chest rise and fall. At any moment I expected him to sit up, climb out of the coffin and chase us with his hands outstretched, just like in every zombie movie I had ever seen. Whenever my parents took us to the funeral home to view the body of some “poor soul” who had just died “bless his heart,” my father was never content to just look at the body of the person we came to see. He thought it was fun to explore the place and see who else was lying around dead. We were used to this and it was easier to just go along with it rather than risk displeasing him.
But one time was different. It was a gray and rainy day when my father led our morbid little tour group down the halls of the Porter’s funeral home. I followed my father, my mother came next, and then my sister, who lagged behind with her arms folded close to her body and taking cautious steps. Daddy led us into a viewing room, urging us to come get a look. It was filled with white roses and a small metallic blue coffin was against the wall at the far end of the room.
I walked over to it with the same solemnity we were taught to march to the altar for our first Holy Communion. It scared me to think who might be inside. The coffin was too small for a regular adult so I figured there must be a dwarf in there, a small person, like Mr. Collins who lived down the street with his four wiener dogs. I peeked inside. It wasn’t a dwarf. Inside the pretty blue metal box was a little boy, holding a rattle. He must’ve been about five. He had on a ruffled white shirt and a blue suit that matched the color of the coffin. His skin was smooth and soft looking, as if he had just taken a bath and his mother had rubbed oil on his face to keep his skin moist, the way my mother did with us. He looked like he was sleeping, not dead. And I had seen enough dead people to know what they looked like, all dried, pasty looking and scary. But he was dead.
My sister burst into tears and my mother rushed her out of the room. My father stood staring at the boy, so I stayed too. But my world was shaken. Up until this day, I didn’t know that children could die. In the perfect world of my mind, where I had figured out all of life’s mysteries, I believed that children were too innocent to die. They hadn’t committed any real sins. I thought you could only die when you were a grown up and responsible for your actions. I realized the grim error of my thinking. My foundation of belief started to crumble. Now, before my eyes was proof I had been wrong, that children could die, that my sister could die, that my cousins could die and that I could die.
I stared at the little boy. What bothered me the most was the rattle in his hand. It made me angry. He was too old to be playing with a rattle. After all, I was six and I wouldn’t be playing with a rattle. It was an indignity that I felt for him because he certainly couldn’t feel anymore. I wanted to take the rattle out of his hand, but I didn’t want to touch it. I was afraid to touch anything in the room. It was as if death was something that could jump from dead person, to object, to living person. Now that I knew I could die, I didn’t want death sticking to me.
I wondered what my father was thinking about. Probably his son, the one that my mother had miscarried before me. I didn’t know about my dead brother then, but maybe that’s why he stared for so long. Maybe that’s why I didn’t bother him.
After a few minutes, I said something funny and he laughed. It was these death house visits that gave birth to my dark sense of humor. I couldn’t stand the tension, so I'd make jokes and act silly so everyone would laugh. I'd joke around at the funeral home, at the funeral, in the funeral procession, at the cemetery. Maybe that's why they brought me along all the time.They figured I didn't mind and I made everyone laugh.
As we got into the car, my humor survival mode went into high gear. I made more jokes and acted sillier trying desperately to distract everyone from all the death we had just seen. My mother and father laughed while my sister chewed her fingernails and stared out the window the entire drive home.
When we got home my father sensed my sister’s moodiness and tried to lighten things up. He pretended he was dead and chased us around the house like a zombie. He was scary and persistent and wasn’t going to stop till he got us. My sister ran through the hallway screaming, tripped and fell on the floor heater and burned a grid-like mark into her lower leg. That was the last time my father played the dead man zombie game. I was sorry for my sister’s pain, but I was glad that this particular game of “fun” was finally laid to rest.
It took years for me to wipe the memory of death out of my mind. I never kept flowers in my apartment because they always reminded me of the funeral homes. I had to force myself to buy flowers every day until the smell took on new meaning.
Sometimes I think about my father dying. I used to not care. I used to be angry for all the cruelty. I used to feel that once he was dead, I would be free. I don't feel that way anymore. My father was uneducated, macho and stupid and he loved me in his own uneducated, macho, stupid way. When he dies I won't be happy.
