Locomotion

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Locomotion Page 5

by Jacqueline Woodson


  night to

  read me and my sister a book or to watch some TV with

  us before

  we go to bed. Angel got quiet after that, pushed the mike

  away from his face. For a minute, the newsman

  just stood there—then quick fast, he turned to me

  asked What do you like about your teacher? Someone

  behind me said math and poetry. I shushed her.

  Not math, I said. Just the poetry.

  Well, why don’t you read us something,

  the newsman said.

  His hair looked like it was sprayed with a whole can

  of hairspray. It looked hard and shiny. Everybody

  ran to get their poetry books saying Me, Me, but the

  newsman kept looking at me. No,

  he said. I’d like to hear something

  from this gentleman. I looked at Ms. Marcus and she

  nodded.

  Go on, Lonnie.

  So I read the poem about birth, real slow, the way

  Ms. Marcus said

  we should read our poetry,

  so everybody could understand it.

  After I finished, nobody said anything for a long time.

  Then the newsman started grinning

  Ms. Marcus smiled and the newsman

  just sort of shook his head, nodding and looking at me.

  Then Lamont said

  That poem’s corny. It don’t even rhyme.

  But Angel said I liked it. And some other kids said

  Me too.

  EASTER SUNDAY

  At church, the preacher goes on about Christ rising

  back up. There’s palms everywhere and Easter

  lilies in big pots. Everybody’s dressed all nice—

  ladies in big hats,

  guys in suits. Little girls in pink and yellow and white

  dresses like Easter eggs.

  Was it a big sacrifice to give your life

  if you knew you was gonna rise back up?

  I mean, isn’t that like just taking a nap?

  I listen to the preacher. I listen to the people going

  Amen and Yes, Lord. I run my hand across

  Lili’s Bible. Some days I feel like I don’t know

  nothing about nothing.

  RODNEY

  He comes in the door and sets a big duffel bag down,

  lifts Miss Edna up like she weighs two pounds

  and she’s laughing

  and punching

  his shoulders and crying all at the same time.

  Then he lifts me up, says Look at Little Brother Lonnie

  all growed up

  You almost a man now, aren’t you.

  Little brother.

  Little brother Lonnie.

  My big brother Rodney.

  Imagine that!

  There’s roast beef and ribs and potato salad.

  There’s rice and peas and corn bread and greens.

  There’s sweet potatoes and macaroni and cheese and

  even some fried okra

  There’s three kinds of pie and two kinds of cake

  and we eat

  and we eat and we eat till the thought of eating

  another bite makes us feel like crying.

  All the while Rodney’s telling us how he’s come on home,

  gonna get himself a job here. Says

  Ain’t nothing for me upstate anymore.

  He has Miss Edna’s dark skin and straight teeth. They

  even laugh the same.

  He’s tall and his shoulders are wide like somebody

  who could

  get a pro football contract if they wanted to.

  I lift my own skinny shoulders, wishing they’d spread

  out like Rodney’s do.

  Little Brother, he called me.

  The kitchen is warm.

  Miss Edna can’t stop grinning.

  Rodney’s voice sounds like it should always be

  in this house.

  Little Brother, he called me.

  Little Brother Lonnie.

  EPITAPH POEM

  for Mama

  Liliana C. Motion

  Born in October

  died in December

  But that’s not all

  that I remember.

  FIREFLY

  It’s almost May

  and yesterday

  I saw a firefly.

  You don’t see

  them a lot

  in the city.

  Sometimes

  in the park

  in the near dark

  one comes out

  you’ll hear

  a little kid shout

  Lightning bug! Firefly!

  It’s almost May

  and yesterday

  I caught a firefly in my hand.

  First firefly I

  seen in a

  long, long time.

  Make a wish,

  Miss Edna said.

  Make a good one.

  Firefly wishes always come true.

  THE FIRE

  The newspapers said it was electrical

  bad wiring in the basement or maybe the first floor.

  We lived on the third.

  Five rooms counting the kitchen

  and the kitchen was big.

  The newspapers said two people died

  and right on the next line was their names.

  The newspapers said survived by

  Lili and Lonnie Motion. Ages 4 and 7.

  A bus was leaving real early for the Bronx Zoo

  and Mama and Daddy had a date by themselves

  Pastor Marshall’s daughter was taking a bunch of kids

  so we all slept over at her house

  And Mama and Daddy had a date

  That made me and Lili laugh

  Married people don’t go on dates, I said.

