You walked.
If Birdleg stood still too long, his string-bean legs might root in the ground. He liked to walk. Once Abu saw him sprout wings and fly home, and Hatch saw him gallop off into the horizon on a pit bull’s back. His toes cut through his kicks and tracked claw prints in grass, mud, dirt, snow.
We the Stonewall Aces, Birdleg said.
The what? Hatch said.
Yeah, Abu echoed, the what?
The Stonewall Aces.
I ain’t no Ace, Hatch said. I’m a spade.
I’m an Ace, Jesus said.
Yeah, Abu said. A red one. An ace of hearts.
Yo mamma like it.
You walked. Birdleg pointed to white smoke lifting from a manhole. That’s smoke from the underground city.
From where?
Ain’t yall never heard of the underground city?
Sure.
You walked.
Birdleg, what’s that? You pointed at a blue-black bird with red bandannas around the wings.
Stupid. That’s a redwing.
You walked.
Birdleg proudly carried his round belly, a real potbelly, steel, iron, cause you could hear the metal ringing when he walked. He smelled like food, like sugar, though he ate scabs candy-quick, scabs saved in an old M&M’s box—plain, not peanuts; I never eat peanuts, specially peanut butter, cause just look at it. It ain’t nothing but shit, just like I never eat scrambled eggs, cause just look at it. It ain’t nothing but somebody’s brains. All that food and belly and smell balanced on two stick legs. Two string-bean legs filled with pus.
You walked. Followed Birdleg through Central. Birds perched on spiked steeples and steel window ledges. Streets awash with people, merging into eddies and disengaging other paths, and the boys like slits in the swaying mob.
You walked. A lot bright with red dirt. That’s the old negro cemetery. Yall heard of negroes?
Sure, Hatch said. My great-granddaddy was a negro.
Mine too, Abu said.
You walked. Summer burned in your lungs. You saw a pond with lightly starred lilies. You crossed a narrow dry gully. Followed a trail of yellow leaves. Heaviness hung low in the trees. Birdleg overturned ancient stones, exposing green worms wiggling in the footprints of Indians and dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs were birds.
Birdleg, Hatch said, you crazy. Dinosaurs were lizards. Reptiles.
Yeah, Abu said. Giant lizards. Reptiles.
Stupid. Dinosaurs were birds.
How you know?
I know.
You walked in heat without a breath of air. You reeled under the dazzling weight of the sun. Distance melted.
It was moving day. The afternoon white and pure. Birds black and light as smoke in the sky.
Yall wanna see some black squirrels?
Nigga, there ain’t no such thing.
Follow me.
You walked. Birdleg’s legs made a sound like twigs breaking. And when it got cold, his legs would curve into a broken circle. You walked for three days. Damn, Birdleg. We gon walk to China?
Shut up, stupid. We almost there.
Damn. Jesus sparkled, body glazed in warm sweat.
A bridge lifted above a black river. Birdleg started across, the wood creaking, sagging under his footsteps. Jesus put his feet down slowly, unsure if the planks would hold him.
Damn, Birdleg. You tryin to kill us?
You scared?
Nawl. I ain’t scared.
The sun hung low in the branches. Slow shadows on the leaves. Points of grass directed Birdleg to his left. There it was. A little path.
Look. Birdleg stopped, bent his knees a little—a bridge’s creak; no, a rusty sound, like Lula Mae’s lawn chairs—and pointed a chunky finger. A black squirrel.
What’s that black bird?
That’s a buzzard.
A nasty ole buzzard?
Yeah.
Why it nasty?
Cause it full of spirit.
A day bright and clear as the leaves on the green plants which grew low and close to the ground. Dandelions clustered like stars. And the white Afros of milkweeds. Children filled the afternoon streets with their shouts. From the height of the park benches, the Stonewall Aces watched butterflies in the bright colors of girls’ clothing and their floating cheeks. Hair braided tight with colored rubber bands, rainbows.
Man, I’m tireda watchin these silly girls, Jesus said.
Help me down from here, Birdleg said.