And I won't walk around the funeral home and look at all the other bodies.
But maybe I'll make some jokes to cheer people up, 'cause after all, that's what I do best.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
OLD DAN TUCKER
Three years is a long time to have a crush on someone. Especially if the first year goes by and you’ve never even touched them. Just lots of staring and fantasies.
Marty played the guitar. He’d sit on the lawn at the Park with some of the other guys and play hit songs from his favorite bands. I’d sit there mesmerized watching his long fingers flick the strings of the guitar and absorbing every note. I wondered how long it took him to learn to play ‘Stairway To Heaven.’ Everybody played that song. You had to. It was an anthem. But it never sounded as beautiful as when it came from Marty’s guitar. Jimmy Page could’ve been standing right next to me, wailing through one of those long version guitar solos and I wouldn’t have noticed. All that existed was Marty slumped over his guitar, blond hair hanging in his face and his all-consuming look of concentration. There was no doubt about it, Marty loved music.
So, I figured that was my way in with him, through the music. I had saved some money from my job as a salesgirl at Capwell’s Department Store. I kept it hidden inside my teddy bear. He had come with a music box inside and the little winding knob was on his back. I had surgically removed the music box in an emergency operation one boring day and carefully stitched up the wound leaving about a half an inch hole. The absence of the music box caused a hollow indentation in his back and in an attempt to fill it back up, I stuffed my extra cash inside him. Why it was necessary to hide my money in the first place I don’t remember, but I was at that age where I felt I had to hide everything and my mother was at that age that she felt she had to snoop through everything. I think all mothers snoop when their child starts having secrets and acting in ways they can’t explain. But money wasn’t really something I needed to hide. Not like drugs, or diaries, or the birth control pills my friend Sandy kept hidden. I remember the day she came to school in dark sunglasses and we all teased her as she approached. She didn’t laugh or speak, she just kept walking toward three giggling girls and when she reached us, she pulled off her glasses and revealed a huge black eye. We, of course, stopped laughing and went into concerned friend mode. We pummeled her with questions and she began to cry. All she could get out was that her mom found her birth control pills.
So anyway, I hopped on the 72 bus and got off at El Cerrito Plaza, walked up to the shopping Center and bee-lined straight to the music store with the pretty wooden guitars hanging in the window. I let the man show me a few and I hugged their polished wood bodies as if I knew what I was doing. I strummed the nylon strings. I knocked on the wood, cause I think I heard somewhere you’re supposed to do that. Then I bought the cheapest. I paid my thirty-five dollars and left with my guitar and songbook, ready to conquer this instrument and win Marty’s love.
My parents thought the guitar was just a whim. They didn’t believe I would stick with anything longer than a week, or at least that’s what they always used to say. I had first asked for a piano when I was seven. They said “No” despite the fact that I spent every chance I got pounding out songs on pianos wherever we’d go and teaching myself to play “Exodus.” Even then they didn’t think I was serious about wanting a piano. “You’ll play it for a week, then you’ll lose interest in it,” they said. “Then we’ll be stuck with a piano.” They didn’t see I wasn’t the kind of child who’s lost interest in anything quickly. They didn’t see I never let go.
I sat in my room day after summer day, plucking at nylon strings and flipping through pages of folk tunes. The man in the store said I should put off learning Led Zeppelin for a while and start with some simple tunes. I focused on one. My fantasy was that I’d go to the park and all the guys would be sitting around on the lawn. Marty would be there with his guitar and I’d sit next to him and when he got tired of playing and laid it down on the grass, I’d pick it up and start playing my perfectly rehearsed version of “Old Dan Tucker.” The guys would all be impressed with my dexterity and nimble chord changes. Marty would have a reason to be in love with me and we’d live happily ever after.
But Marty and the guys stopped bringing their guitars to the Park before I mastered Old Dan Tucker. My guitar sat in the corner and gathered dust. Every time my mother walked by my room she’d say it was a waste of money. So I hid it in the closet. But it wasn’t a waste of money. I hadn’t gotten tired of it.
I still wanted the guitar.
I still wanted a piano.
And I still wanted Marty Koutz.