  And Mama and Daddy shooed us on out of the house

  into Pastor Marshall’s daughter Sarah’s car.

  You two be good, Mama said.

  And Lili blew her a kiss.

  You think it’s still flying through the air somewhere?

  ALMOST SUMMER SKY

  It was the trees first, Rodney tells me.

  It’s raining out. But the rain is light and warm.

  And the sky’s not all close to us like it gets

  sometimes. It’s way up there with

  some blue showing through.

  Late spring sky, Ms. Marcus says. Almost summer sky.

  And when she said that, I said

  Hey Ms. Marcus, that’s a good title

  for a poem, right?

  You have a poet’s heart, Lonnie.

  That’s what Ms. Marcus said to me.

  I have a poet’s heart.

  That’s good. A good thing to have.

  And I’m the one who has it.

  Now Rodney puts his arm around my shoulder

  We keep walking. There’s a park

  eight blocks from Miss Edna’s house

  That’s where we’re going.

  Me and Rodney to the park.

  Rain coming down warm

  Rodney with his arm around my shoulder

  Makes me think of Todd and his pigeons

  how big his smile gets when they fly.

  The trees upstate ain’t like other trees you seen, Lonnie

  Rodney squints up at the sky, shakes his head

  smiles.

  No, upstate they got maple and catalpa and scotch pine,

  all kinds of trees just standing.

  Hundred-year-old trees big as three men.

  When you go home this weekend, Ms. Marcus said.

  Write about a perfect moment.

  Yeah, Little Brother, Rodney says.

  You don’t know about shade till you lived upstate.

  Everybody should do it—even if it’s just for a little while.

  Way off, I can see the park—blue-gray sky

  touching the
tops of trees.

  I had to live there awhile, Rodney said.

  Just to be with all that green, you know?

  I nod, even though I don’t.

  I can’t even imagine moving away from here,

  from Rodney’s arm around my shoulder,

  from Miss Edna’s Sunday cooking,

  from Lily in her pretty dresses and great

  big smile when she sees me.

  Can’t imagine moving away

  From

  Home.

  You know what I love about trees, Rodney says.

  It’s like . . . It’s like their leaves are hands reaching

  out to you. Saying Come on over here, Brother.

  Let me just . . . Let me just . . .

  Rodney looks down at me and grins.

  Let me just give you some shade for a while.

  CLYDE POEM I: DOWN SOUTH

  They used to live in Macon, Georgia

  Peaches, he says. Georgia pecans you eat right

  off the tree. Georgia pines like those that don’t grow

  no place else.

  He picks up little rocks and throws them across the school yard.

  I know Georgia, I say. I know all about those pecans and pine trees.

  The sun is warm and bright yellow.

  There’s kids screaming everywhere.

  But me and Clyde don’t hardly notice

  ’Cause we’re sitting up against the school yard fence

  just slow-pitching little stones

  and remembering Georgia

  a place we both used to

  a long time ago know.

  FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

  When Eric comes back, it’s like the first day

  of school and he’s the new boy

  in a classroom where everybody’s been together since

  kindergarten. He’s skinnier, quieter

  and everybody looks at him out of the corner

  of their eyes. Even Lamont is looking

  away when he slaps Eric’s hand and says

  What’s up, Dog?

  And even Eric’s not looking at anything when he says

  Ain’t nothing so softly, you wonder

  what happened to the other Eric.

  And at lunchtime Eric shakes his head no

  when we ask him to play ball,

  walks real slow over to the edge of the school yard

  and sits by himself

  just staring like he’s been

  dropped out of the sky

  into a world that’s kind of familiar

  but mostly not.

  What’s up, Dog? We say to him

  and he just looks off, nods real slow

  like he’s seen some things

  we’ve never seen.

  Knows some things

  we’ll never know.

