by Kia Corthron
Some years ago I met a gentleman who was introduced to me as Mr. McKelway, editor of the Brooklyn Eagle. It was after a meeting that we had in New York in behalf of the blind. At that time the compliments he paid me were so generous that I blush to remember them. But now that I have come out for socialism he reminds me and the public that I am blind and deaf and especially liable to error. I must have shrunk in intelligence during the years since I met him. . . . The Eagle and I are at war. I hate the system which it represents, apologizes for and upholds. When it fights back, let it fight fair. Let it attack my ideas and oppose the aims and arguments of Socialism. . . . I can read. I can read all the socialist books I have time for in English, German and French. If the editor of the Brooklyn Eagle should read some of them, he might be a wiser man and make a better newspaper. If I ever contribute to the Socialist movement the book that I sometimes dream of, I know what I shall name it: Industrial Blindness and Social Deafness. (1912)
It seems to me that they are blind indeed who do not see that there must be something very wrong when the workers—the men and women who produce the wealth of the nation—are ill paid, ill fed, ill clothed, ill housed. Deaf indeed are they who do not hear the desperation in the voice of the people crying out against cruel poverty and social injustice. (1913)
This is not a time of gentleness, of timid beginnings that steal into life with soft apologies and dainty grace. It is a time for loud voiced, open speech and fearless thinking; a time of striving and conscious manhood, a time of all that is robust and vehement and bold; a time radiant with new ideals, new hopes of true democracy.
I love it, for it thrills me and gives me a feeling that I shall face great and terrible things. I am a child of my generation, and I rejoice that I live in such a splendidly disturbing time. (1913)
I closed the book. This changes everything.
I began taking classes: boilers, heating, ventilation. Twelve weeks later I stood outside Lloyd Fischer’s door holding a note and some paperwork, and I knocked.
Dear Lloyd,
I am submitting to you documentation certifying that I have passed all requirements for licensed employment as a building superintendent. Thus, if I continue to be employed as a night/weekend/emergency super, I must be paid and receive applicable benefits. If you feel you cannot comply, I hope you will understand that I will have to speak with a union representative about the arrangement under which I have been laboring here. I have enjoyed our friendship, and hope that none of the aforementioned engenders ill feelings.
Sincerely,
Benjamin Evans
For a while it did engender ill feelings—I have wondered if Lloyd had been getting some sort of kickback by virtue of my “voluntary” labor (and, regarding my outdoor work which I was about to end, I have also pondered about the sleight-of-hand involved in my hire as a window cleaner without mentioning the union)—but Lloyd nonetheless went to the building management and I was officially hired, becoming a Local 32B member. Naturally he began to give me extra duties in light of my substantial wage increase up from zero, which I have not minded at all. I like earning my paycheck.
Oh what a rich life I have lived in New York! I am overwhelmingly grateful, aware of the domino effect that has brought me to this juncture, ten years since my arrival. Through the dishwashing job I met my friend Sheldon Wise who arranged the window cleaning, which afforded me my move out of the flophouse and into Hell’s Kitchen, leading to my meeting my friend Lloyd Fischer who offered me the night superintendent job, which provided free rent and the time to go to the library and explore museums, where I met my security guard friend Perpétue leading me to my friend and mentor Mary Kim and the Met job, which led me to Penny Appleton who arranged the teaching job (her daughter being one of my students), and my library visits leading to meeting my friend Abigail who gave me Helen Keller’s book inspiring me to demand my just treatment as a New York City superintendent, I am a lucky man! And if it seems odd that I call all these people my “friends,” I would counter that anyone who has offered me the opportunities each one of them has is a friend to me.
The snake has finally jiggled something free. I pull out an eight-inch long rubber alligator, definitely making my top twenty list of strangest things I have ever found that have impeded plumbing. I clean up my area, then wash off the reptile before bringing it out to show my client. Her face red, Mrs. Garcia cries “Nieta! Nieta!”—explaining that her granddaughter must have flushed it. I smile politely, hoping my neighbor will admonish the child not to play in the toilet in the future, then I have her sign the services-rendered form before I run downstairs to take my shower. It’s 7:15 and I don’t want to be late for my own anniversary banquet!
I walk into my favorite restaurant at 8:05, only five minutes late. The friendly waitresses are happy to see me. To be polite, the hostess always asks how many are in my party, even though the answer is always the same. I hold up one finger.
It’s a celebration, so I order the sushi and the teriyaki, then red bean ice cream. I savor the sweet scoops as I look around. A young Oriental couple. Two white middle-aged women. A Negro family, mother, father, two children. Three Hispanic teenagers giggling. Though I appear to be the only one in the restaurant who is alone, I’m not. I have brought my friends Franny and Zooey. I look down and turn the page.
When I get home, I read a bit before retiring promptly at ten. I’m a chronic insomniac, something that began my last few agonizing weeks in Prayer Ridge, and the 10 p.m. curfew allows me a few hours’ shut-eye before the inevitable waking at two. At that point I am a wide-eyed zombie for at least three hours, and I have never been able to sleep past seven. But for tonight I have a plan. This afternoon I visited the brand-new Mid-Manhattan branch of the public library, stood before the woman behind the information desk and handed her a note: Cookbook? This will be my secret weapon against insomnia!
