Truth to tell, as a technique for staying alive, humping seemed to make as much sense as anything. You’re a killer. Let your nuts hang. Though humping brings back all the feelings of self-pity you experienced after a thorough childhood whooping, after Pappa Simmons’s motion-hot belt scorched a black map into your behind. Dream it to yourself. You sit in a wheelchair, paralyzed. Pappa and Georgiana cry behind you, their guilty tears wetting your shoulder. Forgive us, we didn’t know. You say nothing, hate stitching your mouth shut. A year later, you are dead. Pappa and Georgiana are carried out from the funeral parlor, bowed over with grief. Forgive us, we didn’t know.
Your first months in the shit, you move wrapped in terror. Birds of fire rush for cover inside your head. You jump here and there with the histrionics of a bad actor rehearsing for the carnival of your death. Fucking New Guy. Slowly, by degrees (three months in the shit, you figure), a grunt learns to relax. By then fear has become so much a part of your flesh that it no longer bothers you. Your heart develops a reasonable rhythm. You master the fine points of killing and survival. For humping makes you tough and smart and capable, as the sun heats your helmet and scorches into your brain memories of your kills, from your first confirmed—Charlie came through the tall elephant grass. You let loose a whole clip—don’t overheat your weapon; squeeze the trigger in three-second bursts; and remember that every fifth bullet round is a red-tipped tracer—sixteen rounds right in the face. From the chin up, the face disappeared as if from acid. The body stood there and shivered. Took two steps forward and fell—to your most recent, your weapon resting easy in your arms, forging a new self, a matching of heart and muscle and will that force the old self into a premolded present. Tiny steps perfect in their knowing of the drum, follow the wound that is the river back to the sea. Relax. The worst that could happen, you could die. At least the humping would be over.
THE COMPANY CAMPED on a high saddle of the mountain. Been in the shit all day, humping bush and dragging through swamp. You dig a foxhole and fill up sandbags to fortify the trench. That done, you try to piss. Take a shit. Stubborn, pee and shit refuse to leave your body and be stranded in this foreign land.
You settle down on your haunches. View the night jungle through the starlight scope. (Nothing moved. Nothing ever moved. A dark flutter of leaves, perhaps.) Besides, halfway up the hill, your eyes have adjusted enough for you to discover that darkness contained its own light. And light here required shadow there.
You look up into the sky. The stars seem quite close through the branches. You count them, name those you know, identify the constellations. Rest is an illusion. Like the earth, those stars wheel in constant motion. All luminous stars are dead stars. You fix your eyes on a single star. Gather in its cold light. A gentle arm touches you.
You close your eyes doll-like once your back touches the ground.
LIGHT RACES to meet your eyes. The sun wakes you. Rise and shine. But the company has moved on without you. Shit. You study the situation. The world draws together to one center before you. You stare into the mountains, a green screen that hides the war. In many spots the trees thin to let in sunlight. Not a sound. Such quiet, such peace. What should you do? Will they come back to find you? Should you search for them? Surely, if you stay here, Charlie will find you. If you move, you might find Charlie. Flesh surprise flesh. You directed your gaze at the sky. Big whitish clouds massed together. God is up there somewhere.
24
SHEILA ALWAYS FEELS TRAPPED DOWN HERE, in this steel box sliding over iron rails. She gives her body over to the rocking and swaying of the train. Her feet are stinging, need a pan of hot water and vinegar to draw out the tired.
Are they really nasty like people say? Shaneequa scrunches up her face, a frown line or two in her young smooth skin. Her white head wrap forms a swirl like vanilla ice cream. Her face is turned toward Sheila with the window behind it, a black rectangular frame, and Sheila stares in stunned admiration. Shaneequa is the best age to be, for a woman, a year or two short of twenty-five, before age invades the skin, sets in, stays. I mean, nobody can be that nasty.
Their daughter is, Sheila says. She take off her panties and let them drop: the floor, the piano stool, in front of the fireplace, the kitchen table—it don’t matter.
Nasty, Shaneequa said.
Enough to make you sick.
Nasty.
And she had plenty of home training.
You ever think about retiring?
And do what?
Lots of things.
You sound like Porsha.
Did you ask them?
Hush. Don’t bother me.
Mamma—
Now, I done told you not to bother me.
They’ll give it to you if you ask them.
How you know?
Cause the Shipcos are good people.
Maybe, but that don’t mean they have to give me anything.
If you ask, you could move—
Now, don’t bother me. I’m tired and don’t want to hear none of your foolishness.
Wish Sam was here, Hatch said. He’d ask them.
Who asked you anything? You tryin to aggravate me too?
How bout Dave? Porsha said.
Dave? Wit his drunk self? Hell, you might as well get Lucifer.
Dad? He never open his mouth fo anything. Barely mumble a word of praise or complaint.
John.
Yeah. Get John to ask em. He ain’t scared.
Look, ain’t nobody askin nobody nothing. I can ask myself. And I’ll ask them when I feel like it.
