Brown Girl Dreaming

Home > Other > Brown Girl Dreaming > Page 6
Brown Girl Dreaming Page 6

by Jacqueline Woodson


  in our hands, we walk like sleepy soldiers

  through Nicholtown, ringing bells, knocking on doors,

  spreading the good news

  of something better coming. Sometimes,

  the people listen.

  Sometimes, they slam their doors

  or don’t open them at all. Or look sadly down at me

  ribboned and starched, my face clean and shining

  with oil, my words earnest as anything:

  Good morning, I’m Sister Jacqueline and I’m here

  to bring you some good news today.

  Sometimes they give me a dime but won’t take

  my Watchtower and Awake!

  Sunday it’s Watchtower study at the Kingdom Hall,

  two hours

  of sitting and sitting and sitting.

  Then Monday comes and the week starts

  all over again.

  ribbons

  They are pale blue or pink or white.

  They are neatly ironed each Saturday night.

  Come Sunday morning, they are tied to the braids

  hanging down past our ears.

  We wear ribbons every day except Saturday

  when we wash them by hand, Dell and I

  side by side at the kitchen sink,

  rubbing them with Ivory soap then rinsing them

  beneath cool water.

  Each of us

  dreaming of the day our grandmother says

  You’re too old for ribbons.

  But it feels like that day will never come.

  When we hang them on the line to dry, we hope

  they’ll blow away in the night breeze

  but they don’t. Come morning, they’re right

  where we left them

  gently moving in the cool air, eager to anchor us

  to childhood.

  two gods. two worlds

  It’s barely morning and we’re already awake,

  my grandmother in the kitchen ironing

  our Sunday clothes.

  I can hear Daddy coughing in his bed, a cough like

  he’ll never catch his breath. The sound catches

  in my chest as I’m pulling my dress

  over my head. Hold my own breath

  until the coughing stops. Still,

  I hear him pad through the living room

  hear the squeak of the front screen door and

  know, he’s made it to the porch swing,

  to smoke a cigarette.

  My grandfather doesn’t believe in a God

  that won’t let him smoke

  or have a cold beer on a Friday night

  a God that tells us all

  the world is ending so that Y’all walk through this world

  afraid as cats.

  Your God is not my God, he says.

  His cough moves through the air

  back into our room where the light

  is almost blue, the white winter sun painting it.

  I wish the coughing would stop. I wish

  he would put on Sunday clothes,

  take my hand, walk with us

  down the road.

  Jehovah’s Witnesses believe

  that everyone who doesn’t follow

  God’s word will be destroyed in a great battle called

  Armageddon. And when the battle is done

  there will be a fresh new world

  a nicer more peaceful world.

  But I want the world where my daddy is

  and don’t know why

  anybody’s God would make me

  have to choose.

  what god knows

  We pray for my grandfather

  ask God to spare him even though

  he’s a nonbeliever. We ask that Jehovah look

  into his heart, see

  the goodness there.

  But my grandfather says he doesn’t need our prayers.

  I work hard, he says. I treat people like I want

  to be treated.

  God sees this. God knows.

  At the end of the day

  he lights a cigarette, unlaces

  his dusty brogans. Stretches his legs.

  God sees my good, he says.

  Do all the preaching and praying you want

  but no need to do it for me.

  new playmates

  Beautiful brown dolls come from New York City,

  fancy stores my mother has walked

  into. She writes of elevators, train stations,

  buildings so high, they hurt

  the neck to see.

  She writes of places with beautiful names

  Coney Island, Harlem, Brownsville, Bear Mountain.

  She tells us she’s seen the ocean, how the water

  keeps going long after the eyes can’t see it anymore

  promises a whole other country

  on the other side.

  She tells us the toy stores are filled with dolls

  of every size and color

  there’s a barbershop and a hair salon everywhere

  you look

  and a friend of Aunt Kay’s saw Lena Horne

  just walking down the street.

  But only the dolls are real to us.

  Their black hair in stiff curls down

  over their shoulders,

  their pink dresses made of crinoline and satin.

  Their dark arms unbending.

  Still

  we hug their hard plastic close and imagine

  they’re calling us Mama

  imagine they need us near.