The Stonewall Aces stepped down from the benches. Made a net of arms and carried Birdleg to the ground. The Stonewall Aces stretched out in the grass, arms behind heads, watching the treetops, feet to feet, like bookends. The leaves were green and quiet, shimmering in a touch of sun. Jesus stole glances at Birdleg. Birdleg was sitting in his usual position, upright, legs forming a V from the center of his body, his pudgy hands clasped over his preposterous paunch like a protective shell. His mouth was twisted open and his breath came hot and short. Jesus wondered if he were asleep. He slept sitting up. Had to. Cause the stomach could crush him. You imagine him sleeping like normal people, his fat belly rising above the bed, a fish belly-up in the bowl.
Man, I’m tireda watchin these trees.
Okay, Birdleg said.
The Stonewall Aces helped him to his feet, Jesus and Hatch hooking on either arm and Abu shoving from the back. Birdleg moved in the hard afternoon light. Air bright and blinding. The boys followed. They walked along the old tracks. Alert to an occasional train, glittering silver between slices of light. They kneeled low in the green bushes, listening to the asthmatic poppings of pistons when a string of loaded freight cars came pounding along. Kneeled, because, at a distance, freight trains and commuter trains looked the same. Those commuters are deadeyes, Birdleg said. If you got heart and you look hard and heavy, you can see their gun glint.
My Uncle John was a deadeye, Hatch said. Still is.
Yeah, Abu said. He my uncle too. Hatch’s best friend, he was proud to claim blood not his own.
He won a lot of medals.
Yeah? Who he shoot?
Gooks.
The train extended its streaked motion. The tracks curved off into the horizon along a long, white, hot sand road that split the flat green. They followed Birdleg’s scrawny-legged walk through the flying landscape. The beaks of the road ate up the rubber soles of their kicks and unknotted their shoestrings. A stinging thirst clawed their throat.
Damn, Birdleg. We walkin to the moon?
Yeah, Birdleg. Where we goin?
Birdleg stopped, knelt forward, bowed down in exhaustion, hands supported against the forked branch of his bended knees. Pain squeezed the skin tight against the bones of his face.
Birdleg, what’s wrong?
Nothing. Just tired.
Tears ran from his eyes, white, spilling sticky to the concrete. After six or seven hard breaths, Birdleg raised himself and pushed forward.
They walked to the end of a bridge. Climbed down a path under a small trestle where a creek had backed up to form a small pond. Fifteen feet away, a small shanty—a sloping, tar-paper roof, partly hidden by the low-hanging branches of a tree whose name Jesus didn’t know, sycamore, Hatch said—shone white as a bulb.
Who made this shack?
That’s fo me to know and you to find out.
Tell us, Birdleg.
The Stonewall Aces entered the shack, lit by light through holes that peppered the roof. The shack straddled a grass-filled ditch. Each boy made a seat on spike-shaped leaves on the ditch banks. Something was scratched into the wood walls—a fantail connected to a sphere? a fish? Jesus couldn’t say for certain. Tall white sentinels, milkweed watched him from the grass.
Hey, Birdleg, why they call it milkweed? Jesus saw milk in Birdleg’s eyes.
Stupid, Birdleg said. Don’t you know anything?
Jesus studied the milkweed.
Yall loves milk?
Yeah, Birdleg.
Jesus saw flocks of c
louds through breaks in the roof.
I loves milk like I loves white folks like a dog loves hickory.
What?
Why you love white folks? Hatch said.
Birdleg looked at him.
Damn, nigga. You got some funny-lookin ears. Jesus cocked his fingers and popped Birdleg’s rabbit-long ears.
Bitch!
A bitch is a dog.
And you a bitch. Listen. Birdleg raised his palms. Yall know how white people got white?
Jesus watched the shack walls, twigs and splinters. A chill wind swept wide through the ditch, penetrating his feet and hands. But the ground was hot under his butt and the grass warm to the touch. And you and Hatch sat fishing before the Memphis River. Feel water thundering near your feet. Hear fish invisible in the water, their shadows rising and turning into thick waves. Hatch afraid to touch the electrified worms.
How?
From drinkin too much milk.
