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Will Do Magic for Small Change

Page 43

by Andrea Hairston


  “So we’re counting on your help, brother,” Opal said. Star Deer nodded.

  Opal pushed past Clarence and sat down in the chair waiting for her by Raven’s bed. She lifted his painting hand and kissed it. Redwood, Aidan, and Iris crowded around the bed too, holding onto each other. Cinnamon was light headed and wobbly. Klaus and Marie wobbled next to her. Nobody was going to fall on their faces. Raven shook the staff at Redwood and Aidan. They dipped and twirled in his gentle beat.

  “Gilidinehuyi,” Opal whispered Raven’s secret name. Star and everyone echoed her. “Gilidinehuyi.” Opal leaned her ears to his lips as soft sounds spilled out. Words? Opal’s poker face gave nothing away.

  “Children of thunder, Gilidinehuyi,” the Wanderer murmured then faded out as if a hoodoo light-board operator was sliding the dimmer from full down to zero on a ten count.

  “Easy is overrated.” Cinnamon, Klaus, and Marie came together on an upbeat.

  “Who you mean to be is always hard.” Cinnamon poured libation to the master of uncertainty. “But we will do magic for small change.”

  Glossary

  adinkra — Visual symbols on cloth created by the Akan to embody ideas or proverbs

  ahosi — Fon, member of the king’s household, wife of the king, warrior woman

  ajaho — Fon, head of the Dahomean king’s secret agents

  aje — Yoruba, the power Olodumare gave to Oshun; a being with such power

  ajo mmuo — Igbo, evil spirits, alu (abomination) against Ani — the Earth Deity

  Akan — ethnic group in what is now Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire

  akewi — Yoruba, storyteller, griot

  Allahu akbar — God is great in Farsi

  alu — Igbo, abominations

  Ani — Igbo, the Earth Deity

  ashe — English transliteration of Yoruba term, the power to make things be

  ASM — Assistant Stage Manager

  ausgezeichnet — German, outstanding, wonderful

  Babalawo — Yoruba, father of mysteries, an Ifa diviner

  Bambara or Bamana — an African people in Mali

  basiaba — Bambara or Bamana, mud cloth pattern for young women

  Béhanzin — king of Dahomey

  bògò — Bambara or Bamana for earth or mud

  bògòlan — Bambara or Bamana for mud cloth

  bògòlanfini — Bambara or Bamana for mud cloth

  ce farin jala — Bambara or Bamana, a brave man’s belt

  chi — the Igbo personal life force

  Eshu — English transliteration of Yoruba term, an orisha, master of crossroads, life and death, master of uncertainty, weaver of the cosmic interface

  fini — Bambara or Bamana for cloth

  Flugzeuge im Bauch — German, airplanes in the stomach, butterflies, nerves

  Fon — ruling ethnic group in Dahomey

  gawlo — griot in Fula

  gbeto — Fon, elephant huntress, sharp shooter

  gilidinehuyi — Cherokee for lightning

  Hau ab, Arschloch — German, Beat it, asshole

  ide Ifa — Yoruba, beaded bracelet warn by Babalawo

  Ifa — divination wisdom of the Yoruba

  Igbo — ethnic group in what is now Nigeria

  Iyalawo — Yoruba, a priestess of Ifa, a mother of secrets

  Kannst du Deutsch? — German, Do you speak German?

  Kanst du eine Fremdsprache? — German, Can you speak a foreign language?

  kpojito — Fon, reign-mate of the king in Dahomey

  kposi — Fon, literally leopard’s wives, sovereign’s highest ranking spouses

  lan — Bambara or Bamana for with or by means of

  logish — German, logical

  maamajomboo — Mandinka, a masquerade

  Maskókî — Seminole for Creek language

  Mère d’eau — Mami Wata in French, mother of waters

  minkisi — plural of nkisi

  mino — Fon, our mothers — the warrior wives of the king

  Mist — German, crap, dung

  mojo — prayer in a bag

  natürlich — German, of course, naturally

  nkisi — Kikongo, spirit or vessel of spiritual forces from the land of the dead.

  Nne mmiri — Igbo, water goddess

  nzumbe — Mbunde word for animated corpse, zombie

  odu Ifa — Yoruba, the bag of wisdom that Oludumare gave to the orisha

  Ohrwurm — German, a tune, a saying that is stuck in your mind

  Olodumare — Yoruba, the supreme being, the creator

  Omotaiyelolu — Yoruba, the twin who excels

  orisha — English transliteration of Yoruba term, Yoruba deities, ancestors, forces of nature, cosmic deities

  Osanyin — Yoruba deity of herbalistic medicine

  Oshoosi — Yoruba deity of hunters, the archer

  Oshun — Yoruba water deity, akin to Mami Wata

  Ouidah — capital, royal city of Dahomey

  oun — Yoruba, he or she

  sehr gut — German, very good

  Sie kann ein bißchen. Hörst du das nicht? — German, She speaks a little. Can’t you tell?

