Dedicated to the loving memory of Mrs. Dorothy Carson whose prayers are still working...
Within the first painful moments of waking, I didn’t give the dream much more thought.
It’s hard to say if the lucid descent of falling into a pile of fish was symbolic of something profound, infinitely divine or simply had to do with waking up with a bad hangover to find myself sleeping alone, four feet off the ground, on a three tier stack of sagging old mattresses while Billy, and who I guessed was Lana and Susan, from last night, were snoring laboriously in a tangled carnal heap on the bed next to me.
Oh Damn!, I winced with a looming dread of temporary amnesia
as thoughts began forming fragmented pictures and were trying to emerge
unwanted, that I fought back hoping I had not at any
time been remotely involved or by drunken chance or circumstance, even fallen anywhere in the direction of that other springless, lopsided tower of a bed, be it
invited or not. It never fails us that we can turn any night upside down and
backwards and I haven’t seen Billy in almost a decade and you would think I never
left.
I silently found myself begging and pleading in the muddled
sobering moments for no regrets I would remember in the next few minutes or at
least before I was long gone. Billy would have argued, ‘it’s all good brotha!,’
He would say he was doing me a favor as our long past history would attest to,
but this night I had only planned on just passing through after years of hiatus
and ended up staying a little too long. There had been so much to catch up on
and time just got carried away and as usual took on a direction of its own.
I figure it was nothing I couldn’t handle as I sifted
hurriedly for a long anxious moment, editing through the faded remnants and
fragments of the night and was somewhat relieved that nothing carnal or illegal
was floating in the circle of thoughts and that I still had all my fingers and
toes intact. But then again, the worst does always present itself a day or
moment too late and might just catch me later in a jaw dropping surprise.
So much for the past, I thought. I didn't have time to be consumed or linger. All would soon be irrelevant of events of the past
48 hours. I now was faced with the laborious task of how to get out of the room unnoticed
and for the most pressing dilema, I simply had to pee like a son of a bitch.
Meanwhile, simultaneously my head was coming alive like an am radio stuck
between stations on full blast. I could almost see my hearts outline as it
struggled to get a rhythm along with the feeling of metal shards flowing
through my veins. How much cheap booze did I drink? I knew I had to get up and
move before I turn to dust or stone!
The hazy room, now layered in textures through foggy eyes,
radiated a coarse heat all consumed in unconscious breaths and the sticky air of
sweaty acidic flesh breathing in gasping deep buckets of air that spun me into
instant nauseous vertigo. I tried not to gag as I pulled myself up. Slowly I
rolled up like the blob of a giant lava lamp.
It didn’t really matter at this point and might forever be a
questionable blackout as to what all went on in the early hours but as I
glanced up, it was clear that it all happened in the wide-open gaze of Gods eye
and now my dream began to make sense. God, being that Billy’s oldest brother Larry,
who had become a fairly decent artist, and self proclaimed painter be it house painter, car or canvas, had painted, in his signature style, a huge
sunburst, black-light, fluorescent image of Jesus himself with a full afro
floating against a baby blue sky and fluffy clouds that spanned across the
whole ceiling and blended into the matching blue walls. It was still there as I remembered when
we were just kids, staring down upon us unchanged for years except for a water
stain here and there, the blue hues had slightly faded and the white doves now a
shade of gray, but it was still there as big as life staring forlornly down upon us. That one painting, (and perhaps the Indian ink cross tattoo on my forearm)
would always be a key element or premonition as one of the first glimpses, a
sign in my life, that I would look at the world and God a little askew and
slightly tilted off its axis- and rightly so.
I internally shook my head taking it all in and spying at
everything through gritty smoke burned eyes at such familiarities that I
could no longer relate to after so many years being gone. I gazed at the
shifting of bodies like watching an abstract theater play and ballet unbearably
real and sad.
I breathed in and out a silent breath feeling chest pains
revealing my own shame and making me all to aware and present to my own
tarnished and damned soul that was somewhat lost and wandering much like in my dream. It perpetuated a constant sadness inside that’s
always just below the surface.
Here I go, I thought clenching my teeth and standing up
knowing no better time than the present to clear out. I got up in a child like
attempt to be invisible. Hoping I could exit and flee unnoticed. I slowly
coward toward the door as if tiptoeing on razor blades and floor splinters. I cut delicate through the breaking silence of hushed moans stirring.
It was the longest yard as if anticipating the drop of a
guillotine or lightning bolt striking me down.
I passed through the opened doorway pausing momentarily to
look back in disbelief and mixed regrets before quietly turning to make my way
on the creaking floor and down the narrow hallway lined with shadows
and ghosts illuminated by a single naked bulb. It was a long dilapidated stretch of wall paper faded and rubbed smooth by country life of countless
generations flowing through here like a constant river.
This old place had been so much a part of my youth, my
second home, my alternate universe.
It had been years since I had been back here, but consciously I still
remember every loose floorboard, wall stain, and ceiling crack. And though our
worlds had taken such extreme different paths, this home would always be as
much a part of me as my own skin and bones.
These old walls were now in such dire condition, it’s a
wonder its still standing, surviving not only a few tornadoes and the wrath of a
hundred years of pounding foot traffic, but also the encroaching city moving
slowly in and around any given space around this country town, devouring all in
its path. I’m sure this old house is slated for removal on the desktop papers
of some Bank or real estate office far far away from here. Miles around, from here
to San Marcus had already been bought up and stripped clean to topsoil and
limestone. This house was prime because of how many acres it sits on. The property stretched from 'Kitchen's' baseball field all the way to the entrance of San Leanna Estates and all the way in the backfields to Slaughter creek where our 'Pretty pool' ran deep. We could ride our horses Dumas and Dixie at a full run for 5 acres before even slowing down. Greedy men were chomping at the bit to put a fancy white cookie cutter sub-division in here and give it some typical gated community name like mountain creek cedar...even though there's no mountains within a thousand mile of here. But regardless of its
rickety structure, or the future of this little town even long after every board and nail is gone, it will always be home and a sanctuary
to me if just in my heart.
