Every Body Looking

Home > Other > Every Body Looking > Page 2
Every Body Looking Page 2

by Candice Iloh


  him in his crispiest suit, her bulging from a flowered dress

  my baby brother dressed

  as Dad’s mini identical twin

  belted in the back seat

  of my father’s golden Toyota Camry

  is giddy knowing nothing

  about what day it is

  or how his big sister

  will survive it

  after picking up her own mommy

  keeping her seated somewhere

  she can fidget

  far from his side of the family

  Mama fidgets

  in my passenger seat

  more on edge than me

  maybe cause it’s been

  like five years since we’ve seen

  each other but she is here

  scoffs under her breath

  thinking, just like her

  this hoopty is proof

  of yet another thing

  I don’t need

  shrugs away small thoughts

  not knowing

  Dad demanded

  I save and buy my first Camry

  myself

  sits and tugs

  at her lopsided wig

  pulls down the mirror

  reapplies bloodred lipstick

  smudges some on her cheeks

  with her fingers

  and I thank god knowing

  without this

  I may not

  recognize her

  We pull into my high school’s parking lot

  for the last day I will ever have to smile at these people like I ever belonged here / for the ten minutes it takes Mama and me to get to the stands along the football field, a place she has never seen / I imagine the sounds of our heels to be / like a song we are for once dancing to together / today / I’m not angry / at her slurred speech / I’m not angry / at her missing teeth / I’m not angry / at her fuss / I’m not angry / that she looks nothing like / the last time I saw her / or that / I don’t know when the next time will be / for the ten minutes it takes Mama and me to get to the stands along the football field / I’m just happy we’re both here / alive

  My name is Ada

  but not really

  it’s what my father’s side

  calls me cause I was born

  first

  and on this day

  I’m only three months

  from leaving this place behind

  they tell me there’s

  a big world out there

  and they tell me

  there’s so much I can do

  and I know nothing

  but this city

  but my father

  but these schools

  where I’ve always

  been one of few specks

  of dingy brown

  in a sea of perfect white

  but I know the bible

  and I know how to do

  the right things

  so how hard could college

  really be

  How hard could it be to

  Find a dress that both Mama and Dad would like.

  Make sure the dress was loose enough to hide all my heavy.

  Put on heels I could stand for more than three hours.

  Pick Mama up in my own car.

  Get Mama to my soon-to-be old school.

  Sit Mama somewhere I could see her.

  Run back and forth between Mama and Dad.

  Smile for every camera.

  Smile with Mama.

  Smile when Mama insists that she be the first, after it’s over, to have dinner with me.