At the restaurant are Abigail the librarian, Lloyd the super, Perpétue the security guard, Mary the museum guide, Penny the private school parent, Joy the principal at the private school, Mrs. Garcia from upstairs, even Sheldon the window washer whom I haven’t seen in years—all my friends! At first they are smiling, chatting, but now they seem uncomfortable. I can read their lips: Where’s Benjamin? And I realize I’m not there! Now I leave my building, I’m coming! But no. I’m lost! The restaurant is only two blocks north but I’m in Times Square, then Grand Central Station, then the Chrysler Building—I can’t find my way! Now I stand in Central Park, a circle of seven hippies seated cross-legged in the grass. They gaze at me with benevolent wise looks, knowing something I don’t.
My eyes flash open at 1:55 and I pick up my defense. But as I carefully study each term in the glossary from aerate to zest, and as I identify the calorie counts for various casseroles and stews, and as I incorporate my arithmetic skills—if a cup and a half of flour is needed for four dozen cookies, how much for three dozen?—awaiting sleep to overcome me in the mundanity, I am suddenly seized by a profound melancholy and when I feel my eyes burning I throw off the blankets and run to the kitchen breathing, breathing.
As I gradually calm I become aware that I’m staring at my hundreds of books. I had nearly forgotten my decision to donate a few boxfuls to the public library, and now it occurs to me my own library could use some organizing. Knowing the hour is late, I am gentle in emptying the bookcases covering my walls so as not to disturb my neighbors, and in an hour my floor is covered in tomes. I’m alphabetizing, classifying—merge biography with history? separate fiction from poetry?—while setting aside dozens of volumes for my public library contribution. I’m barely halfway through when daylight seeps through the blinds, and I remember I’m out of milk and should go to the corner grocery now to beat the morning pedestrian rush on the sidewalk.
2
I never heard the voices of my family nor of my neighbors nor of the other men at the sawmill, yet when I read Faulkner I have an impre
ssion of things familiar, of coming home. I’m not in the least interested in ever returning to Dixie, but there’s a certain comfort in this identification, a fellow Southerner who can so richly convey, for better or for worse, the intricate peculiarities of our very distinctive region.
I turn the page. It’s the 5th of December and the uptown E is packed, some headed to Saturday night social events, some suburban holiday shoppers. Squeezed in the horde are four deaf students, their hands moving rapidly. The colored girl says Kennedy started the escalation, and the colored boy says the first U.S. casualty was way back in ’56, Eisenhower, and the Oriental girl says when they began defoliating the jungle that was the real beginning, and the colored boy says What? and the Oriental girl says My brother was there, it comes in big cans with an orange stripe, “Orange,” and the white boy says it started with the origins of the Cold War, and the Oriental girl says who cares where it started, three hundred thousand American troops there now, killing and dying and killing.
At Times Square there’s always the mass exodus of passengers replaced by a mass influx, the colored girl the only remainder of the students. Her flawless smooth skin is dark brown. She wears a miniskirt and tights and sports a large Afro. Moments after the doors have closed and the train pulled off I glimpse her stricken face, and I recognize her distress: she had wanted the uptown local train, the AA or CC, and just realized she’s on the E to Queens. The girl is not aware that I have been observing all this because I’ve learned to absorb the goings-on around me without appearing to have lifted my eyes from my book. She moves through the throng to the map and seems to make a plan. At 50th, the next stop, she exits the train, as do I. My building is three blocks away. I walk up the steps and notice there’s some sort of police action that has temporarily halted the uptown AA and CC. I feel someone tap my back.
She stands before me with that panicked look again. She is five-five or -six, a good foot shorter than I, and stares up into my face as her lips move, apparently sound is being uttered from them as she gestures with exaggeration. She assumes I can hear. Her distorted sound might only confuse a hearing person but, fortunately, her strained pronunication allows me to easily read her lips. “Cross over?” She would like to know if at this station she can move from the uptown to the downtown side without exiting and thus avoid paying an extra fare. I smile sympathetically as I shake my head. She looks as if she’s going to cry. I don’t know what else to do so I turn away. She grabs my arm, a bit frantic. She has pulled out a small notepad and writes furiously.
I have many friends. Abigail the librarian and Lloyd the super and Joy the school principal and Perpétue the museum guard and none of them knows anything about me, no one has ever asked me a personal question and this has made for me a very culturally rich and safe life. I keep my chats with Perpétue brief, and holding conversations with hearing people who are not sign-speakers is exhausting for both parties so I’ve been able to maintain respectful boundaries with all of my good friends. To begin a conversation with a stranger in the sign language is to risk complications. I could give this young woman the thirty cents, then have her walk up out of the station to cross the street then back down into the station on the other side to take the E or the AA or the CC one stop downtown back to the Times Square station to then walk up and over from the downtown side to the up to wait for the northbound AA or CC.
But there’s an easier way.
I sign: Do you need the CC uptown?
She stares at me, startled that I am hand-speaking. Yes! I’m going to 94th and Amsterdam.