  DEAR GOD

  Dear God,

  I’m reading the book you wrote. My sister, Lili, gave it to me. I like the beginning when it talks about how you made everything and then rested. It don’t say how though. Like how did you make the sky and the water and the earth and stuff? And when you took a rib from Adam to make Eve, was that like an operation? Miss Edna says it’s blasphemous to ask those kinds of questions but I just wouldn’t mind knowing some answers. Lili said when I finish the book, we’ll be back together. It won’t be exactly the same ’cause, as you know, my mom and dad passed away. You must know because people blame you. I mean, people always say “The Lord works in mysterious ways” and that makes me think that them dying in that fire had something to do with you. I don’t really understand though. So I’m trying to finish up the book you wrote but it’s got a lot of pages and a lot of names I can’t sound out. I read a little bit every night and when Miss Edna comes in, she nods at me and smiles. In the nighttime if she hears me crying, she comes in and rubs my shoulders. She says, “It’s gonna be okay, Lonnie. Don’t you worry none. It’s all gonna work out fine.” And some nights, I fall asleep believing her. God? Did you know that this was a poem letter? And God? Is there some kinda sign you can send down about how Mama and Daddy are doing up there with you? I’m gonna see Lili tomorrow and it’d be nice to go to her new mama’s house with some good news.

  Love, Lonnie.

  LATENYA II

  “All, all, all in together girls

  how you like the weather, girls?

  Fine. Fine. Superfine.

  January, February, March . . .”

  That’s how the jump-rope song goes.

  LaTenya’s over there. She jumps out

  on her birthday month, March,

  comes over to where I’m sitting

  against the school yard fence.

  LaTenya! one of the other girls says but LaTenya

  just waves her hand

  I’m done playing, she says. Then sits down

  says Hey.

  I say Hey yourself.

  My stupid heart beating hard.

  LaTenya so close I can smell coconut hair grease

  like the kind Miss Edna uses sometimes.

  I can see a place on her hand where a little bump

  sticks out

  right by her pinky finger.

  What’s that? I ask, pointing.

  And LaTenya puts her hands real fast behind her back.

  Then after a long time, she takes them out again.

  Holds them out to show me.

  Used to have extra fingers, she says.

  You gonna run away now?

  You gonna call me a freak?

  The school yard’s sunny and loud.

  There’s kids everywhere.

  LaTenya’s friends start singing that All, all

  all in together, girls song again.

  I want to say You sure are beautiful, LaTenya.

  I want to say You sure are something.

  But my lips get stuck over my teeth.

  And my mouth dries up.

  And all I can do is reach out and touch

  those tiny bumps that once was fingers

  look at LaTenya, smile and let out a little whisper

  No.

  JUNE

  Camp Kaufman’s in upstate New York

  in a little town with a long name.

  You go to Port Authority and take a bus

  and ride for two hours.

  Then you’re there.

  And there’s horses and a lake, a swimming pool too.

  And there’s your little sister, Lili

  for two whole weeks in July

  the two of you with a whole lot of other kids

  but the two of you

  together again

  every single day.

  Camp Kaufman’s coming

  But now it’s June

  and you’re walking in Prospect Park

  with your little sister, Lili,

  her new mama’s back there at a picnic table

  with some people from her church

  that you go to now

  every other Sunday not because of church

  or her new mama’s god

  or the Bible your sister gave you.

  You go because her new mama said Well, I guess so

  when you asked if you could start going.

  You go because

  you get to sit next to your little sister

  for two whole hours and after, if the weather’s nice

  you and your little sister get to go to Prospect Park

  and spend some more time

  together.

  Some of the church ladies pinch your cheek

  Say He’s a handsome boy, Selma

  to Lili’s new mama

  who just gives you that look

  And sweet as he can be, the church ladies say.

  It’s Sunday

  and you and your little sister are walking in the park.

  It’s warm and the sun is too bright to look up at

  but you feel it on your forehead and neck and down

  your arms
.

  Later on, maybe you and your big brother Rodney’ll go

  shoot some hoops

  and Rodney will laugh when you tell him

  about the church ladies.

  As sweet as he can be, you’ll say

  tryna sound just like them

  And Rodney will throw his head back

  laugh his big laugh.

  But right now, your little sister’s saying

  I told you and holding tight to your hand.

  Right now, your little sister’s just skipping along

  beside you. I told you, Lonnie!

  You see God everywhere these days. Especially

  when Miss Edna makes her sweet potato pie

  and when

  your little sister smiles.

  And camp is only another three weeks away.

  And school is almost over.

  Maybe one day I’ll see your name in print

  Ms. Marcus said.

  You have a gift, Lonnie.

  The poems come to you day and night. Sometimes

 

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