  Dad smiles for his final picture with me

  loosening the awkward grip

  tightly held on the outside

  of my right arm

  his sharp signature cologne

  left to linger across

  my shoulders

  a scent just as strong

  as the bass

  in the shifting tone of his voice

  proud of you, kid

  you did good

  he says

  as if I’d done

  my entire high school bid

  just now, all in one day

  thanks, Dad

  I smile back, bashful

  warm under the way

  he looks at me

  on the days

  I do right

  standing back I look

  at the softness peeking through

  thick folds of my father’s face

  watch yet another attempt

  to pull his belted suit pants

  over the bottom of his round belly

  now at the end of a long day

  under the football field sun with beads of sweat

  faithfully dabbed across his widow’s peak

  by an old white cloth always tucked

  in his back pocket basking in the praise

  of his job well done

  After the pictures are done

  caught back and forth

  on opposite sides

  of the crowded field

  buzzing with families proud

  of children

  they don’t really know

  we pull into the driveway

  as the sky surrounding Dad’s house

  is deepening toward black from gray

  Mama glances toward

  his front door and back

  toward the road behind us

  scared

  I think to place a hand

  on her trembling shoulder

  but settle for telling her it’s okay, Mom

  tell her we’ll be a minute

  tell her I just need to change

  tell her they’re not home yet

  but Dad’s house is my house too

  Mama looks back at me

  wanting too much

  to see where I live

  but too proud to admit

  she needs my permission

  stares into the side of my face

  hungry for any scrap

  I might drop for her to catch

  reaches for my hand

  as I lift it just in time

  from the gear stick for her to miss

  shifting my foot

  from the brake pedal

  checking my phone for the time

  I tell Mama

  we’ve got thirty minutes

  before my father and that woman

  come home

  Some kids grew up coming home

  to the smell of mustard greens

  special recipe mac and cheese

  cornbread from scratch and cookies

  baking in the oven

  to the sound of their mama

  screamin at somebody on the tv

  getting on her nerves for the tenth time

  while she watches the same shows

  announcing to the whole house

  that this will be

  the last time I trip

  over a child’s raggedy school shoes

  or telling them you better

  clean up that funky alleyway

  that you like to call

  your bedroom

  some kids grew up

  being asked about

  why their grades ain’t

  better than that and fussin

  over homework they need to do

  but my mama

  was different

  my mama just

  wasn’t really the type

  To keep tabs on me
like that

  wasn’t really my mama’s style I learned years ago

  when she started asking me my age

  I’d look back at her and wonder

  how she could forget when she had me

  how she could push out a whole person

  and just forget

  Mama and I both forget

  about time the minute I turn the key

  unlocking the front door to Dad’s house

  suddenly it’s like we’re surrounded

  by a museum of forbidden family

  knowing she can look but not touch

  Mama is everywhere her feet

  take her wanting to see what we’ve

  been up to while she’s away

  the walls covered with me at every age

  that she struggles to remember

  Mama getting lost in all the picture frames

  my fancy life of birthday parties and school plays

  my first dance recital on a park stage

  dressed in colorful West African cloth like the other girls

  a buzz from my phone reminds me

  to get her upstairs so I can change my clothes

  From upstairs I can hear Dad’s car door slam

  and I know they are home already

  Mama’s fidgets come back again

  and I’m angry

  when just seconds ago

  her soft hands were gliding

  across my pictures

  my clothes

  my animals

  stuffed with love

  and a pillow with her picture

  stuck inside its plastic cover frame

  freshly painted red fingernails

  touching just about everything

  happy to be in the room

  where her child sleeps

  happy to be inside

  and here she is

  now filled with fear

  filled with how they will see her

  a stranger squatting

  in her own daughter’s

  bedroom

  I run from my room

  closing the door behind me /

  down the stairs / I run / so I can

  smile and twirl / real sweet once more /

  for Dad / and his new wife

  to dance / in their still-fresh

  pride of the new high school graduate

  where is she, Dad asks

  I tell him

  she is upstairs

  tell him

  we’ll only be a few minutes

  tell him

  this is my house too

  his new wife looks and sucks her teeth

  upstairs, one of the first, down here the last

  my baby brother off playing and oblivious

  and suddenly I know somewhere

  it’s written, somewhere it says

  my mama shouldn’t be here

  Mama shouldn’t be here

  so we’re gone quick and quiet five minutes later to eat

  anywhere but here and Mama is cussin but I smile and turn

  on the radio, blast the ac cause it’s just her and me

  I ask her where she wants to go and she tells me anywhere girl

  I’m with my baby

  I knew we shouldn’t have gone in there! chile, did you see how she

  was lookin

  I pretend it’s all nothing and drive us to my favorite restaurant

  thumping my fingers

  on my lap to the beat, leave Mama to keep talking and talking

  to the tune of herself

  She already answered this herself

  when I come back to the motel for her the next day

  a question she asks in the car on the way

  to my graduation party and it sounds like some

  kind of silly joke where she’s playing or must have

  forgotten the party where we are headed is for me

  I don’t really feel

  like bein bothered

  with all them people

  all them people I don’t know

  and they just gon be

  lookin at me and I’m just gon be

  sittin by myself and I just ain’t

  in the mood to be bothered, you know

  I ask her what she wants to do instead

  but tell her I’m going to my party, after all

  it was thrown for me, it’s either she comes

  or she gets on the next train back, cause

  today is supposed to be about me

  oh I don’t know but

  I don’t feel like bein bothered

  I really ain’t tryna go to no party

  she says

  Away from the party on this drive to the train station

  it’s only silent for a few minutes

  before I’m called every name

  I’m sure I’m not supposed to be

  called by my mama but I know

  this is how she says she’s angry

  this is how she says this is her day too

  this is how she says she’s sorry

  in her own way, as a mother

  for breaking all the rules

  The first thing I do after everyone is gone

  is shut the door

  close the blinds

  sometimes being dramatic

  is my thing but

  this really was

  the first time I’ve seen

  this much cash

  ever

  the room I’d slept in

  for the past seven years

  painted a Pepto-Bismol pink

  was now marked

  an old green

  at the center

  I’d opened each

  graduation card alone

  skipped Hallmark notes

  telling me Good Job! and Great Things Ahead!

  skipped every Congrats on your big day!

  in search of what mattered most

  told Dad I didn’t feel like

  being mushy

  in front of all

  those people

  but truth is

  I just wanted

  to count my money

  in peace

  Dad says having money brings peace

  always quotes what seems like

  his favorite bible verse that

  says money is the answer

  to everything

  money answereth to all matters

  he says so seriously whenever

  we talk about dreams or just

  pulling into a gas station

  I know you think

  all I care about is money

  but you can’t tell me life isn’t easier

  when you have extra in your pockets

  bible verses and African proverbs

  always being the half answers

  to my questioning

  but looking down into the pile

  this time, maybe he’s right

  Right now

  I’ve got about a thousand dollars

  and two months until I’m officially on my own

  a stack of bills in my hand, gifts

  from Dad’s friends, names and faces

  I couldn’t remember but Dad told them

  come

  said the people that really love you

  will bring you things, shower you

  with gifts if they really care about you

  come to your party with thick envelopes

  never show up with

  empty hands

  My hands hold

  more m
oney now

  than I’ve ever seen

  all at once

  so I slowly

  count it all

  again and again

  passing dirty paper

  through moistening fingers

  wondering what it means

  imaging what

  all this green can do

  hundreds of miles away

  there’s no way

  I can tell him

  how much I really have

  there’s no way

  I could tell him

  without him making

  demands

  The next morning I trash the empty envelopes

  stand still in my half-empty bedroom

  in the silence of this empty house

  wishing I was already gone

  two months ago Dad took me

  to visit my new college

  and my mind is already gone

  wonder what would happen

  if Dad and his new wife came

  back from the store and my body was already

  gone

  I am gone again

  before Dad has the chance

  to come knocking at my door after

  everyone is back from church to ask me

  how much or if I made sure to say thank you

  to all of his friends who put something

  in my hand

  I roll down my windows

  letting the highway air cool my thoughts

  allowing the rough wind to pull all the questions

  from shoulders and neck

  turn the music up louder

  cause it’s just me

  text Dad to let him know I had to work

  tell him I took an extra shift for college money

  that I forgot to tell him and not to worry

  that I realize it’s graduation weekend

  that it’s no big deal because I know

  everyone will be in bed early

  knowing when I get back

  from dance class

  no one will notice the sweat

  no one will question me

  tiredly raiding the kitchen

  and Dad will be in his room

 

‹ Prev