Marty played the guitar. He’d sit on the lawn at the Park with some of the other guys and play hit songs from his favorite bands. I’d sit there mesmerized watching his long fingers flick the strings of the guitar and absorbing every note. I wondered how long it took him to learn to play ‘Stairway To Heaven.’ Everybody played that song. You had to. It was an anthem. But it never sounded as beautiful as when it came from Marty’s guitar. Jimmy Page could’ve been standing right next to me, wailing through one of those long version guitar solos and I wouldn’t have noticed. All that existed was Marty slumped over his guitar, blond hair hanging in his face and his all-consuming look of concentration. There was no doubt about it, Marty loved music.
So, I figured that was my way in with him, through the music. I had saved some money from my job as a salesgirl at Capwell’s Department Store. I kept it hidden inside my teddy bear. He had come with a music box inside and the little winding knob was on his back. I had surgically removed the music box in an emergency operation one boring day and carefully stitched up the wound leaving about a half an inch hole. The absence of the music box caused a hollow indentation in his back and in an attempt to fill it back up, I stuffed my extra cash inside him. Why it was necessary to hide my money in the first place I don’t remember, but I was at that age where I felt I had to hide everything and my mother was at that age that she felt she had to snoop through everything. I think all mothers snoop when their child starts having secrets and acting in ways they can’t explain. But money wasn’t really something I needed to hide. Not like drugs, or diaries, or the birth control pills my friend Sandy kept hidden. I remember the day she came to school in dark sunglasses and we all teased her as she approached. She didn’t laugh or speak, she just kept walking toward three giggling girls and when she reached us, she pulled off her glasses and revealed a huge black eye. We, of course, stopped laughing and went into concerned friend mode. We pummeled her with questions and she began to cry. All she could get out was that her mom found her birth control pills.
So anyway, I hopped on the 72 bus and got off at El Cerrito Plaza, walked up to the shopping Center and bee-lined straight to the music store with the pretty wooden guitars hanging in the window. I let the man show me a few and I hugged their polished wood bodies as if I knew what I was doing. I strummed the nylon strings. I knocked on the wood, cause I think I heard somewhere you’re supposed to do that. Then I bought the cheapest. I paid my thirty-five dollars and left with my guitar and songbook, ready to conquer this instrument and win Marty’s love.
My parents thought the guitar was just a whim. They didn’t believe I would stick with anything longer than a week, or at least that’s what they always used to say. I had first asked for a piano when I was seven. They said “No” despite the fact that I spent every chance I got pounding out songs on pianos wherever we’d go and teaching myself to play “Exodus.” Even then they didn’t think I was serious about wanting a piano. “You’ll play it for a week, then you’ll lose interest in it,” they said. “Then we’ll be stuck with a piano.” They didn’t see I wasn’t the kind of child who’s lost interest in anything quickly. They didn’t see I never let go.
I sat in my room day after summer day, plucking at nylon strings and flipping through pages of folk tunes. The man in the store said I should put off learning Led Zeppelin for a while and start with some simple tunes. I focused on one. My fantasy was that I’d go to the park and all the guys would be sitting around on the lawn. Marty would be there with his guitar and I’d sit next to him and when he got tired of playing and laid it down on the grass, I’d pick it up and start playing my perfectly rehearsed version of “Old Dan Tucker.” The guys would all be impressed with my dexterity and nimble chord changes. Marty would have a reason to be in love with me and we’d live happily ever after.
But Marty and the guys stopped bringing their guitars to the Park before I mastered Old Dan Tucker. My guitar sat in the corner and gathered dust. Every time my mother walked by my room she’d say it was a waste of money. So I hid it in the closet. But it wasn’t a waste of money. I hadn’t gotten tired of it.
I still wanted the guitar.
I still wanted a piano.
And I still wanted Marty Koutz.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
NADINE WASHINGTON
Everything about Nadine Washington was big. She was the tallest person in our fifth grade class. She was the tallest person in all of St. Columba's Elementary school. Her voice was the loudest in the schoolyard and her arms, her legs, her hands and her hair were massive. Even with your eyes closed, you could sense when Nadine was around. Her presence was overpowering. And if she was walking toward you, it was like a herd of buffalo heading your way. You'd feel the rumbling under your feet and in a panic, you'd run to avoid the stampede.
