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The Residue Years

Page 17

by Mitchell Jackson


  My pager goes off and it’s a lick. I chomp another bite of burger and scribble a fry in ketchup. You ready to roll? I say. Let’s be out.

  Peoples, peoples, keep it one hundred with me. You’ve been wondering about us improvidents—my uncs, the booster, Half Man, the antiheroes on the other side of the Sham, me. You’ve been wondering, what is it that sets us apart, haven’t you, wondering how are we all, all, all, all, one in the same?

  Chapter 27

  So simple—but for her not much of a care.

  —Grace

  You steal one day off from no days off.

  And laze.

  Unplug the phone and carry in a radio. Tune it to a station that dulls the noise—a tantruming baby, neighbors barking back and forth, the thumpety-thump-thump of a neighbor that keeps his beat box blasting—that seems to never cease. You run the hottest tub you can, a temperature that steams, and, if you’re short on essentials, dump capfuls—shampoo, dishwashing soap, liquid detergent—of something to bubble and foam. No one’s home, but you close the door and seal off the world. Light a candle and place it close, and by candle flame pin your hair off your neck and take your time stripping out your clothes. Climb in one foot first to test if it scalds, then full in. Roll a bath towel and prop your neck. Fold a facecloth and lay it across your eyes.

  Be who you want, where you want, for as long as you want.

  Forever.

  Soak, and when you’re done, dry and rub down—cocoa butter and cream that’s sweet—and get dressed, make a mug of hot tea or hot cocoa or warm milk, and saunter into the front room to be still with yourself.

  The door.

  The door and a voice I can’t make out behind it calling my name.

  I walk to the curtains and crack a slit and peek to see who it is. It’s my caseworker here unannounced, which, pursuant, as they’ve told me, is well within her rights. I don’t so much let her in as she rambles past as if she owns the place and leans her tall umbrella against the wall. She’s dressed in a wool coat, checkered wool scarf, and the kind of low-heeled heels that—forgive me, God—they sell at stores for old hags. She tells me to help her out of her coat, that she prefers it hung on wood, and I scuttle off to the closet with it over my arm. She tells me to have a seat when I come back, that this will take as long as it takes. Then she’s off down the hall and into the bedroom and I can hear her slamming drawers, hear her dragging open the sliding closet that never stays tracked; if she wanted, she could turn the pockets of my old coat inside out, shake my pants wrong side up, snatch the lid off my precious few shoe boxes. She’d be justified tearing off my sheets, shaking the pillow from its sham, flipping the mattress, and with the time she spends, this could be what she does. She stomps into the bathroom next, creaks open the cabinet, and rattles bottles and bottles of pills and makes a fracas of restacking them on the metal shelves. She uses the toilet and runs the faucet twice as long as anyone should. Then you can see her in the hall, rustling through the hall closet, a cubbyhole understocked with secondhand towels. She passes through the front room and into the kitchen, where she slams the cupboards, clangs the silverware, clashes the pots and pans; where she hounds through a drawer I keep stuffed with pens, papers, broken knickknacks, condiments from work. She opens the fridge and it grunts on cue. If the fruit and vegetable bins weren’t empty, she’d probably hunt them too.

  It hasn’t dawned on me until now what a former tenant might’ve left. That this woman could happen upon that last person’s loose pill, empty gram packet, that she might find an ancient antenna pipe, a scorched spoon, a burnt pop can with a pencil hole punched through it. And if she does, it’s trouble—a bench warrant, increased fines, a mandate for day-reporting, jail time that lasts for months, a possible request for revocation, a brand-new charge. She makes her way back into the front room. She takes my picture off the wall, snoops the seams of the curtains, kneels to check the innards of the baseboard heater. She ask-tells me to stand and pulls the couch cushions one by one. Not until all of this is done does she settle, take a steno pad—you can see the handcuffs attached at her waist—out her purse and start to scrawl. Looks like everything checks out, she says. Impressive.

  Thanks, I say, and cinch the tie on my robe. So I’ve been wondering, is there a chance of me being cut loose sooner than my contract date? I say.

