Rails Under My Back

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Rails Under My Back Page 6

by Jeffery Renard Allen


  Good game.

  Who got winners? Khaki Two curled up first one leg, then the other, checking his shoe soles. He pulled an old fighter pilot’s helmet (World War I stick-winged biplane, Snoopy and the Red Baron) over his sculpted hair.

  A scuffle flared up. No Face started for the court, Jesus followed him. Like a magnet, faces drew them in.

  Keylo. No Face spoke to Khaki Two. Why you give me that whacked weed?

  Give you? Bitch, I ain’t give you shit. You paid me.

  Jesus blinked. Focused. Keylo? So Khaki Two was Keylo, legend in the flesh. Word, drove an old red ambulance with a bed (stretcher?) in the back. His ho buggy he called it. Say he never changed the sheets.

  Keylo approached, and Jesus imagined him choking No Face in the noose of his bowed legs. He smiled toothless, like a snake. Crunched his face, a single line of eyebrow above lidless rat eyes. Balled in a boxer’s crouch. Rose on his toes with a dance in his body and pimp-slapped No Face upside the head.

  Damn, Keylo. Why you always fuckin around?

  Cause I want to. Keylo slapped No Face again. A storm of laughter convulsed the spectators.

  Damn, Keylo. No Face’s dreads rose like cobras. Quit.

  Make me, bitch. Fists moving, Keylo circled No Face, dukes up, slow-moving like an old man. Circling, he fired slaps, loud as thunder in easy rain, stinging blows which rocked No Face, hard, fast-pitched blows to the soft mitt of his raised chin. No Face hung tough, refusing to go down.

  Chill.

  Laughter died down.

  That’s right. Chill.

  Jesus searched for the voice’s source. Khaki One. Sunlight streaked his greased flesh, accentuating every vein. Chill, he said, voice feverish, cloggy and hot, phlegm-filled as if from a cold.

  Damn, Freeze.

  Freeze. Freeze.

  No Face alright, Freeze said. He hooked No Face’s head under his elbow and stroked the idiot’s bowed head. No Face grinned, tongue fish-flopping in his mouth. He alright. Freeze yanked down on No Face’s head, then released it. No Face ballooned up to his normal height. Don’t try to play him like a bitch.

  I was—

  Freeze cut Keylo off with a sharp glance. Shoved him into No Face. Kiss and make up.

  What?

  Kiss and make up. Freeze’s biceps were round and solid, train wheels. Go on. Kiss and make up.

  Keylo searched the crowd, pleading eyes and mouth.

  Freeze cut a grin. The crowd flew into stitches.

  You see the look on his face?

  Yeah.

  Had that nigga goin.

  Yeah.

  Thought he was serious.

  Bout to piss his pants.

  Shit.

  No Face bobbed in place, grinning, cannibal teeth, appreciative, glad that Freeze had made a fool of him. Freeze slapped him on the back. You did good, he said. He looked at Jesus, and his eyes spoke recognition. Jesus was sure of it. You did real good.

  Thanks, No Face said.

  Something inside told Jesus that Freeze’s compliment went beyond the battle with Keylo, addressed some secret subject.

  Yo, Freeze.

  The voice spun Freeze’s head.

  You had yo fun. A short dude spoke, coal-black face under a red baseball cap, brim backward, manufacturer’s tag dangling from the side like a tassel on a graduate’s mortarboard. You ready to do this?

  Aw ight, Country Plus, Freeze said. If you hard.

  I’m always hard.

  So pick yo team.

  Well you know I got my nigga here. Freeze nodded at Keylo. They slapped palms and locked fingers in some private ritual.

  Huh, Country Plus said. So what else is new? Ain’t yall married?

  Freeze ignored the comment.

  Give me MD 2020.

  My nigga.

  Cool, Freeze said. You can have him. Give me my man No Face. No Face swelled up with gratitude, chest out, lips inflated into a grin, one eye expanding expanding expanding, and he rose, tiptoes.

  Thunderbird.

  Damn, Freeze, Keylo said. You gon let this bitch play on our team?

  Jesus breathed his first whiff of Keylo’s gravedigger breath.

  Give a nigga a chance, Freeze said. Even a bitch. He gave Keylo a quick hug.

  Come on, Country Plus said. Choose another man.

  Damn, who else? Freeze studied the crowd.

  Pick him. No Face pointed to Jesus.