  Verdammt — German, Damn it!

  vodun — Fon religion related to Yoruba Orisha worship (voodoo)

  Yemoja — Yoruba water deity, akin to Mami Wata

  Biography

  Andrea Hairston is the Artistic Director of Chrysalis Theatre and has created original productions with music, dance, and masks for over thirty-five years. Her plays have been produced at Yale Rep, Rites and Reason, the Kennedy Center, and on Public Radio and Television. She has received many playwriting and directing awards, including a NEA Grant to Playwrights, a Rockefeller/NEA Grant for New Works, and a Ford Foundation Grant to collaborate with Senegalese Master Drummer Massamba Diop. Since 1997, her plays produced by Chrysalis Theatre have been sf plays. Archangels of Funk, a sf theatre jam, garnered her a Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship. Her latest play, Thunderbird at the Next World Theatre, appears in Geek Theater—an anthology of science fiction and fantasy plays published by Underwords Press.

  Ms. Hairston has published critical essays on Octavia Butler, speculative theatre and film, and popular culture. In 2011, she received the International Association of the Fantastic in the Arts Distinguished Scholarship Award for contributions to the scholarship and criticism of the fantastic. Lonely Stardust: Two Plays, a Speech, and Eight Essays was published by Aqueduct Press.

  “Griots of the Galaxy,” a short story, appears in So Long Been Dreaming: Postcolonial Visions of the Future, edited by Nalo Hopkinson and Uppinder Mehan. A novelette, “Saltwater Railroad,” was published by Lightspeed Magazine. Ms. Hairston’s novels include Redwood and Wildfire, winner of the 2011 Tiptree Award and the Carl Brandon Kindred Award, and Mindscape, shortlisted for the Phillip K Dick and Tiptree Awards, and winner of the Carl Brandon Parallax Award. Both novels were published by Aqueduct Press.

  In her spare time she is the Louise Wolff Kahn 1931 Professor of Theatre and Africana Studies at Smith College. She bikes at night year round, meeting bears, multi-legged creatures of light and breath, and the occasional shooting star.

  Table of Contents

  Public Display

  Dedication to The Chronicles

  CHRONICLES 1: Dahomey, West Africa, 1892 —Stillpoint

  Guardians and Wanderers

  CHRONICLES 2: Dahomey, West Africa, 1892 —Spirit Guides

  Chicken Fun for All

  Generous Spirits

  CHRONICLES 3: Word Dance

  Remembering

  Notes (#1) to the Current Edition of the Earth Chronicles, December 1984

  CHRONICLES 4: Dahomey, West Africa, 1892 —Books

  CHRONICLES 5: Dahomey, West Africa, 1892 —Blood Oath

  Mojo Working

  Letter from Iris Phipps, December 1984

  Notes (#2) to the Current Edition of the Earth Chronicles, December 1984

  CHRONICLES 6: Dahomey, West Africa, 1893 �
��Return

  CHRONICLES 7: Dahomey, West Africa, 1893 —Pretty Knots

  CHRONICLES 8: Dahomey, West Africa, 1893 —New Life

  Pizza and Spells

  Theatre CPR

  Acknowledgment for Temporal Gaps, February 1987

  Urban Fantasy

  Untying Knots

  Letter from Iris Phipps, February 1987

  Notes (#3) to the Current Edition of the Earth Chronicles, February 1987

  CHRONICLES 9: Coast of Dahomey, 1893 —Demons

  Fire in the Eyes

  CHRONICLES 10: Coast of Dahomey, 1893 —Masquerades

  CHRONICLES 11: Coast of Dahomey, 1893 — Fire from Elsewhere

  Snowballs in Haiti

  Glass Slippers and Golden Angels

  Perspicacious and Intrepid

  CHRONICLES 12: Atlantic Ocean, 1893 —Monsters on the High Seas

  CHRONICLES 13: Atlantic Ocean, 1893 — Light Show

  Roller Coaster Ride

  CHRONICLES 14: Atlantic Ocean, 1893 —Warrior Dances

  CHRONICLES 15: Atlantic Ocean, 1893 —The Color of Love

  Contact Improvisation

  CHRONICLES 16: Atlantic Ocean, 1893 —Dragon Slayer

  Homeless Eshu

  Hospital Blues

  Not Over Yet

  Born Two

  CHRONICLES 17: Ariel and Abla

  CHRONICLES 18a: Paris Fables — Océane and the Aje

  Baron of Badass

  CHRONICLES 18b: Paris Fables — Oshun’s Comb

  Hormones

  Disastronauts and Glamazons

  CHRONICLES 18c: Paris Fables — Spirit Houses

  The Iron Lady

  CHRONICLES 18d: Paris Fables — Masquerade

  CHRONICLES 18e: Paris Fables — River Pirates

  Secret Society Pact

  Hillbillies and Country Gals

  Hearing Spirits from the Other Shore

  Ear Worm

  CHRONICLES 19: Carnival Visions

  Hold All Of Me

  Eleven (On a Scale from Three to Fourteen)

  CHRONICLES 20: Father of Mysteries

  Who Do You Mean To Be?

  More Good News

  CHRONICLES 21: American Dreams

  Trying Times

  Sweet Revenge

  Note from Sekou, December 9, 1984

  Bathroom Refuge

  CHRONICLES 22: Chicago Dreamland

  Heroes

  Secret Stash

  CHRONICLES 23: Chicago Nightmare

  AC-DC

  Flying

  Chronicles 24: Tree of Forgetfulness

  Knife Boy

  CHRONICLES 25: Flash Flood

  Mallemaroking

  Danger Fans

  Hoodoo Spell #7b

  CHRONICLES 26: Final Entry — Defying Gravity

  What Do We Do?

  Black Bird Take My Spirit High

  Glossary

  Biography

 

 

 


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