Rails Under My Back

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Rails Under My Back Page 44

by Jeffery Renard Allen


  You want to make a report?

  Transformer, Jesus says when he can speak. His face has resumed its normal color, a red road map of veins. He lifts his chin slightly, looks Hatch full in the face, his own face tightening. Transformer.

  Shut up, the cop says, heavy, male.

  Snitch. Jesus lurches forward. The cops pull him back.

  Just relax. The cops apply muscle.

  Jesus frowns, gash-deep.

  My hands were tied, you say. You made me, you say, the words with life of their own.

  Uncle John enters the room, paper bag in arm. Like beheaded chickens, two glass necks poke out from the open end of the brown paper bag. Uncle John and Jesus lock their eyes on one another. Uncle John’s mouth expands, marshaling words behind the tongue.

  But know this, Gracie says. Head bent back, neck craned and looking up into Jesus’s face. That if the good man of the house had known in what watch the thief would come, he would not have suffered his house to be broken up.

  Uncle John shifts the bag from one arm to the other—the two bottles inside the bag knock together—the only sound in the room. Uncle John’s chest moves deep and slow, feeling and measuring every breath.

  Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his lord hath made ruler over the household, to give them meat in—

  Shut up! Uncle John says. His chalk-white teeth scrape the blackboard of Gracie’s flesh. She shudders.

  Take him, Uncle John says. Take him, he pushes the words out, somewhere and let him cool off, he says.

  Jesus flashes his eyes at Uncle John.

  This your house?

  Uncle John says nothing.

  You want to file a complaint?

  Uncle John says nothing.

  Look, we’ll take him but we ain’t got time for this. There real crime out there.

  Take him, Uncle John says. He aims his mouth like a flashlight in Jesus’s face. It won’t kill him.

  You heard the man. The cops tug Jesus into motion. You can feel your heart all through you. Eyes slide away from Jesus’s hating face. The cops waver swiftly to Gracie’s open front door. The cops slip and shamble with Jesus on the polished black oak front-porch stairs. Carry Jesus between and away from them like a scalding bucket.

  Don’t forget his coat, Gracie says.

  Give it to me.

  Gracie passes the coat to Uncle John. Uncle John follows Jesus and the cops to the squad car. Winter hovers like a bird. I’ll come with you to the station, Uncle John says.

  Come in the morning. The cop snatches the jacket from Uncle John. Sleep on it. And sleep it off.

  The cops bend Jesus under the squad car hood. Push him into the back seat, throw his red coat over his head like a hood. Take their places in the front seat, doors slamming behind them, you and Uncle John watching from the sidewalk, the white headlights flicking bright—balloons in the night; light floating up inside to the inside place from where you watch—the engine growling and the car leaping forward onto the ribbon of road.

  THAT WAS THE LAST Hatch had seen of him. On first finding out about the cancer eating away Lula Mae’s body, Hatch was determined to journey to Jesus and let him know; he never raised one uncertain foot in search. But these many months Jesus had felt near. His presence clung like a damp shirt. Now Hatch understood why. His exile foretold. Jesus approached the full height of his weightless life, for Freeze had given him a high mission and he would fulfill it, his red will be done. Blood followed blood. Blood defined. Blood defended.

  T-Bone had smothered word for a reason. Hatch’s one spark of consolation. Through T-Bone, Hatch was wiser in the knowledge, perhaps safer too. The future will tell. But how to use this knowledge? Jesus was not within reach. Even if he was—Shifted, uprooted, Jesus would not drop back into what he had been for Hatch at the beginning. And Uncle John was gone from him forever. Lucifer too. And surely Freeze would not be swayed by reason, forget or forgive.

  Hatch dipped, dived, turned—all without leaving his seat. One thing for sure, he had to heart it alone. The wheels were in his head now, carrying him, pushing him. The train curved around the tunnel, grinding iron wheels working filelike over his teeth. He sat there, hungry, digesting his own invisibility. The train straightened into moving silence. Red Hook. The words bobbed into Hatch’s consciousness, shiny red apples. Hatch bit. Red Hook. He tasted. Red Hook. The words forced their way to his lips. He looked about the car to see if anyone had heard him. Assured, he savored the words on his silent tongue. He would walk beyond the knowable horizon. He would move, swift and definite. Red Hook. His bright mind cut through metallic glare. He would go to Red Hook. The thought came smooth, without effort, rippling like a boat over water. The train tilted up, unhitched from the world. The whole car filled up with joy so that it was hard to breathe. Yes, he would go to Red Hook.