Everyone made fun of Nadine, except me. She was the only person the class bully, Earl Atkins, would stop teasing me to go after. I liked her for that. And I felt sorry for Nadine and her bigness, and the anger she felt about the unfairness of it all.
Aside from her weight, her height and her large limbs, Nadine was the darkest person at school. I think she was the darkest person I had ever seen, with skin tones at St. Columba's ranging from vanilla to caramel, caramel to mocha, mocha to chocolate, and chocolate to… Nadine. It was a time when it wasn't so wonderful to be dark.
St. Columba's schoolyard was a large, gray cement rectangle, caged in by a Cyclone fence. At lunch, different cliques of girls sat on green wooden benches that lined the perimeter, gossiping about boys and trading lunches. I didn't belong to any one clique. Actually, I didn't belong to any clique. But this one time, for the first time, I was sitting with the popular girls. See, I had been sitting alone and they came over and told me to move, so I wasn't really with them, but… if you drove by in a car and looked into the yard, you might think I was.
In a grand gesture of sucking up, I offered them my lunch to pillage. I had made it myself and it had all my favorites: a tuna sandwich, with separately wrapped lettuce and tomato, so the bread wouldn't get soggy; Laura Scudder's barbeque potato chips, which I was about to smash up into delicious crumbly pieces and sprinkle onto my tuna; and two pink Hostess Snowballs, which I routinely ate in ritualistic fashion starting with the creamy white center, then peeling off the pink marshmallowy coconut layer, and finishing up with the chocolate cakey middle. They grabbed my bag and tossed me back some mystery meat sandwich which I ate, taking tiny bites and pretending to enjoy it while trying to control the gagging.
I sat there and listened to the popular girls talk. I laughed at their jokes, acknowledging their comments with interjections of approval. Then, the ground began to vibrate. Everyone looked up and saw Nadine bounding toward us from across the yard. Nadine's large legs were equally thick at the knee, calf and ankle, making them look more like tree trunks than human limbs. As she approached, one of the girls joked, "Look at Nadine's fat legs." We all laughed and in my eagerness to belong I added, "Yeah, black just like her face!" The laughter stopped. What the hell was I saying? In an attempt to cover, I faked a coughing fit then mumbled something about a food allergy. But it didn't work. Everyone was staring at me, then at Nadine. When I saw her face I knew she had heard what I said. In one second, everything about her seemed to shrink. Her big, wide-toothed grin disappeared, her full lips sucked inwardly like pulled by some great implosive force. Her whole face shriveled up into a pained, dried-apple doll expression. She spun around like a tornado and whirled back across the yard and into the school, crying… loudly. "That wasn't very nice, Bernadette," one of the popular girls said. "You made fun of her too," I answered. "That's different," she said as she shoved the rest of my pink Snowball into her mouth.
Sister Mary Catherine let Nadine go home early that day, then she took me aside for a talk. She was solemn. She sat in her heavy oak principal's chair, swaddled up in black and white nun clothes. Her fingers fidgeted with the wooden beads of a long, black rosary that was attached to her side. She stared at me and spoke slowly, careful to enunciate each word as if doing so would drive the words deeper into my brain. Her white face was flushed and became redder as she spoke. She began. "Bernadette, Nadine is sensitive about her color. You should never call someone black." As bad as I felt about the whole thing, I didn't want to be in trouble. I immediately went on the defensive explaining that Nadine's legs were black, and what I said wasn't really an insult as much as an honest observation. She wasn't buying it. We were still Negroes then. I was a Negro too but I was a 'good' color of brown and Nadine wasn't. Black wasn't beautiful yet. Black was an insult.
Nadine skipped school the next day too. That made me feel worse. Everyone in my class was mad at me for what I said to her. Sure, it was okay for them to call her a cow, or King Kong or joke about her every day of her life, but I had crossed that invisible color line.
When Nadine finally came back to school, she didn't talk to me anymore. Everyone was nice to her for a while. I was happy that at least some good had come from it. Then, all the kids fell back into old patterns and Nadine became the butt of jokes again.