I’m gon work til I can’t work no mo.
I got to buy a car, Shaneequa says.
You know it, girl. Save yo money. I might start riding with the car pool.
Why don’t you buy a car?
Me?
Shaneequa nods.
You must be jokin. I don’t know how to drive.
You can learn. Porsha can teach you.
It’s too late for that.
Steel meets steel with a jolt as the brakes grab and spring, shaking rhythms. The string of cars halt. Several boys enter the car from the door at the end of the corridor, slapping daps, rolling their hips, holding the knots in their groins. Shaneequa leans forward over her shopping bags. Sheila could not move if she wanted; her body is a deep dry well of exhaustion, from the last round of labor, calling out for water. Shaneequa’s gesture exposes the small butterfly pin stuck (floating) over the back of her right shoulder. She wears a new pin each day, always some variety of butterfly.
Sheila nodded at the boys. These younguns, she said. Can it get any worse? You wouldn’t believe what I saw yesterday when I was standing on the El platform.
What?
This Asian—She thought about it. Should she tell? No. She would save it for Lucifer. Get down in his thoughts and have him share them with her. Oh nothing. Jus these durn younguns. She shook her head. People wonder why they so bad. Raised in the streets. Out of the frying pan and into the fire. She shook her head. People don’t understand that a train can’t run in but one direction.
Yes, ma’m.
One night, Porsha and Nia, Porsha’s lifelong friend, had brought Shaneequa over to dinner.
Mamma, Nia said, this is Shaneequa Chase, my Stylist of the Month. Actually, she my stylist of every month.
From what little she knew, Sheila had gathered that Shaneequa was a bright young woman quick to see the possibilities of any new venture. She would go places. She had much to learn and Nia and Porsha could teach her. Nia and Porsha, two peas in a pod, a fat one and a firm one, one formless and spongy, the other shapely and hard; a lima bean and a pea—their relationship stretched back to childhood, like the rows of paper dolls they loved to cut from magazines. Nia and Porsha were serious in both work and play, strictly business in money and men, having sampled everything in the fish-giving sea, though Porsha was particular about what she tasted, while Nia was catch-as-catch-can. She seemingly had a new man every week, though she n
ever let any man stand in the way of her money. The dominoes fell and she gathered up her chips.
If anybody ask you who sing this song
Say it was ole Kneel Down Nia done been here and gone
Through the success of her Ship of Beauty (OPEN 24 HOURS), Nia had more money than she could shake a stick at—heck, a whole forest. And money really did grow from trees in her neighborhood, Hombreck Park in North Shore, where they watered the grass—fine-combed lawns sloping in every direction—with the sweat of hard work. Old houses untroubled by the face of modern construction. Occupants raised goats, chickens, and, believe it or not, horses and cows. A little bit of country life for people with city dreams and city habits. Nia lived in a big Victorian house, which she’d purchased for a steal at a government auction, hidden behind a screen of green trees, trees of an age and grandeur rarely encountered in the city. You could relax on a rough-hewn lawn chair, reach for the pitcher of cool lemonade on the raw-lumber table, and watch a marble pond where ducks and water lilies floated, watch the brown green blue yellow life of nature. Nia lounged around in her bathing suit, the ruts of the rattan chair pressed into her fat thighs. She flopped around the house in hemp sandals, purchased in Mexico, hair flying all over her head.
Nia’s success served as both accusation and witness. Sheila had choices. Her life might have gone different. All we have are choices. She realized that now.
By her own account, Nia worked Shaneequa hard. No wrong in that. Someday Shaneequa would feast on the golden fruits of her labor.
What time do you get off?
Two o’clock.
And you ride the train all the way back to Red Hook alone?
Shaneequa nodded. That’s why I need a car. She sat there, pocketbook on her arm, gloves in hand, the butterfly motionless on her back. Looked real. Not metal or ceramic, real. The white shawl wrapped around her head, holding out to the world’s inspection a round dark face with Indian cheekbones and shiny brown eyes. (Sometimes she hid them under a cloud of dark glasses.) The ankle-length dress inches above black calf-high boots, laced loop for loop, the strings taut over the leather.
Are you a Muslim?
No, ma’m.
It’s just the shawl and the dress.
I do it to keep the men away.
Girl, why you wanna do that?
What? Nia said. Girlfriend, don’t you like mens? She flicked her tongue fast and dirty.
How bout some modeling on the side?
Shaneequa turned her face away, the white shawl blush red at the edges. You sound like Porsha. She always tryin to get me to model.
How much longer do you plan to model? You’ll be thirty soon.
Not soon, Mamma. In three more years. You act like thirty is the end of the world.
The boys passed them—Shaneequa’s butterfly fluttered slightly, testing its wings—and found seats at the other end of the car.
Man, he act like a bitch. The boy’s voice mirrored his face, hard and rough.
Word.
See, a ho can pussywhip a nigger.