  29

  BEAUTY DEMANDS MOTOR SKILLS. Like driving a car.

  She feels, words tossed into her silent insides. Her head warms to morning. A listening glow. Infinite sunlight. Infinite window. How clearly the instructor stands out against everything going on in front of her, his lips moving quietly, birdlike.

  White lines. Yellow lines. Steady hand at the circular wheel. Sight and touch equal, each with a job to perform. The instructor pours a cup of coffee—she can hear it, smell it, feel it—that gleams like liquid steel. Her nipples rise to quick attention. Heads bent over sketchpads, the students behave in exemplary fashion. Their hands move with ease, comfort in knowing exactly what to do.

  The reassuring sounds of another vehicle or two. Caught in the stillness of speed. The eye of each man is on himself. But, please, be careful. Cautious. The instructor waves his hands like a magician. Don’t blink.

  The students shake with laughter, their pencils moving spastically. She would laugh too, if her flesh would permit.

  Light, the most suitable of bodies, has the greatest extension.

  The words she sees and seeing hears sink into a darkness past her telling. The instructor bends at the waist; with his thumb removes a dust speck from brown leather shoe, glowing tie extending down and away from his neck, a dog’s wet tongue. She waits. Light ticks off the sun. Spring forward. Fall back. She sits in her own weather, private.

  Optics is inseparable from the study of lines, angles, and figures that are realized in the propagation of light.

  This still room (and her body still). Bright lake light tiding the window. Moved by the instructor’s voice, words foreign in meaning. Depths she can’t sound. Moved. She spreads thought on the morning. Water-deeps reflect opening roses, expanding (disintegrating) leaves, floating colors, petals larger than her hands.

  Your eye seeds itself. His fingers circle a sun-charged cup and saucer. A chip on the rim, neat clean and precise from a distance, as if painted on. He sips (one sips tea not coffee) it black. No sugar, I bet. Put money on it. Of smaller details, he says, coffee steam on his words, no saying. He chimes cup to saucer. Moves to the window—white cup and white saucer balanced in the palm of one hand like a delicate flower—blackfired against the light. Give me what you have.

  The window offers a visual path to Red Hook miles through air blindingly bright, clear as if she knew it firsthand. Her feelings expand. Her desire for Deathrow released and flowing.

  No false colors.

  Deathrow in a place memory picked out. His skin mirror to her own.

  No fraudulent lines. He lifts cup from saucer and tilts it to his lips. His eyes close with the drinking. He returns cup to saucer. Opens his eyes. Sets cup and saucer on the plane of windowsill. Breathes.

  Deathrow.

  He stands before the city—small eyes (bits of green glass), face strong, brows and hair the same heavy black; his body, fat and lined—it behind him, as if he had painted it. The city built into the sky. He built it. The calm of form, he gestures, the storm of imaginings.

  The serial glint of distances. Everything’s far, except here. Even the instructor. A shape she can follo
w back to a source in the self. The students study her from the intimacy of distance, their voices faint and far. They—the same face repeated over and over, eyes gleaming—had entered quickly and silently, this long brown room full of sunlight and shadows, shifting trees outside. Her brown form took the podium, while silent praises trailed her from their desks.

  To paint is to draw boundaries. Each dot a simple bearing that tells us where and how we ought to stand. He turns to face the window, his broad canvas of back facing the class. He takes it all in. Fresh. He lifts and sips. Ah, yes. Fresh.

  Still-seated, seated-still, she listens and observes, only her eyes moving, and their eyes and hands: so many styles of breathing, varied shells dotting a beach. She hears against wind from a distance Deathrow speaks from, the earth (sand) between them. Her tenderest knowing. Deathrow far away, in that region inside herself, untouched and unchanged. Him belonging by how she feels about him. Yearning inward to be part, to be embodied.

