Call Me Athena

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Call Me Athena Page 21

by Colby Cedar Smith


  saying goodbye

  to his sweetheart.

  Only this time,

  she knows he will return.

  I try to imagine

  what it is like.

  This land

  my father loves.

  The land

  of my ancestors.

  The land

  I have never seen.

  Giorgos (Gio)

  Saint-Malo, France

  1918

  I post a letter

  to my sister and mother.

  Heading to America.

  The line at the ticket office

  winds

  out of the door.

  Families yearning

  for a new life.

  I purchase two

  transatlantic tickets

  with all of my savings.

  I hold them

  in my shaking hands.

  Jeanne

  Saint-Malo, France

  1918

  We gather in the courtyard

  My aunt and Vera

  stand beside me.

  I close my eyes

  and imagine

  Maman and Papa

  holding me.

  Solid as an oak tree.

  The monsignor

  binds our hands

  with a white silk scarf

  and pronounces us

  husband and wife.

  Two days before

  New Year’s Day,

  we travel by train

  to Cherbourg.

  The same harbor

  where I said goodbye

  to my beloved Papa

  so long ago.

  I turn

  and say goodbye

  to the country of my birth.

  Gio hands the attendant

  two second-class tickets

  and we board

  the largest ship

  I have ever seen.

  I try to look brave,

  but my stomach lurches

  with the waves.

  We walk up

  the lavish, grand staircase

  of the RMS Olympic.

  Porters take our bags

  to our small room.

  It has bunk beds,

  a stiff sofa, and a tiny

  porcelain sink.

  We sit in a dining room

  with molded ceilings.

  White linen

  and crystal glasses.

  They serve

  roast beef

  with horseradish cream

  mashed turnips

  and cabbage.

  After dinner,

  we walk the promenade.

  The wind is blowing.

  I hold Gio’s gaze.

  I want to work

  when we get to America.

  I want to be a nurse,

  maybe even a doctor.

  Tell me we won’t let life

  get in the way.

  Never, he says,

  and pulls me closer.

  I move into

  the warmth

  of my husband.

  His dark eyes

  full of expectation.

  The convent feels

  an ocean

  away.

  I have something for you

  I say, and place

  a stack of letters

  in his hands.

  I wrote to you too.

  Mary

  Detroit, Michigan

  1934

  Letter #23

  November 11, 1918

  I had a dream of a seed, small and round.

  What is this? I asked.

  A voice said, “All that is made.”

  “How can it last?”

  The voice answered, “It lasts and ever shall.

  Everything has its beginning in love.” 35

  Always yours,

  Petit Oiseau

  Without my father

  once again,

  our pantry is bare.

  I tell my mother,

  I will go

  to the Ford factory

  to find a job.

  I expect her to laugh

  and say,

  They’re not going to hire

  a girl!

  Instead,

  she holds my shoulders

  and kisses me

  on both cheeks.

  Is this what you want?

  she asks.

  Very much, Mama.

  If God wills it,

  I am willing to let you try.

  I put on

  my best Sunday suit,

  lace up

  my high-heeled

  boots.

  I drive myself.

  I arrive at the Ford factory

  and take a moment

  to breathe.

  I smooth my skirt.

  I reach down to

  to tighten my laces,

  and I see

  something glinting

  in the dirt.

  I dig it

  from its lodgings.

  It’s a round coin

  on a chain.

  I wipe the dust

  on my leg.

  There’s a picture of a girl.

  It’s Jeanne d’Arc,

  my mother’s namesake.

  Jeanne’s hands

  are clasped together

  at her chest

  with the words

  Écoutez les voix

  Listen to the voices

  carved into the metal.

  I remember the day

  at the movies so long ago.

  My sister

  sitting beside me.

  I hang the coin around my neck,

  press it to my body.

  It feels like Marguerite

  placed this here

  just for me.

  I spin the radio dial.

  Listen for the frequency.

  I hear her.

  I walk into the hiring office

  at the Ford factory

  and talk with the woman

  behind the desk.

  She’s got horned-rimmed glasses

  and a mug of steaming coffee

  in her hand.

  I ask her

  if there are any

  positions available.

  I hand her my resume,

  which only has

  my foreign name,

  my address,

  and the high school

  where I just graduated.

  She looks at it

  as if it were garbage.

  Puts down

  her coffee mug.

  Shuffles though

  some pages

  without even looking

  at them.

  There is no work

  available

  for young girls

  with no experience.

  I take a deep breath in

  and say,

  I saw in the paper

  that Mr. Ford

  was looking for an

  elevator boy?

  A sharp burst of air

  escapes her lips.

  He’s been through

  five people in the last

  two months.