You can walk to Columbus Circle and catch it there. I’ll give you the thirty cents.
Thank you! Thank you so much!
And as I am reaching into my pocket for the quarter and nickel, her hands begin moving rapidly. She lives in Greenwich Village and never comes uptown but a friend of hers from college has just moved to the city and is having a housewarming party. It started at seven but then you know how parties go, you get there when you get there. She couldn’t come until now because of her Friday afternoon class with the people she was on the train with.
Yes, I thought you were students. We have come out of the subway and are walking up Eighth Avenue, the night clear, in the forties.
Continuing education students, I think you mean. I’m thirty-three. It was a fiction writing class. Have you ever written stories?
No.
I haven’t done it since Gallaudet. I’m really glad I went there. I liked D.C. After high school I debated whether to go to a regular college or deaf, but I guess I’ve always been around deaf people so I felt more comfortable there. My parents and most of my siblings are deaf.
Really?
Her fist nods briskly. I’ve never been to a housewarming before. I wasn’t sure what to bring so I brought wine. Do you think I should have brought something for the apartment? But I haven’t seen the apartment. So I just brought wine and I’ll ask Marielle when I get there if she needs anything for the apartment. That’s her name, Marielle. Well, actually, it was Mary Lou until she took the name Marielle in classe de français and kept it. The young woman smiles, rolling her eyes. Oh I love these decorations! I know it’s all commercial but I just can’t help it, I get in the spirit. I’m going home to South Carolina for the holidays. I have six brothers and sisters and they’re all deaf except for my sister Ramona. She’s the third oldest, I’m right behind her. We’ll go to church Christmas Eve and she’ll sing in the choir. She wanted to sing in her high school chorus in tenth grade but she was afraid it would insult our family and when my mother found out she was livid. So junior and senior year there she was, her whole deaf family in the front row watching her lips move. Were you born in New York?
I have held onto every word and still it takes me a moment to realize she has paused for a reply.
No. Alabama.
A fellow Southerner! I thought for sure you were native Gotham, you sign so fast! How long have you lived here?
It seems strange for her to remark on my velocity, given that her own hands have been flying a mile a minute.
Ten years.
Oh you’re a real New Yorker then! When I graduated from Gallaudet, I stayed in D.C. a while. Another English major I knew got me a job proofreading at her law firm. Then three years ago I was talking about coming to New York and I wrote to my old sophomore roommate who was already here. Well Toni tells me she’s about to move to Seattle to get married and her fiancé is allergic to cats so would I like to sublet her place and take care of her cat? Would I! The young woman stops a moment. You must think I’m some dingbat, walking around with no money. When I carry it I have a bad habit of spending it, on coffee, a candy bar, junk I don’t need and then I’m broke. Thank God I don’t smoke anymore. I smoked my freshman year, then my aunt died of diabetes, I quit cold turkey. I know diabetes isn’t lung cancer, but every day they seem to discover some new disease smoking causes, I’m not taking any chances. Now I can’t even stand to be around cigarette smoke though I know they’ll be smoking at the party, they always do. Do you smoke?
No.
So after spending way too much on crap I started leaving my apartment with no more than a dollar. But then right outside the building where my class was I saw this destitute man, skin and bones. I’d already bought my token to get to the party so I gave him the rest. I figured after I got to the party I could borrow thirty cents from somebody for the token home. So it would have been all okay if I hadn’t made that mistake just now and got on the E when I should have been on the CC. She shakes her head. That poor man had no shoes. In December! It made me feel grateful to have a job. Even if I hate it. Temped the first two years here, now I’m a secretary in an ad agency. I was told it’s the way you break in. Except I’m not sure anymore I want to break in. What do you do?
She’s a college graduate and I’m a janitor who never went to the first grade. I want to say I’m a teacher but I’d feel
like a liar. At any rate it’s part-time, and I teach sign. Nothing impressive for her.
I’m a building superintendent.
She stares at me, wide-eyed. Free rent?
I smile.
Fantastic! You know, I’m thinking very seriously about a career change. I have a friend who works at the Bronx Zoo who thinks she can get me something. That’d be great, outdoor work. And I love animals! How old are you?
Now I truly consider lying. But I believe she has told me the truth about her age, it’s only fair. Only fair. My sigh is private.
Forty-seven.
Really? I would have thought a lot younger. Mid- or late thirties.
My face warm, crimson.
I never come uptown. I’m missing out on a lot, you know? You ever been to the Cloisters? Top of Manhattan?
Yes.
I’ve always wanted to go! She breathes in the air. What a beautiful night! What’s your name?
We are caught at the corner of 61st by a red light. I indicate for us to cross Broadway, and she follows. When we are on the sidewalk, I reply.
Benjamin.
Benjamin. And what’s your sign name?
As directed by my sign instructors I had created a concise moniker, an embellished B. But the name I grew up with, the name I have never mentioned to anyone in New York, is compact enough. I swallow before I form the two letters.
Hello, B.J. I’m April May June.
I stare at her. She smiles.
It started with me being born in April. And my parents the Junes had a sense of humor. What’s that?