  Freeze gave Jesus a fishy-eyed look. I want him.

  That doofy-lookin muddafudda, Keylo said. He and Jesus faced one another, eyes colliding.

  And I’ll take Mad Dog. Okay. We set.

  Jesus pondered the faulty mathematics. That’s only four. Four players, not … No Face pulled Jesus into the huddle.

  Yo, g, Freeze said. What’s yo name?

  Jesus.

  Jesus?

  Yeah.

  Welcome, Jesus. I’m Freeze. Freeze extended his hand, and Jesus took it with his firmest grip.

  Country Plus pulled a dime from his pocket and tossed it shimmering into the air. Call em.

  Heads, Freeze said.

  The coin fell to the surface of Country’s skin. He slapped his palm over it.

  See, Freeze said. You already lost.

  What you call?

  You know.

  Country removed his palm. Heads.

  See.

  Country Plus stared into Freeze’s face, the price tag dangling from his cap and jerking back and forth in the breeze like a hooked fish on a line. From this time forward, I will make you hear new things.

  Whatever, Freeze said. You talk a good game. Let’s see if you can play.

  No Face unzipped his jacket and pulled it off, removed his T-shirt, and revealed his Mr. Universe torso.

  Hey, Jesus, Freeze said. That’s yo man. He pointed to Country Plus. Stick him.

  Word, Jesus said. Damn, how Freeze tryin to play me? Jesus always played center, the tallest and strongest player on the court. And here Freeze was, playin him like a guard.

  We skins, No Face said. Ain’t you gon take off yo shirt?

  Nawl.

  Why not?

  Nawl.

  Yo shirt gon get all funky.

  I’m aw ight.

  Better take out yo earring.

  Nawl.

  Nigga yank it off.

  Nawl.

  No Face, Freeze said. Take out the ball.

  No Face took out the ball. MD 2020 snatched his lazy entry pass and tossed an easy layup. Good steal. Country Plus congratulated his teammate, and his team—Thunderbird and Mad Dog—celebrated their first basket. No Face looked at Freeze with a drowning man’s eyes (eye!), begging for mercy.

  Country Plus threw Freeze the ball.

  Wait a minute, Jesus said. It’s their ball.

  Wake up! Keylo said. You in South Lincoln. Red Hook rules. Stonewall rules. Stonewall rules.

  Freeze took out the ball. Fired it to Keylo, who crouched low and ran it hard on his short, baby-thick legs. Country Plus’s unit swooped down on him, a flock of small fast birds moving in streaks, sparrows in a room. Keylo froze in place. Fired the ball at Jesus, but Country Plus clawed it in midair, and in the spark of a moment swept Jesus aside like a swatted fly. Jesus gave chase with everything in his legs. Country Plus launched for the nest-high basket, his elbow catching Jesus in the throat.

  Damn!

  Don’t sweat it, Freeze said. He took the ball out. Fired it in to Jesus. Jesus dribbled. Green-thumbed grass poked through the concrete and snatched at the ball. Tall weeds twisted around his legs. And puddles swamped him, quicksand. With each putting down of his heels, his whole body sank further into the court. Then Country Plus liberated the ball from his paralyzed fingers. Rode an invisible rainbow to the hoop. Reaming sight. The rim vibrated colors.

  Freeze looked at Jesus. Took the ball out, fired it to Jesus. Jesus barely caught it. A large fish. It slipped from his hands back into the dark court waters. Country Plus clawed it up, bearlike
. Lifted for the jump shot. Jesus jumped as hard and high as he could, springs in his toes. Fake. Country Plus had never left his feet. Now he took it casually to the hoop. Jesus landed back hard on the court, waves of hard concrete pulsing from his feet and through his body, mixing with waves of laughter circulating the court.

  You see that muddafudda? Way up in the air.

  Yeah. A real sucker.

  Freeze took out the ball.

  Wait, Jesus said. You take it in. The center is supposed to—

  Freeze fired the ball hard into Jesus’s defiant chest. Jesus watched him a moment, eyes working. He dribbled the ball up the court. Country Plus yanked it from his hands, a string on rolled twine. He dribbled, in front of him, behind his back, between his legs, while Jesus grabbed at the ball, again and again.

  Damn, look at that mark nigga!

  Gettin played like a bitch.

  Country Plus blew past Jesus. Took it behind the backboard for the reverse lay-in.

  In yo eye, punk.

  Mark.

  Trick.