  You see, he’s very picky,

  and that position

  h
as never been given

  to a woman or a girl.

  It even has “boy”

  in the job title!

  I ask to see her supervisor

  He is a tall man

  with a thin mustache

  and oily hair

  combed back

  on his balding

  scalp.

  I tell him that my father

  has been injured

  at the factory,

  and I have come

  to replace him.

  He looks at me

  like I am a visitor

  from planet Mars.

  Then he points

  his long, crooked finger

  out the door.

  I stomp

  out of the office

  into the lobby.

  I see red.

  My father was injured

  on their factory floor.

  How can these people

  sleep at night?

  How do they think

  we are going to eat?

  They don’t give a damn

  about their workers!

  It’s lunchtime

  and there are hundreds

  of people milling about.

  I can’t see over the heads

  of the men wearing suits

  and factory uniforms.

  My body is jostled

  back and forth in the crowd.

  I end up getting pushed

  into an elevator.

  Eighth floor, please

  says a man in a gray suit

  from behind a newspaper.

  We’re the only people

  on the elevator,

  so I press the number eight

  and close the door.

  I look around.

  The elevator is decorated

  with mirrors,

  red velvet, and gold.

  I’ve never been in a room

  this gilded.

  It’s shooting

  through the sky

  like a star

  with wings.

  The man folds his newspaper

  and tucks it under his arm

  and takes his hat

  from his head.

  It’s then

  that I realize.

  I’m on an elevator

  with Henry Ford.

  When the elevator reaches the eighth floor

  my hands start to shake.

  The bell chimes,

  and I slide open the gate.

  I know I have to say something.

  He steps off the elevator,

  and just as

  I’m closing the door,

  I stop

  and pull the door

  open again.

  Mr. Ford?

  He looks up

  with a surprised expression,

  as though he’s never

  been addressed

  by a woman before.

  Yes?

  Mr. Ford,

  I look at the man

  who I admire

  and fear.

  The man who built

  our town out of

  metal and smoke.

  I take a deep breath

  and surprise myself

  by saying,

  How did you know?

  Know what?

  How did you know

  you were going to change the world?

  Mr. Ford raises his eyebrows

  and a small smile

  blooms

  on his lips.

  What’s your name, young lady?

  Mary, sir.

  Do you work here?

  Not yet, sir.

  He pauses,

  and I can hear

  the second hand tick

  on the golden watch

  dangling

  from his pocket.

  Well, I do need a new elevator boy.

  I look him straight

  in the eye.

  How about an elevator girl?

  He looks

  into the mirror

  and straightens his tie.

  He turns back to me.

  See you tomorrow at 9 a.m.,

  Mary.

  I close the door

  and press

  the lighted circle

  with my fingertip.

  The golden metal box

  slides down the side

  of the building

  like a burning ball

  of light

  sinking into the horizon

  waiting only

  for the opportunity

  to rise

  once again.

  Giorgos (Gio)

  Komnina, Central Greece

  1934

  We heave the weight together

  pushing

  with all our strength.

  The sea

  rises up to our thighs.

  Jump on!

  My nephew,

  Costas,

  yells as he hefts

  coiled ropes

  into the hull

  of the kaiki.

  We jump into

  the sturdy boat.

  My boat.

  Costas

  smiles at my sister

  as he stands on the deck.

  His strong arm

  on the tiller.

  We fly across

  the harbor.

  A white Pegasus

  with wings

  for sails.

  I stand in the olive groves

  and inhale

  the smell of the earth.

  I can hear

  the church bells

  chiming

  in the distance.

  There is an ocean

  between me

  and my family.

  I kneel down

  and take a fistful

  of dry soil

  in my hand.

  I will take it with me.

  Across the world

  back to my home.

  Jeanne

  Detroit, Michigan

  1934

  My daughter

  drives away

  in a car

  by herself.

  I hear the boys

  outside

  playing ball.

  The house feels

  empty.

  I feel the loss

  of my children

  more and more

  each day.

  The taller and wiser

  they become.

  I wonder,

  after years

  of giving myself

  to my family,

  What will I do now?

  I enter the hospital

  and walk

  to the receptionist.

  The woman looks up

  and smiles.

  Does she remember me?

  From the night

  I sat in this lobby?

  When I held

  and rocked

  my feverish girl?

  Does she remember?

  The moment,

  when the doctor

  opened the blanket

  looked at my daughter

  and told me,

  She’s gone.

  I try to keep my voice calm

  my spine straight.

  I look her in the eyes

  and say,


  I am a nurse.

  I was trained during the war.

  I would like to help.

  Mary

  Detroit, Michigan

  1934

  Tomorrow

  is the first day of my new job.

  I lie in bed

  and think about

  Billy’s proposal.

 

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