  Imagine the letters from our own mother—

  Coming to get you soon—

  are ones we’re writing to them.

  We will never leave you, we whisper.

  They stare back at us,

  blank-eyed and beautiful

  silent and still.

  down the road

  Be careful when you play with him,

  my grandmother warns us about the boy

  with the hole in his heart.

  Don’t make him run too fast. Or cry.

  When he taps on our back door, we come out

  sit quietly with him on the back stairs.

  He doesn’t talk much, this boy with the hole

  in his heart

  but when he does, it’s to ask us about our mother

  in New York City.

  Is she afraid there?

  Did she ever meet a movie star?

  Do the buildings really

  go on and on?

  One day, he says—so soft, my brother, sister and I

  lean in to hear—I’m gonna go to New York City.

  Then he looks off, toward Cora’s house down the road.

  That’s south, my sister says. New York’s the other way.

  god’s promise

  It is nearly Christmastime.

  On the radio, a man with a soft deep voice is singing

  telling us to have ourselves a merry little . . .

  Nicholtown windows are filled with Christmas trees.

  Coraandhersisters brag about what they are getting,

  dolls and skates and swing sets. In the backyard

  our own swing set is silent—

  a thin layer of snow covering it.

  When we are made to stay inside on Sunday

  afternoons,

  Coraandhersisters descend upon it, take the swings

  up high,

  stick their tongues out at us

  as we stare from behind our glassed-in screen door.

  Let them play, for heaven’s sake, my grandmother says,

 
when we complain about them tearing it apart.

  Your hearts are bigger than that!

  But our hearts aren’t bigger than that.

  Our hearts are tiny and mad.

  If our hearts were hands, they’d hit.

  If our hearts were feet, they’d surely kick somebody!

  the other infinity

  We are the chosen people, our grandmother tells us.

  Everything we do is a part

  of God’s plan. Every breath you breathe is the gift God

  is giving you. Everything we own . . .

  Daddy gave us the swings, my sister tells her. Not God.

  My grandmother’s words come slowly meaning

  this lesson is an important one.

  With the money he earned by working at a job God

  gave him a body strong enough to work with.

  Outside, our swing set is empty finally,

  Coraandhersisters now gone.

  Hope, Dell and I are silent.

  So much we don’t yet understand.

  So much we don’t yet believe.

  But we know this:

  Monday, Tuesday, Thursday,

  Saturday and Sunday are reserved

  for God’s work. We are put here to do it

  and we are expected to do it well.

  What is promised to us in return

  is eternity.

  It’s the same, my sister says,

  or maybe even better than

  infinity.

  The empty swing set reminds us of this—

  that what is bad won’t be bad forever,

  and what is good can sometimes last

  a long, long time.

  Even Coraandhersisters can only bother us

  for a little while before they get called home

  to supper.

  sometimes, no words are needed

  Deep winter and the night air is cold. So still,

  it feels like the world goes on forever in the darkness

  until you look up and the earth stops

  in a ceiling of stars. My head against

  my grandfather’s arm,

  a blanket around us as we sit on the front porch swing.

  Its whine like a song.

  You don’t need words

  on a night like this. Just the warmth

  of your grandfather’s arm. Just the silent promise

  that the world as we know it

  will always be here.

  the letter

  The letter comes on a Saturday morning,

  my sister opens it. My mother’s handwriting

  is easy, my sister says. She doesn’t write in script.

  She writes so we can understand her.

  And then she reads my mother’s letter slowly

  while Hope and I sit at the kitchen table,

  cheese grits near gone, scrambled eggs

  leaving yellow dots

  in our bowls. My grandmother’s beloved biscuits

  forgotten.

  She’s coming for us, my sister says and reads the part

  where my mother tells her the plan.

  We’re really leaving Greenville, my sister says

  and Hope sits up straighter

  and smiles. But then the smile is gone.

  How can we have both places?

  How can we leave

  all that we’ve known—

  me on Daddy’s lap in the early evening,

  listening to Hope and Dell tell stories

  about their lives at the small school

  a mile down the road.

  I will be five one day and the Nicholtown school

  is a mystery

  I’m just about to solve.