  To be honest, I’m not a big fan of that, she says. But I’d listen. Where are you on fines and fees?

  Caught up, I say. And I’d work to pay them early if need be. There’s plenty hours down at my job.

  She tells me I’d have to be finished, that we can discuss the prospect at my next scheduled check-in. She says it, too, as if it’s so minute. The strings on my life low on her list of concerns. Makes you wonder if she’s ever needed permission to come and go, if she’s ever been afraid of what comes next.

  The door. The door—again!

  This time a bam, bam, bam that cracks it from half cracked to half open. It’s who else? Seeing his face I could lie down and die.

  MCA, don’t act all like that, he says. I came to make amends.

  Now’s not the time, I say. Not now.

  C’mon, now, thought it was Christian to forgive. It been bothering me ever since, he says. He huffs a facsimile cloud and shivers and rubs the sleeves of his stretched knit sweater. He jokes he’s far from weatherproofed and asks to come in. The man smells as you’d expect he would.

  My caseworker appears at my back, exhaling what must be stones.

  Oh, you got company, Michael says. He pats his misted afro. There’s a cake cutter stabbed in it.

  The way she says my name. Oh God, the way she says my name.

  Michael beams that jagged yellow puzzle. He swaggers in and introduces himself. But pretty as you is, he says, call me what you damn well please.

  May I ask how you and Grace are acquainted? she says.

  He scratches his beard. Sheeit, me and baby girl go way back. Ain’t that right, MCA? He stoops to tie his shoe. He gets upright and brushes the knees of his corduroys.

  Interesting, she says. She tells him her name, her first name.

  Beautiful name, he says. And biblical too. Now, if you don’t mind me askin, how you know old MCA?

  This is my caseworker, Michael, I say, and feel sparks in my chest.

  Oooooh, Michael says. Oh, I see. You mean as in an outstanding member of our county’s fine, fine Department of Community Justice.

  Yes, that’s correct, she says. And can you clarify when you and Ms. Thomas last convened?

  Michael jabs his cake cutter into another spot. He turns to me—slow; he turns to her—slower. Now, that’s a damn good question, he says. Hmmmm, let’s see. Well, if I’m not mistaken … No, no, no, as a matter of fact, your forgiveness, please. The date seems to have escaped me. These days a brother’s mind ain’t worth a quarter, he says, nor nickels, he says. But I can vouch it’s been a good minute. A good little minute, indeed.

  She asks for his full name.

  He gives her a false surname and bows and backs away.

  Look like you two tendin official business, he says. Think that’s my cue to get the hell outta Dodge.

  I close the door with strength, and twist the locks back and forth, back and forth, and turn by increments to face her and all of what she is. She moseys over to where she left her purse and roots through it. She culls a pad and scribbles in the pad and packs it away. She touches the cuffs at her waist. Ms. Thomas, I take it you know the rules of your contract, she says. And the penalties for breaking them.

  Wait, I say. Please let me tell you the truth.

  She crosses her arms and cocks her neck. The truth, is it? she says. Let’s hear this.

  Chapter 28

  But now?