Yeah.
Look at Jerome. Henpecked. His bitch and her best friend gang up on the nigga.
Birds of a feather flock together.
Yeah, tsetse fly.
The boys shoved around rough laughter.
The train hit a curve—the tunnel tightened around it like a fist—the riders pressed hard against the rim. The boys resumed their filthy talk. Sweat began to sheet Shaneequa’s forehead.
COATED WITH FILTH, electric lightbulbs stretched toward the tunnel’s black mouth. Paint peeled from the walls—scabs from a wound—exposing the white undersurface. Sheila took the stairs slowly. Closer to the street now, sunlight pushed through a window, splattered against the oily walls, a fluorescent river, streaming down the sides and pooling into cracks on the tiled floor.
Heels ticked by clocklike. Night rushed in. Traffic moved, an unguided circle. Buildings flecked with tiny squares of yellow light. Houses hazed in smoke. Each streetlamp provided a small oasis of light. She felt pain in every step. This was the part of the journey she hated, walking under the eye slide of the drunks, drunks who cast foul shadows, crowding in and staring, pushing their breath in your face. Hey now, fine girl. Evil spirits possess bums at night, enter the empty tenements of their souls. She kept her hand firm on the skillet in her purse. Times like this, she wished she owned a cattle prod. Or a stun gun. Maybe even a real gun. It was very dangerous to live even one day.
Man, look at that caboose.
Yo, baby.
Hi, she said. She always spoke. Kept walking.
My, you a pretty one.
Everyone always noticed her good looks. (She was the spitting image of her mother, only a shade or two darker.) The shadow-circled eyes (like women in silent movies), the round face, the glossy black ponytail that heightened her high cheekbones, the thin neck, and the smooth caramel skin. When you smile, Lucifer said, it gives your age away. She thought about it; when she smiled, the lines of her face stretched tight, vibrating with age. But the hands—Yeah, Lucifer said, they give you away too. He kissed them, running their roughness against his smooth lips. She had tried to protect them, snapped rubber gloves over them for forty-four years. Labor bit through. Her hands. Her body part the most like her mother’s. But her sixty-year-old mind inhabited the same body she’d had at seventeen. Gravity had yet to take its toll, come drooping and sagging. And her respectful dresses and blouses hid her burns—not many really, four—one for each limb, each the size of a leather elbow patch, cause Lula Mae had left her baby by an open fire. How? Why? Beulah said that Lula Mae had gone to town to purchase Christmas gifts, while Dave claimed R.L.’s father had paid Lula Mae a visit—and Mr. Albert Post happened along to discover her. For all the years since, Sheila had tried to imagine Lula Mae’s face when she discovered Albert Post ducking her baby in a bucket of water.
Yo, bitch. Why you walkin away?
The walk home seemed long tonight, and she had to will each foot to step one at a time. Step on a crack, break yo mamma’s back.
Give you five dollars if you suck—
Sometimes, after she heard or read about a torched bum, her heart lifted on flicking fingers of flame. Thank heaven for hell. She and Lucifer had moved to this neighborhood to enjoy the deeper currents of life: solitude, safety, sanctuary. Five years ago, Edgewater was the haunt of style and fashion. And the move from South Shore to here shortened her daily commute to work. Then the projects started spilling out roughnecks like sand from a broken hourglass. There was talk of privatizing Red Hook—a group of Japanese businessmen had already put in their bid—converting it into a luxury high-rise. After all, Red Hook was but a short walk from the Gold Coast. Soon, they might be forced to move again.
Bitch.
Keep walking, bitch.
Bitch, you think you better than me or something?
Yo shit still stink.
The city flowed up to her. (There are tides in the body.) An old wish returned. Her thoughts fled thirty years back down the sidewalk. Miss McShan, I don’t want nobody but you. Life struck straight through the streets. I don’t ever want anybody but you. The pavement vanished, slanting away into darkness.
You said, Yes, beneath the splintered scaffolding. Yes, drawn into a ball against the dawn’s wet chill. Fierce summer stars swimming through blue sky. Cause they left you there, in the light’s concentrated pool, perhaps expecting you to spill forth in a bright cascade of silver dollars. They left you there and you said, Yes, and he opened the door, shutting away the outside air. The lock clicked, skin setting off to light. Her eyes watching your eyes. Burning eyes, shoving hot pokers into your face. The heat can carry you to your inward-spinning self. Streaming through you. Lift skin to sky. Ice will flake and sink away.
She felt lighter inside now, nothing left to hide. All she had to face now was the knowable weight of Lucifer’s eyes.
THE SHEETS WERE CLEAN, fragrant, tight, white, stretched in the broad wid
e band that she had shaped that morning. She rushed to the bathroom. The tub was clean, white, and empty. Many a night, she would bathe Lucifer’s work-worn body in a tub of red leaves. Then he would massage her, rub memory back into her muscles. She felt an echo of her morning’s anger.
Rails Under My Back Page 34