  And what about the fireflies and ditches?

  And what about the nights when

  we all climb into our grandparents’ bed

  and they move apart, making room for us

  in the middle.

  And maybe that’s when my sister reads the part

  I don’t hear:

  a baby coming. Another one. A brother or sister.

  Still in her belly but coming soon.

  She’s coming to get us, my sister says again,

  looking around

  our big yellow kitchen. Then running her hand

  over the hardwood table

  as though she’s already gone

  and trying to remember this.

  one morning, late winter

  Then one morning my grandfather is too sick

  to walk the half mile to the bus

  that takes him to work.

  He stays in bed for the whole day

  waking only to cough

  and cough

  and cough.

  I walk slow around him

  fluffing his pillows,

  pressing cool cloths over his forehead

  telling him the stories that come to me

  again and again.

  This I can do—find him another place to be

  when this world is choking him.

  Tell me a story, he says.

  And I do.

  new york baby

  When my mother returns,

  I will no longer be her baby girl.

  I am sitting on my grandmother’s lap

  when she tells me this,

  already so tall my legs dangle far down, the tips

  of my toes touching the porch mat. My head

  rests on her shoulder now where once,

  it came only to her collarbone. She smells the way

  she always does, of Pine-Sol and cotton,

  Dixie Peach hair grease and something

  warm and powdery.

  I want to know whose baby girl I’ll be

  when my mother’s new baby comes, born where

  the sidewalks sparkle and me just a regular girl.

  I didn’t know how much I loved

  being everyone’s baby girl

  until now when my life as baby girl

  is nearly over.

  leaving greenville

  My mother arrives in the middle of the night,

  and sleepily, we pile into her arms and hold tight.

  Her kiss on the top of my head reminds me

  of all that I love.

  Mostly her.

  It is late winter but my grandmother keeps

  the window in our room slightly open

  so that the cold fresh air can move over us

  as we sleep. Two thick quilts and the three of us

  side by side by side.

  This is all we know now—

  Cold pine breezes, my grandmother’s quilts,

  the heat of the wood-burning stove, the sweet

  slow voices of the people around us,

  red dust wafting, then settling as though it’s said

  all that it needs to say.

  My mother tucks us back into our bed whispering,

  We have a home up North now.

  I am too sleepy to tell her that Greenville is home.

  That even in the wintertime, the crickets

  sing us to sleep.

  And tomorrow morning, you’ll get to meet

  your new baby brother.

  But I am already mostly asleep again, two arms

  wrapped tight

  around my mama’s hand.

  roman

  His name is as strange as he is, this new baby brother

  so pale and quiet and wide-eyed. He sucks his fist,

  taking in all of us without blinking.

  Another boy, Hope says,

  now it’s even-steven around here.

  But I don’t like the new
baby of the family.

  I want to send it back to wherever

  babies live before they get here. When I pinch him,

  a red mark stays behind, and his cry is high and tinny

  a sound that hurts my ears.

  That’s what you get, my sister says.

  His crying is him fighting you back.

  Then she picks him up, holds him close,

  tells him softly everything’s all right,

  everything’s always going to be all right

  until Roman gets quiet,

  his wide black eyes looking only at Dell

  as if

  he believes her.

  new york city

  Maybe it’s another New York City

  the southerners talk about. Maybe that’s where

  there is money falling from the sky,

  diamonds speckling

  the sidewalks.

  Here there is only gray rock, cold

  and treeless as a bad dream. Who could love

  this place—where no pine trees grow,

  no porch swing moves

  with the weight of

  your grandmother.

  This place is a Greyhound bus

  humming through the night then letting out

  a deep breath inside a place

  called Port Authority. This place is a driver yelling,

  New York City, last stop.

  Everybody off.

  This place is loud and strange

  and nowhere I’m ever going to call

  home.

  brooklyn, new york

  We did not stay in the small apartment

  my mother found on Bristol Street,

  Brownsville, Brooklyn, USA.

  We did not stay because the dim bulb that hung

  from a chain swung back and forth

  when our upstairs neighbors walked

  across their floor, casting shadows

  that made my brother cry

  and suck hard on his middle fingers.

 

‹ Prev