  To draw is to shut your eyes and sing. The instructor turns away from the window—light curling around him in the turning, curling, cocoonlike—back to the class. Taste is the mother of beauty. He takes up his cup and saucer, now yellow in the light. Open your mouth. Pigment. The instructor smiles, teeth large and round as eggs. Not pig meat.

  Student heads bob laughter.

  Time in the moment of waiting. This day barely different from the last. No Deathrow. No sight. No sound. No touch. Her heart shivers to stay her body. How much longer will I wait? She still—this is my job—letting wonder hold. (Could she afford less wonder?) Her mind, holding. Her body, waking and waiting, a gentle wearing down. The world gone over with the edge of sunrise, she had lifted her head from her exhausted pillow, bathed, dressed, baptized her earlobes with perfume, considered lipstick—tubular colors glittered in their steel bulletlike shells—taken the train, numb to the day, walked across the spring grass, the grass hissing at her heels, ducked under black boughs, angled through sections of the sculptured garden where hoses sprayed furious foam, where—above—pigeons turned again and again, air on air. So morning found her, serene and neat, fully upright in an armless chair (plain, hard, wood), her proud flesh exposed for training eyes.

  What did I say or do? Maybe he met with an accident, black and blue. Deathrow. He never broods for days. So unlike him. Feel and feel in return. Only pain (or death) would keep him away from me, keep him from calling. She shivered at the thought, the inward turn of mind. Think the best. He is angry, even if lasting anger is uncharacteristic. Only one knows how two feel. She can ask, ask herself, how to the other she may appear, to his eyes and heart. Yes, the possibility of blind feeling when like-minded lovers harden, change.

  Number is the key to harmony. Two perpendicular lines, one from nipple to nipple, the other the length of the torso. Simple ratios between the height of the columns and the spaces between the axes.

  She could always go to Red Hook.

  The surest way to a center is through a maze. The instructor drains the saucer to hollow whiteness. Burps. Catch light as a design on us.

  Now the instructor’s voice wakens her, awakens in her the need to know. Heavy in her chair, weighted with alternatives. Yes, she could go to Red Hook and end the uncertainty.

  Once, she had driven there through freezing rain.

  It was nine at night and had been storming all day. Heavy rain jumped like divers from the clouds and collided against the car’s roof. (She would have to search it for dents. Yes, the Datsun 280ZX was brand-new then.) Her windows steamed, wind rushing the rain in. Bubbled in cowled sound, she drove slowly and carefully, illuminated by the dashboard’s green light. Traffic was heavier than usual in the city streets and even slower on the highway. Stalled cars floated, water-soaked driftwood. Stalled buses like watering elephants. She put her foot on the gas—the rain accelerated—wheeled to the outside lane and speeded past the limit. It didn’t take her long to reach South Lincoln. (Yes, she had seen it.) South Lincoln tilted into Tar Lake as if a careless broom had shoved it there. The Red Hook Housing Projects—the jets, so they called it, toilet flush and airplane roar—ringed it, a soaring metal commode flooded with an invisible tide of heaving black brown yellow flesh.

  She turned off at the exit. Entered a valley. The car whined down a black strip of street. Touched waters curved away from the windshield, carrying wake behind. Sealed inside the car, she observed square metal giants that looked down on small slumped-over houses set down boulderlike and squeezed together in silent rows.

  At the red-staring stoplight, she observed knucklelike roots that had pushed up through the concrete pavement but no tree. Flocks of vivid children threw bread at one another, their laughs and taunts fluttering up. The light blinked green.

  She drove past the Wells Street Port with its railroad tracks extending onto docks where Tar Lake raged black waters. She was close now. Deathrow lived by himself—he had little to do with his family; long ago, he’d decided that they were guppies, eating their young—in a row house that was part of Red Hook but a good mile or more away from it.

  Her wipers quit. The windshield cried with blind rain. She worked the switch. The wipers refused to function. She would have to exit the car, enter the rain, and manually set the wipers back in motion. Sighting out the passenger window, she swung car to curb and kept the engine running. Under a blind streetlamp, corner boys tried to float an old gym shoe on a puddle. And hooded boys (men?) moved lethargic, dreamlike, in the half-light of rain and street.