  —Champ

  This was after mom and Big Ken had split, a night KJ was off with Big Ken, so it was just me and Mom at the crib. It was one of those nights when my gut was doing Béla Károlyi backflips. One of those nights when I slunk into
Mom’s room with the hope of coaxing her into fixing a snack, fixing a meal, fixing a grain of anything. That night, though, I found her lying across her bed with her face smothered in a pillow. I asked what was wrong and she rose and told me not to worry, that what was bothering her was grown folk’s business, and since it was, I should go on back to my room and lie down. And go on back to my room was what I did. But no sooner had my stomach settled and let me close my eyes than Mom shook me awake, rushed me to get dressed, and tugged me out the front door. She hustled me into our compact car and told me we were going to see Dawn (her best friend, my play aunt), that we wouldn’t be but a minute, and drove us across town with me complaining the whole way till she promised me a Burger Barn burger, my favorite. We drove to a mangy motel at the end of Interstate Ave., climbed flights of stairs, and knocked on a room with its numbers scribbled in thick felt-tip. This man straight out a nightmare answered, raked us a good one with his eyes, and let us in. Mom’s friend, my play-aunt Dawn, was sitting on a bed cluttered with clothes, looking as though she’d been mauled by pit bulls. I may have been a month or so shy of finishing fifth grade but it didn’t take no adult foresight to see what was happening was all to the bad. Mr. Nightmare cleared the clothes (beeper tags still attached) off the bed, turned on a show, and tossed me a tepid can of pop. I watched a black-and-white TV with bad V-hold till the credits scrolled on a kung fu show or a cowboy show or a hero show—whatever they played before the networks went off-air. By that time my bladder was good and full, but the problem was, Mom, Aunt Dawn, and Mr. Nightmare were locked in the bathroom. What could I do? What I could do is what I did: squirm with my eyes stinging and the pop about to burst an organ. About the time that I was about to erupt I scrambled over, stuck my ear to the bathroom, and heard whispers that made me hella-hesitant. Picture me doing a rain dance for courage. Picture, just when I worked up the nerve, Dawn cracked the door on a bandbox of gray haze. Picture clouds rushing out and my mother wild-eyed and sucking a pipe.

  That first time is on my mind—here now cause she’s at work and it ain’t much happening in the courtyard, here and there a roving eye peeking through a sheet-tacked window or a split in diaphanous-ass drapes, eyes trailing me to Mom’s apartment, where it takes me forever (so long, I’m thinking maybe she got it changed) to get her janky lock to click. I haul the bag into her bedroom and strip the bed and snatch off a ratted blanket and mismatched sheets. I remake it with the new sheets (the thread count is mean; for once a booster wasn’t false-advertising) and tuck the sheets with tight-ass hospital corners. I fluff her flat pillows and slide them in the new shams.

  On the way out, I see Mom’s left her tenny shoes kicked off by the front, with the laces yanked tight and knotted. I stop and pick them up. I untie the knots, loosen the strings just so, and set them flush against the wall. This was the most I could for her then.

  But now?

  Later, the storm has stopped (the worst of the storm anyhow) by the time I swoop Half Man and head for the spot everybody’s been bragging on the last couple weeks, and if the cars in the lot are any clue, the word wasn’t no hype. Half Man hops out and strolls ahead, unzipping his parka. Look like it’s off the chain, he says, his voice pulsed. The wind sighs damp leaves and cigarettes butts, scatters a few loose flyers. There’s a line stretching around the side of the club, but we swank to the front, shake a dub in the door guy’s hand, mosey in, and on our way to the bar shoulder-bang a few wassups. I order a vodka and tonic and Half Man opts for a (he loves that dark potion) Hennessy double. Soon as I get his drink, he says, Let see what they bitin like, and strolls off.

  The club’s hazy with smoke, smoldering under strobes. I find a close-to-empty corner and watch the set. Dance Fever types doing what they do on the parquet dance floor: a chick rubbing her ass against some dude’s crotch, a buffed dude convulsing as if by electric shock, a couple of cool-ass two-steppers. This kind of stuff goes on uneventful for songs, but when the DJ spins an East Coast set, a scuffle (wouldn’t be a weekend without a fisticuffs) breaks out. The DJ mutes the music and shouts over the mic. The floor clears, leaves these two dudes tussling center stage without a single punch thrown till bouncers with their polo shirtsleeves rolled to their rotator cuffs (there must be an unwritten bouncer rule: the bigger you are, the smaller you buy your shirts) rip them apart and drag them off in choke holds.

  With the brawl cleared, the DJ spins a slow set. Oooh, I see a girl across the room mouthing a chorus. We smile at each other (an invite), and I stroll over. We rap a taste, and guess who you won’t catch saying too much of nothing, not cause I’m at a loss, but more so cause I trust old head sagacity: If a chick is feeling you, she’ll wait for you to say the right thing. But if you say too much, you raise the risk of saying the wrong thing.

  Half Man, on the other hand, plays percentages, philosophizes that if he spits at the right number one will bite.