Above the roof, the sun blinked bright, immersed Jesus in a cascade of light. Pearl after pearl. Like the way you cast sinkers of light into the Memphis River.
How you know? Hatch said.
Yeah, Abu said. You lyin.
Straight up, Birdleg said.
ONCE YOU WALKED to the keen edge of exhaustion. Walked until the sun took on strange shape and color. And Sheila met Hatch at the door, squeezing an ironing cord in her angry fist. The sky rained boulders of ice and Birdleg demonstrated how to use a garbage-can lid for a protective shield. Use it as an umbrella—hard iron rain struck lid and ground with a hollow sound. The ice thinned to rushing water. And when the rain stopped, you as a team collected drowned birds. Like the snails you collected in West Memphis. You and Hatch pulled them skinny from their shells. Held the shells to your ears and heard ocean. Frogs burped, drunk.
Birdleg, where rain come from?
Stars. Stars are holes in the sky that let the rain through.
That’s not right, Hatch said. Rain falls from clouds.
Yeah, Abu said. Rain falls into the clouds way up from Mars cause the devil be beating his wife and God squeeze the rain from the clouds.
Clouds ain’t no sponges, Hatch said.
Know where babies come from? Birdleg tested.
From they stomach.
Out they navel.
Out they testine.
No.
Where, Birdleg?
A bubble of water. Inside a bitch’s stomach.
BIRDLEG WOULD CLEAN HIS HANDS in dog slobber. Walk right up to a dog and put his hands under the slobbering faucet of mouth.
Damn, nigga. That’s nasty.
Shut up. Know what’s really nasty?
What?
Blackbirds. Buzzards. They drip vomit. That’s why you always see them flying in a circle.
Why?
Stupid. Ain’t you never looked in a sink and seen a drain? The water flying in circles?
What?
Birdleg had a way with dogs. His footsteps summoned them like drums. One snap of his fingers could make a raving dog heel. Two snaps could sic the dog on an enemy. Bear witness:
Stonewall Aces rolled proud and true through the red valley, the jets above reflecting menacing shadows. A rival crew rolled forward, six or seven big boulders, and blocked the path. Red-tied bandannas, threatening, gallows rope.
Damn. What yall sposed to be?
Natty lump lump lump.
Bitch plus three.
The four tricks.
So, nigga. Speak up.
Yeah. Represent represent.
Represent.
Well … Who yall—
Yo mamma, Birdleg said.
Bitch, I’m gon kick yo ass.
Birdleg stooped, rested his palms on his bent knees. Jesus must have blinked, because when he opened his eyes a pit bull shot out from between Birdleg’s skinny ankles. Destruction took over. A black blur of violence, snapping teeth and crunching bones. Like a matador’s cape, red bandannas bringing out the anger bringing out the hate bringing out the violence in the pit bull. And red blood drew more attacking teeth.
Stupid. Bulls are color-blind. All animals are.
Dogs too?
That’s right. Yo mamma too.
The red boulders dissolved into black dust that took to the air, filled the sky. Justice done, the pit bull ran for Birdleg’s skinny ankles and disappeared, yo-yo yanked back up into Birdleg’s stomach.
WHO YALL REPRESENT
Sciples.
A laugh let go Birdleg’s mouth. Stupid. That’s a set.
Vice Kings.
Stupid. That’s a set too. Not the source.
Who you callin stupid?
Don’t you know what a source is?
I’m BP Nation. Chapter One.
Me too. Chapter Thirteen.
AK. Aerosol Kings.
TNT. Too Terrible Testaments.
Killer C’s.
Cobra B’s.
Stupid. Stupid. Is you People or Folks?
Jesus searched the faces of the circle of boys, seeing his face in theirs. Blinked into Birdleg’s bold black outline.
Stupid. People and Folks. That’s the source. Sets come from them.
Yeah, Jesus said.
How you know?
A timeworn train clanked in the distance.
Yeah, Birdleg, how you know?
Birdleg looked at Jesus, unblinking. White eyes. Frozen milk. Yall ever heard of Fort?
Yeah, Jesus said. The words flew from his mouth instant like vomit.
Hightop?
Yeah, Jesus said.
Sure, Hatch said.