  She stood away from the memory. Kept it at a distance. Ah, Deathrow. Deathrow.

  The instructor cut his eyes toward her. His nostrils flared a little. Had she said it out loud? Or moved with the thinking of it? Deathrow.

  30

  EVEN THE SKY WAS DIRTY HERE, canvas-colored, a rough sun pasted to it. Used papers fluttered about, giant moths. The morning full of sirens, moving in waves, crashing and rising again. Stonewall and Red Hook ran the distance of the horizon. Gatewayed in his eyes. Sparkled like two big buckets cast down in the middle of South Lincoln. He walked with measured steps. Every few seconds, his head wheeled back over his shoulder. He raised his arms like wings. Sticky sweat beneath his shirt. Many a time he had placed himself into the hollow form of a chalk-white sidewalk tracing, space that defined South Lincoln nightly on the TV news. He was alone here.

  South Lincoln was like another country, cut off and remote from the one on the rim. He knew. Before the Great Fire of 1871, locals called this strip of land, which ran west from Stonewall all the way east to Red Hook, Mud Europe. Poor white trash lived in low wooden houses on pole foundations that kindled into fire nightly. After the Great Fire, the city replaced them with brick town houses. Then the city tapped rail upon rail to form high-rises, a steel gift for veterans returning from the war. In a space of years, the once low shoebox houses had stretched to boot-tall projects.

  A car rolled past and roared to a stop at the corner, turned, leaving behind the power of its sound. Red Hook rose up before him. A still red flower, sixteen buildings arranged petal-fashion. Wine-flushed niggas dogged a corner, leashed to a lamppost. Nerves went electric in his body.

  What up, player?

  What up, he said.

  You straight?

  I’m straight.

  I got the best.

  I’m straight.

  Rock to you can’t stop. Make you wanna drop.

  I’m straight.

  Aw ight, player.

  At the next corner, another group of niggas stood. Silent. Sunlight slipped inside the caves of their bowed hoods. Gleamed off bald heads. He concentrated on keeping his pace.

  The project walls had the thickest bricks he’d seen. Bricks made of iron, not straw. He could feel wet heat inside them. They could withstand a bomb blast. A bomb could do no more than age the sidewalks, add some cracks.

  Voices speeded in. Voices of red song, red song. Sound on skin. Sounds of skin. Noise closer upon him than his own clothes. A chicken scrat
ch of words clawed at his eyes and ears. A charcoal dog barked from the wall. Building One. The white-painted 1 ran a rough pattern over rough brick, crayon smeared on wax paper.

  He stood before a door, two slabs of steel, at the top of each a box of thick glass window covered with iron wire. The lock buzzed, sending fire through his body, and the slabs opened, light to the touch, inward like a church. He stepped into a vestibule of red tile walls and cereal-colored tile floors. Ripe heat. A man sat short like a ventriloquist’s dummy in the lap of a big wheelchair. Missing the lower halves of his legs. A second man sat next to him, his legs hidden under a metal block of desk. Wrinkles in his neck and face thicker than his mustache. A metal clipboard in reaching distance of his worm-wrinkled fingers. The fingers inched, crawled toward the clipboard. This old motherfucker workin security?

  That’s neither here nor there.

  God was watching out for you. You were blessed.

  Blessed hell. I wish he had killed me. In forty-five years, I ain’t slept more than two or three hours a night.

  Hello. The words barely quit Hatch’s mouth.

  What you want?

  I’m—

  You in the wrong place. This the senior citizens building.

  I’m lookin for Mr. Pool Webb.

  I said you in the wrong place.

  If you’ll permit me.

  You got a hearing problem?

  No, sir. I’m looking for Webb. Mr. Pool Webb.

  What?

  Mr. Pool Webb.

  Silence sounds in the slowness of the pause. Pool Webb?

  Yeah.

  Why?

  He’s a friend of my father.

  Who’s your father?

  Lucifer Jones.

  Who?

  Lucifer Jones.

  The man watched Hatch longer than Hatch cared to return the stare.

  Go into the Community Center.

  Where?

  The Community Center. Round there. The man pointed.

  Thanks. Do I need to sign in? Hatch gestured toward the clipboard.

 

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