  But myself, I ain’t built for such sufferings. Trust and believe, my friends, it’s suffering.

  This chick isn’t a Half Man gamble, but she also ain’t looking like a one-night hype. You can see the obsequious ones from miles off, the ones eager to offer up a piece of themselves for a few drinks and a rote flattery—the hurt and the hurt communing. With this chick, though, it’d have to be another night or week, which might work for a dude with more time on his hands, but here’s the thing: A month from now will be too close to June, when the baby is due. Each month it becomes harder and harder to risk our good thing.

  I offer a drink and she accepts, but on the way to the bar, Kim’s a straight masochist—her sweet face, sweet voice, her sweet-ass presence dogging me to no end. It’s torture to the point that, by the time I make it back, no B.S., I can’t even look the chick in her eye, much less lay down a mack. The best I can manage is, Nice to meet you. I say that, then I bounce. No numbers exchanged, no promise to meet again.

  I tramp across the club. Strobes pulse light off earrings and watches, off rhinestones and sequined tops, a tinseled tooth or two, off a fellow hustler’s hella-big medallion. The DJ plays a West Coast rap set and the floor fills up again, with a bouncer roaming the border, his ponytail noosed in a rubber band, his triple-X shirt stretched to a test of physics. I down a drink and search for a place to make a call (I move mindful of my space; you never know when a mean-mugging misanthrope is itchin to spark a beef over an accidental nudge or a scuff on his new white kicks) from indoors, since the club don’t allow reentry. I end up in the restroom. It’s empty, but for caution’s sake (yeah, I love my girl but I can’t have one of these fly-by-nights thinking I’m whooped) I close a stall and cup my cell.

  Kim picks up short-time.

  Guess you were up? I say.

  Something like that, she says. Got a call not too long ago. Whoever it was called and listened and hung up. Probably one of your broads.

  Stop it, I say.

  She exhales in a way that lets you know she’s alive.

  Anyways, why’re you calling so late? she says.

  Do I need a reason to call my woman? I say. Can’t it be me thinking of you? Me calling to see what you need?

  This, of course, is truth (this time), and it hurts that she can’t trust it.

  What did you do? she says.

  Damn, here we go with the indictments, I say. A nigger can’t be concerned?

  ’Bye, Champ, she says. I’m fine. We’re fine. See you when you get here.

  Half Man’s posted in a corner blathering to a chick wearing glitter on her arms and a cheap necklace. I tell him I’m ready to leave and he pops up and pulls me to the side. Damn, dog, all this work and you wanna bounce? Why?

  Man, look, I say. Stay if you want, but you’re on your own.

  Think I’ma hold tight, homie, he says. You see that? A few more stiff ones and she’s a go!

  Outside, there’s a gust of feral wind and the moon’s so low you could jump and touch it.

  It’s true, all true, it makes me sad that my girl’s instinct i
s to doubt my word, but I’ve told so many lowdown dirty pitiful lies, how could she ever, ever, ever with her whole heart believe?

  IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON

  FOR THE COUNTY OF___________________________

  In the Matter of:

  )

  )

  Case No._____________________

  ______________________________,

  )

  Petitioner,

  )

  PETITION FOR CUSTODY AND PARENTING

  )

  TIME under ORS 109.103

  and

  )

  and CHILD SUPPORT

  )

  _____________________________,

  )

  DOMESTIC RELATIONS CASE SUBJECT TO

  Respondent.

  )

  FEE UNDER ORS 21.111

  )

  and

  )

  )

  ___________________________,

  )

  Child who is at least 18 and under 21 years

  )

  of age, unmarried and unemancipated.

  )

  (ORS 107.108)

  )

  1. Petitioner is the mother father and Respondent is the mother father of (names of children): __________________________________________________________________________, born on the following date/s:___________________________________________________________________

  2. Paternity has been established:

  by filing with the State Registrar of Vital Statistics a voluntary acknowledgment of paternity, concerning the following child/ren (e.g., birth certificate):______________________________________________________________________________________________

 

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