At the end of an unforgiving year, we had our class picnic. I sat in the bleachers watching my classmates play baseball. Nadine was up. She picked up the largest wooden bat and took a few practice swings. I clenched my teeth together to prevent any spontaneous remark from slipping out. There was no way I was going to be responsible for another black on black crime. Earl Atkins pitched the ball. It sped by Nadine a little on the inside, just below her waist. It was a bad pitch. I saw that, but Nadine didn't. Her hands tightened around the bat and her face tensed up. Her whole body twisted with all its mighty force and spun around swinging the bat, slicing through the air. The ball whizzed by. Nadine caught up in the velocity of the spin continued around in a circle, clouds of dust rose up from her feet and then… she let go of the bat.
It flew, slow motion, in lopsided circles across the field, across the bleachers, right toward me. I went through the process of seeing the bat, registering the picture, thinking about the implied danger and concluding the need to take action. As my brain screamed at my muscles to move, I learned that the velocity of a thrown bat was far greater than the speed of my mental processes. The thick side of the spinning bat made full contact with the side of my head and I dropped, out of the conscious world to blackness.
When I woke up I was lying down on the bleachers, looking up at nuns and the entire fifth grade class. Someone was yelling for ice. I was embarrassed and quickly tried to sit up. My head hurt but I lied and said I was okay. Disappointed, everyone dispersed, except for the nuns and Nadine Washington. She was holding my hand and crying huge, wet tears that splashed onto my arm. Nadine said she was sorry. I started crying too and said I was sorry.
I was sorry I had called her black.
I was sorry being black was bad.
I was sorry I had sat in an unprotected section of the bleachers.
And I was sorry that I had to learn the hard way, that the hurt you give out... always comes back to you.
I'll always remember that.
You don't have to hit me in the head with a baseball bat.
THE BRA
The summer between the seventh and eighth grades, all the girls in my class developed breasts. Except me. I noticed it and all the boys in the eighth grade noticed it… the absence of a bra through my thin white Catholic school uniform blouse. They could all see the outline of an undershirt against my brown skin and my flat-as-a-board chest which was a testament to a summer spent without a visit from the puberty fairy. I had grown two inches taller and now, even more resembled a stick figure.
Every day that first week of school, the boys teased me unmercifully, asking what happened to my tits. It took me by such surprise that I didn’t know how to respond. I had never really thought much about getting breasts except the dread of experiencing that obligatory trip to Hink’s department store and standing in a dressing room, naked above the waist, while being measured for a bra by a wrinkled old saleswoman with cold hands. I had gone with my mother when she took my sister. The whole idea was paralyzing. I wasn’t comfortable with my body. I came from a family that wasn’t comfortable with their bodies. No one ever got naked in front of anyone else. My sister and I shared a room since birth and we had never seen each other naked. How was I supposed to let a stranger look at and touch my just-beginning-to-bud breasts?
I went home and cried. I didn’t belong. I wasn’t like the other girls. I was a freak and everyone knew it. The thought of returning to school filled me with dread and there was no one to share this with. I couldn’t possibly tell my mother. She wasn’t the kind of mother you talked to. I had tried once. It was in the sixth grade when she proved to me that she wasn’t good at handling sexual-type things. They had just installed a Kotex machine in the girl’s bathroom. Laura Gardner and I were the only girls in our class who didn’t know what a Kotex was. We spent the whole day speculating about it before concluding that it must have something to do with breasts.
I went home that night, seeking out my mother for some answers. She quickly became nervous and evasive. As I pushed, she became more distressed until my father finally took me into their bedroom, reached up on the high shelf in the closet, pulled out a white cotton sanitary napkin and showed it to me. This was a Kotex. He didn’t tell me what it was for. I didn’t ask. I had seen a Kotex and that was all I cared about. The other girls had nothing on me.
So, it was up to me to solve my bra problem myself. I came up with a plan. My sister, who was three years older, had a few bras but wore them in a regular rotation so it would be impossible for me to take one without her noticing. But she was also already wearing stockings and owned several garter belts to hold them up. She only wore those when she dressed up or on Sundays for church. The next morning, I went into my sister's drawer and took one of her garter belts. It had a wide white band of cotton with four rubber and metal buckles that hung down to attach to the stockings. I hooked the two opposite buckles together fashioning a type of shoulder strap, turned the garter belt upside down and slipped my arms through the straps. Hooking it closed around me, I had created a “bra.” My very first bra. Although the place where the buckles were joined was a bulky knot at the top of my shoulders and a little uncomfortable, it looked like a bra to me and would hopefully to the eighth grade class too. I put on my white uniform shirt and looked at myself in the mirror. I could see the haltered outline of my “bra” through the sheer fabric. My heart raced. This would work. I covered up with my uniform sweater and went to school.