  Ranked and intense observers watched Jesus. No shifting, no craning among the still faces, the still eyes. Country Plus laughed in close, Jesus hearing himself, the laugh erupt from his own belly.

  Be true to the game, Freeze said.

  Jesus lowered his eyes. The ball went weightless in his hands, so he hugged it to prevent it from floating away. The leather skin peeled away to allow him to look directly into the ball’s hollow inside, where shapes formed then started to move. Thick sweatbands pinch head and wrists. Sleeveless T-shirts loop skinny shoulders. Jogging shorts sag like oversized diapers. Layers of brightly colored socks curve like barber-pole stripes around thin calves. Converse All Stars, Pro-Keds, and leather Pumas scuff the court with rubber music. John, Lucifer, Spokesman, Dallas, and Ernie—the Funky Five Corners—geared up for battle. Chuckers doing chumps. John with his quick little hands, hands so fast they don’t move when he passes the ball. And Lucifer, mouth open, his tongue hangin in the air, some magical carpet lifting him above the ground, the court, the basket.

  And you shoulda seen that nigga shout out when he jammed the ball. Served up a facial. He’d be like, Take that, you punk ass motherfucker!

  Quiet Lucifer?

  Yeah. Quiet Lucifer. I dawked that in yo face!

  One-word Lucifer?

  One-word Lucifer. How you like that motherfucker! Feel good? Taste good? That tongue just flappin. And those big hands shakin in yo face like he jus rolled seven. Yeah, he had some big hands, but they was slow. Lucifer wasn’t no good at handling the ball. Dribblin. Catching a pass. Spokesman told John, Throw it at his face. He’ll catch it then. It worked. Same way with everything: Spokesman had an answer. Standing there, watching from the sidelines, rubbing his belly like a crystal ball. Tryin to science the game. Geometrize plays for the Funky Five Corners. This is a human behavioral laboratory. You know, white smocks and white rats. Test tubes and Bunsen burners. Ideas lead to buildings and bridges. I like to think about yall, us, the team, the Funky Five Corners, and visualize yall, us, the team, being better players through my schemes. He measure the court with a slide rule and a triangle, then write some figures down on his notepad, sketch some pictures.

  Damn, nigga. What you doin?

  Always tryin to science something.

  You may be Einstein but you ain’t no Jew. Still black. Science or no science.

  One time he took these big-ass pliers and measured every nigga’s head on the court. They let him, too, wanting to be part of the experiment, get written up. Spokesman. This other time he took this big magnet and poked it all around in the air and kept poking it. We jus shook our heads.

  When he made his report he expected you to abide by it. He shook his head when you fumbled a pass. A person your age and height normally covers three and a half feet with each step, so we must conclude that you shouldn’t have taken more than ten paces. An unnecessary waste of energy. Drew his lips tight with anger when you missed a layup. Lucifer, be slow about obeying the laws of gravity. And he was always placin bets. Oh, we can’t lose. I got this all scienced out. John, if my right eye jump, we win money for sure. We won some money too. Serious money a coupla times. Lost some. Did we profit? Who can say? I guess it evened out.

  YALL GON PLAY OR WHAT?

  A cool breeze wafted onto the stifling court, stirring up the stench of wine and weed. Jesus breathed through his hard-winded nostrils, unsure whether it was time to breathe in or breathe out. Everything was off, out of whack. Just need some more time. Gotta learn how to fly again. He was drowning in dark waters, in spinning lights. Blood on his tongue. He surveyed the players, searching for that one face which would sanction his plight. Freeze cracked his anxious knuckles. Keylo checked his shoe soles. No Face hard-breathed. Then the sun awakened, clean and clear.

  I said yall gon play or what?

  Jesus saw in precise detail thick, ropelike veins stretched lengthwise in skinny arms and hands. Saw a red sleeveless T-shirt and a red baseball cap, brim backward, the price tag dangling from it. Jesus saw him. Jesus knew him. Engaged sight the pulse of his color. Red, he would get back in the game. He would—yes he, he alone, not his team—make a run.

  He fired the ball to No Face, who fired it to Freeze, who fired it to Keylo, who fired it back to Jesus. Jesus held the ball above him, squeezed in one hand. He brought it upcourt, dribbled three times, blip, blip, blip, then took it up the alley, body curved, elbows high. He faked the layup, drew back for the jumper, kicking his feet ballerina-like in midair. The ball arched from his fingertips. Sunk.