Sure, Abu said.
Fort from Stonewall—
What was his real name?
Stupid. Fort, he from Stonewall.
Yeah?
Well, he ain’t from nowhere. He dead. But he lived in my buildin. Buildin A.
Nigga, you lyin.
Let him tell it, Jesus said.
And Hightop from Red Hook.
Something ran a course, through, under, around, behind, and between the words. Crickets hummed. Grass whispered.
They were cousins. And they were sanctified.
The words fell to the bottom of Jesus’s heart and what was at the bottom came out, swirling, turbulent. Sanctified?
They went to church eight days of the week. Sometimes nine.
What you talkin bout, Birdleg?
Yeah, Abu echoed Hatch. What you talkin bout?
Why you talkin bout church?
Yeah. Church.
Hatch scrunched up his face. You tryin to Bible me? The words blew hot as steam. Steam lifted.
I like the Bible, Abu said. I’m a Christian.
Jesus wet his tongue. Gripped his elbows to keep them from flying away.
Stupid. I said they were sanctified. Didn’t say they stayed sanctified. Birdleg revealed a fan-shaped row of teeth. Stupid.
Why you always callin somebody stupid?
Shut up. I’m tryin to learn yall something. Do you talk in school?
What?
I say, do you talk in school?
No.
Well shut up then. Light caught the white in Birdleg’s eyes. Fort and Hightop, they was way back in the old days. Way back. When niggas used to be sleeping on lawns in the summer and cookin in the snow in the winter. See, Fort and Hightop, they used to dance every Sunday in church. Then they started dancing at sets. Everybody knew these niggas had the best steps, so everybody get them to dance gainst one another. Course Fort had the best steps. This one time, he pulled his do-rag off his head, jumped way up in the air, clicked his heels twenty-five times, and polished his shoes befo he landed back on the ground. And he land on one toe and he hold his ground for an hour. He looked like a statue, a stone.
Damn.
Hightop tried to be like Fort. He jumped up and fell down. Well, his toes stuck right into the floor. Yeah, he standing up there on his tippy toes stuck in the floor. Like one of them ballerinas. Five big niggas had to pull him out. Peop
le be like, what kind of step is that? Hightop flashed the V sign. He yelled, Vice Forks Love, but everybody thought he said Folks. But since Fort held his ground, he yelled Power to the P-Stone Nation.
How you know?
Stupid, I know.
Jesus was saturated with a soft feeling. He didn’t believe.
What the P stand for? Birdleg tested them.
P for people.
P for power.
P for peace.
P for prayer.
P for pussy.
P for punk.
Words disappeared in the sheen of sunlight.
Okay, pussy, punk. Better not let no Disciples hear you say that. They ain’t as nice as me.
Hatch and Abu sat picture-still. Silent.
Who you represent? Birdleg blinked.
What? Jesus said.
Who you represent?
Well …
What bout you, Hatch?
…
Abu?
Damn, yall don’t represent?
Friends.
Forks.
Persons.
Stupid. It’s People and Folks. I’m People.
Then I’m People too, Jesus said.
I’m Folks, Hatch said.
Yeah, I’m Folks. Me and Hatch. Folks.
YOU KNOW KEYLO? Jesus asked. He remembered the name from the TV news.
From Red Hook?
Yeah.
Keylo. Big hat, no cattle.
What?
Stupid. He ain’t shit.
How you know?
Stupid, he didn’t even whack the raper man who sexed with his sister.
Ain’t what? The green earth stole Jesus’s words.
Now Fort changed the nigga that stomped on his sister.
He had a sister?
Yeah. She married this nigga. He made her stay in the house all the time.
Used to invite his friends over and beat her up in front of them.
Damn.
Then he threw the baby food out the window. Then threw the baby. Fort threw him.
Damn.
What happen to the sister?
She jumped off the buildin.
Damn.
My buildin.
Damn.
Buildin A.
Damn.
My buildin.
Why she do that?
Why you think?
Damn.
And Fort shot the raper man who sexed with Hightop’s sister.
What? But they—
Was enemies. Yeah, they was. But she was his cousin too.
Rails Under My Back Page 57