I was anxious the whole morning but waited for the perfect moment to reveal myself. Usually everyone kept their sweaters on in the morning. I sat nervously hoping no one would notice the extra bumpy something on the tip of my shoulders. As we settled down to work and the temperature of the room rose, one by one people started taking off their sweaters. This was it… Show time! I slowly slipped off my sweater, placed it on the back of my chair and leaned forward in my desk.
The first whispers came from Earl Adler who sat behind me. He had made torturing me his career at St. Columba’s dating back to the first grade when he gave me some contraband gum and once I was chewing it, forced me to swallow it by threatening to tell the nuns. Maybe not a big deal to some, but I had never swallowed gum before and had been warned against it repeatedly by my mother who swore it would stick inside me, clog up my stomach and kill me dead. Everything always killed you dead.
Hearing Earl’s all too familiar laugh, I turned around and saw that everyone was looking at me. I turned back and sat up proudly sticking out my tit-less chest.
At lunchtime, the guys teased me again. “Bernadette’s wearing a bra!” “Yes!” This is the same way they had teased the other girls. I felt giddy and weightless and the most supreme joy and pride. I was just like the other girls. I had a bra too.
I continued to sneak my sister’s garter belt for the next two weeks until the boys’ interest in female under-apparel waned. Then I went back again to wearing my sleeveless ‘Lollipop’ undershirts with the little cloth bow in the front. I was unafraid to take off my sweater because I now had complete “bra confidence.” I knew, and they all knew, I had a bra, whether I chose to wear it or not.
I REMEMBER GRASS
A loud lawnmower noisily chops up the grass in its path as a white dog barks.
He doesn’t like it either.
The mailbox clatters as it vibrates.
The earth rumbles and my brain quivers.
Everything is shaking when the Mexican gardener comes.
See?
Si si!
I hear him Espanol-ing to his fence.
“The noisier I work, the faster I work. Then I’m off to someone else’s yard
He doesn’t like it either.
The mailbox clatters as it vibrates.
The earth rumbles and my brain quivers.
Everything is shaking when the Mexican gardener comes.
See?
Si si!
I hear him Espanol-ing to his fence.
“The noisier I work, the faster I work. Then I’m off to someone else’s yard
to make their white dog bark.”
I miss the scraping of the rake.
Its slow repetitive metallic lullaby that meant daddy was outside working and I was safe.
Today’s child rock-a-byes to Pepe’s diesel blower and dreams of
Staccato jungle gyms and native roots.
There’s no safety in the smell of gasoline.
A lawn is such a beautiful plaything.
It is fun’s potential amplified and alive.
It was my job to water it.
Underground sprinkling systems had not yet taken over our home’s petty cash.
I earned my green from the green that grew.
I filled glass jars with its bugs
And I never
Ever
Guessed
It would be replaced
with
Gravel.
THE JOSHUA TREE
I am an old home.
I am a new home.
Run to me and hide.
I will let you crawl beneath my skin until you die.
I will watch with pride as you give birth to your young.
I will feed you and protect you from the rain.
I will gather love from the heaven and the earth for you.
I will be here forever.
Changing,
Yet remaining the same.
Rest in me!
I am an old home.
I am a new home.
Run to me and hide.
I will let you crawl beneath my skin until you die.
I will watch with pride as you give birth to your young.
I will feed you and protect you from the rain.
I will gather love from the heaven and the earth for you.
I will be here forever.
Changing,
Yet remaining the same.
Rest in me!
UNCLE PAUL
“YELLOW MATTER CUSTARD… DRIPPING FROM A DEAD DOG’S EYE”
I love that.
It’s the most vivid and disgusting musical lyric.
I love the Beatles. My Uncle Paul bought me my first Beatles’ album. He’s my mother’s only brother, her baby brother. She and her sisters doted on him. They believed he was going to be someone special. I was six years old and I believed so too.