  Country Plus grinned. I gave you that one, he said. Felt sorry for you. He took the ball in. Lifted off his toes for the jumper. Jesus caught the ball in the palm of his hand, midflight, fly to fly strip. Swatted the ball to Freeze, who lifted for the easy basket.

  You got lucky on that one, Country Plus said. He looked Jesus flush in the face.

  Guess so, Jesus said.

  Mad Dog fired the ball to Country Plus. Country Plus crouched low in the dribble, challenging Jesus.

  Pass the ball, Country.

  Nigga, stop showin out.

  Jesus punched the ball from between his legs, scooped it up, and arched it into the net.

  Country looked at Jesus, anger and frustration concealed like fishhooks in his eyes.

  Thunderbird inbounded the ball to Mad Dog, who bounced it in MD 2020’s direction. Jesus hopped on the ball mid-air, squeexed it tight between his thighs, and rode it for a second or two like a bucking bull. Country Plus faced him, crouched, arms out, yellow sweat covering his forehead. Jesus bobbed and weaved, then broke for the basket, elbows working, tearing off a layer of Country’s flesh. Jesus soared in solar heat—he could stay up in the air long as he wanted—gave niggas plenty time to count each tread mark on his rubber soles. He looked down on the basket miles below him, and released the ball like a bomb.

  Okay, okay. Don’t get happy. Game ain’t over.

  Country Plus planted his feet, tent in a field. Wind, Jesus blew him flat. Jumped for the shot. The ball hit the rim. Bounced. Once. Twice. Freeze snatched the rebound. The enemy unit trapped him within a wall of raised arms. Freeze fired the ball to No Face. Perfect pass. Except No Face was three seconds behind the ball.

  Bitch, Freeze said.

  Damn you slow, Jesus said.

  Bitch, Keylo said, you better stop fuckin up. Or I’ll wrap my dick around yo head like a turban.

  No playin bitch, Jesus said. Sweat dribbled down his nose, his mouth, his chin, every inch of his skin, every cell flooded with the energy of the game, the rhythm of his breathing. He studied his heart’s double beat. Defense. That was the key. Offense through defense. Offense through defense. Fundamental. Time and distance. Count the pauses between bounces. Feel the game, deep down, somewhere behind the belly, near the lungs. Play as you breathe.

  Country Plus rose like a wave for the basket, and Jesus chopped him down with one stroke.

  Damn!r />
  Jesus dunked and almost threw himself through the hoop. He landed on the court with easy footing, tiptoes, a ballerina.

  That’s game.

  We won.

  Country Plus lay flat and still on the concrete, like something you could stick a fork into. Mad Dog extended an aiding hand. MD 2020 and Thunderbird followed his lead, but Country Plus slapped their hands away, then raised himself warily, like someone trying to stand up on a rocking boat.

  Next time, Country.

  Next time.

  Good game.

  Yeah, Country said. Good game. He studied Jesus with nonforgetting, nonforgiving eyes. Good game. Catch yall later. He turned and led his unit from the court, parading his anger and his wound.

  Jesus gave Freeze a high five, palms slapping. Slapped some skin with Keylo and No Face. Memory warm like sweat on his skin, of the Funky Five Corners—John, Lucifer, Spokesman, Ernie, Dallas—celebrating a victory.

  You play a strong game, Freeze said. He greeted Jesus with a quick hug.

  Yeah, Keylo said. He removed his pilot’s cap, exposing a thick wave of greased hair, raised and stiff, a parrot’s comb. He turned the cap upside down and dumped out a gallon of sweat. Liked the way you conned them mark niggas, actin like you couldn play at first. He fit the pilot’s cap back snugly on his head.

  You got it going on like a big fat hard-on.

  Jesus said nothing. He wanted more game.

  Straight up. Hard.

  Ain’t no man, woman, or beast can beat me, Jesus said, words warm with his heart’s heat.

  You got that right.

  Word.

  You the man.

  Aw, Freeze, No Face said. You don’t know him from Adam. This nigga can tell some stories.

  Stories? What kinda stories?

  Like—

  Like the time he fucked yo mamma.

  No Face looked at Freeze.

  Keylo twisted off the metal cap on a cloudy, missile-shaped forty-ounce bottle of malt liquor. Threw his head back and gulped down the liquid, Adam’s apple working. A big booty switched by. Some bitch got a big booty around here.

 

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