Uncle Paul lived with my grandmother in a small apartment in Berkeley. My mother took my sister and me to visit every weekend. Their apartment was always warm. If it was warm outside, it was warmer inside because the heater was on. My grandmother liked it that way and if you didn’t like it you could leave.
The whole place smelled, but not in a bad way. It was a combination of last night’s dinner and this morning’s breakfast. It smelled homey, and told me that there’d always be food.
The rooms were dark and full of stacks of clutter; newspapers, clothes, boxes. All too important to throw away and not important enough to keep dusted.
In the front of the apartment was a sun porch; all windows with white lace curtains. It was the only bright room and where my sister and I played. It was also Uncle Paul’s studio. He was going to be a famous artist and sell his paintings for thousands of dollars.
The sun porch smelled like oil paint. In the corner was a large easel with his latest masterpiece-in-progress. I thought it was beautiful. It was an ocean scene. He had painted yellow sand and bluish-gray waves breaking on the beach. He hadn’t painted the sky yet and the white canvas was a shocking contrast to the serenity of the rest of the picture.
My grandmother yelled out from the kitchen; warned us not to touch our uncle’s painting. We yelled back that we wouldn’t. Immediately I reached up and touched a wave. It was wet and left a blue spot on my finger. I rubbed some of it off with my thumb and smeared the rest on a pile of nearby Berkeley Gazettes. I put on my innocent face and walked away, as far as possible from the scene of my crime.
Next time we visited the painting sat on its easel just where it had before. The sky was still undone and the white canvas was starting to yellow. Dust had settled on the sand and ocean. My grandmother left the room and I put my finger on the wave again. This time it was hard and sharp and left no trace of paint.
Uncle Paul came home and I asked him when he was going to finish the painting. He smiled at me and said, “Soon… soon.” We both stared at the blank sky.
A few weeks later the paints, the easel and the painting were gone. I snooped around and found the painting stuffed behind a pile of old clothes. I pulled it out. The sky was still empty yellow canvas. I took it to the kitchen where my grandmother stood at the stove stirring something in a pot. I asked her why Uncle Paul hadn’t finished the picture. She grabbed the painting from me and yelled, “You shouldn’t be snooping through other people’s things.” I followed her into the other room and she put it back behind the pile of clothes. I told her I would finish painting it. But she didn’t answer. She just went back to her stirring.
When Uncle Paul came home, he was carrying a black leather bag. He told us he decided he was going to be a doctor and make thousands of dollars. He was excited about his new career so I forgot about the painting and got excited too. He opened the black bag, pulled out a stethoscope and listened to our hearts. I was sure he was going to make a great doctor because as he listened, he looked at his watch then told us how many times per minute our hearts were beating. It was going to be fun to have a doctor in the family.
A month later, Uncle Paul decided he was going into the construction business. He bought himself a beige leather tool belt and a whole box of tools. He was going to build apartments and get rich from all the rent. I thought that was a good idea but wondered why he had decided not to become a doctor. Later, I found his black bag hidden under the most recent mountain of clutter. My grandmother wouldn’t let me have that either.
Shortly after the dust began to settle on the beige leather tool belt, Uncle Paul disappeared. No one knew where he was. My mother and her sisters would talk about him in disappointed whispers. When he finally showed up he said he had found religion. He was attending a church in San Francisco with a charismatic minister who was speaking God’s word in a new and special way. He seemed happy, like he’d finally found peace. But then he dropped out of the church a month before the Reverend Jim Jones moved them all to Guyana.
The last time I saw Uncle Paul, he was devising a system that was going to help him win the lottery. It was a chart full of numbers in vertical columns, intersecting numbers in horizontal rows. There were arrows and dates and stars, red ink and black ink. He began explaining the chart to me. I didn’t understand but pretended to anyway. I got swept up in his enthusiasm, how his eyes twinkled as he grinned with pride. He was certain his calculations were going to pick the winning numbers. I wished him luck and hugged him goodbye.
Five years later my Uncle Paul won $80,000 in the California State Lottery.
Six months earlier he had thrown away his chart.
He won on a Quick Pick.
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