I continued gingerly creeping down the hall with familiar
faces staring back at me from old crooked faded picture frames. I smiled warmly
amused to see a picture of myself still hanging there, skinny as a bean pole, taken from more than 10 years ago with me holding a pool cue.
I remember back in the day, it would be normal to have 20 or more people spread throughout the house and scattered in every corner from sofa to
kitchen floor.
On weekends we used to show up late with an entourage from
the Rosewood and Chicon, the far east side Housing Projects, after late nights
hustling pool at Gameworld pool hall just east of downtown on 12th
street that was more reminiscent of a ‘delta juke joint’ than pool hall. It was obvious where that picture of me on the wall was taken.
4th of July |
'Southside' i can still hear saying,"let me educate you people on 'Whitefolks' here".
We tried to stay within the proximity of Game-World and rarely drifted through the neighborhood and only occasionally to a craps game in the lower projects.
We never knew or questioned back then all the complexities
and ventures of Brad's or the other Satterwhite brothers life, or their coming
and goings but for one thing Brad owned Game-World and had enough confidence to back
our pool winnings even though we were the youngest around of a new generation,
but granted, it was true that we could three out of four times clear a pool table on anyone
with a dollar to spare and were a sure bet against even for the best of hustlers, (except for
maybe this one kid, a 10 year old hustler named Junebug which is a story in
itself),
It’s true I might not have single handedly broke up any
racial isolation east or west of I-35, but they did have my own t-shirts made
for me with 'Whitefolks' ironed on the back and the name Gameworld centered
over a rack of pool balls on the front of a pool table green T-shirt, same as the
one I’m wearing in that faded picture on the wall. 'Whitefolks' was the nickname Brad bestowed upon me on the first day. We were as good as it gets with a pool cue and maybe we innocently being
young and naive put ourselves in dangers way deep in a grownups world but we
survived another day and even if we didn’t make it back home to the country for
playing all night, we were trusted with the keys to lock up the place where
come noon the next day, you would find our tired asses sleeping on a bench
inside the pool hall even though knowing poor Mama Carson was praying worried to death back
in the country that we just one time might not make it back home. We would
spend time during closing hours sharpening up our fancy bank shot skills before making
the long trek back home.
Back here at the shack, it was pure country and a far cry
from the city and a little scary for some of those that were all ghetto and had
never came further south than Riverside drive. We on the other hand adapted to any
environment be it here or there. We were a gang of modern Troubadours and when we would show up downtown, in their
own impoverished yet jubilant neck of the woods, looking trim, all spit shined, dressed to the nines,
and white walls glowing, you never would have figured we had been climbing up
and down a goose-neck trailer bailing hay or setting fence posts all day. Most of the clothes were hand sewn from hip pattern books by Billy's older sisters and were so impressive that Billy earned the title of 'Bessed Dressed' in our Jr High yearbook.
We rolled into town like Rock Stars, although we did in fact roll in at times in the lime green pinto of Southside's with its long white CB whip antenna stretched from bumper to bumper, left over from the brief era of CB-mania. Still, there was no question when we arrived, that we floated in on respect of the coat tails of a really big extended family with a long legacy, be it good and bad, loathed and loved.
We were undeniably an integral part of the true hustle and flow pulse the now outdated, misunderstood and exploited groove of so called ‘negro’ culture, now faded into history with “negro” now a footnote as offensive slang, But at the time it was strutting colorful pride, and this neighborhood was thriving at sundown like a big ghetto block party where the streets felt non of the economic hardships and moved rhythmically to the booming base of four way speakers rising out of the stream of pimped-out slick cars cruising 12Th street with curb feelers shimmering, moving as if on Sunset Strip in Hollywood. And just next door, as the night wore on, a flow of sweaty bodies and billowing menthol smoke spilled happily intoxicated out of Chester’s nightclub and onto the street in their Disco funk stretch polyester while drifting sideways on platform heels to the echoing smooth soulful R&B fading as the door closed behind them.
We rolled into town like Rock Stars, although we did in fact roll in at times in the lime green pinto of Southside's with its long white CB whip antenna stretched from bumper to bumper, left over from the brief era of CB-mania. Still, there was no question when we arrived, that we floated in on respect of the coat tails of a really big extended family with a long legacy, be it good and bad, loathed and loved.
We were undeniably an integral part of the true hustle and flow pulse the now outdated, misunderstood and exploited groove of so called ‘negro’ culture, now faded into history with “negro” now a footnote as offensive slang, But at the time it was strutting colorful pride, and this neighborhood was thriving at sundown like a big ghetto block party where the streets felt non of the economic hardships and moved rhythmically to the booming base of four way speakers rising out of the stream of pimped-out slick cars cruising 12Th street with curb feelers shimmering, moving as if on Sunset Strip in Hollywood. And just next door, as the night wore on, a flow of sweaty bodies and billowing menthol smoke spilled happily intoxicated out of Chester’s nightclub and onto the street in their Disco funk stretch polyester while drifting sideways on platform heels to the echoing smooth soulful R&B fading as the door closed behind them.
A neighborhood tamed and gentrified now and somewhat
forgotten except for those of us who lived through it. it was a time of Soul Heaven reflected in the lyrics of Barry White, Sly, The Ohio Players, War, Isley brothers, Al Green, Marvin Gay, O'Jays, Curtis.... The AM Dj's looped the hit tracks non stop that blasted from street corner to Heaven.
The prettiest girl I had ever seen back then was Brandy Sims
a tall pretty light skin girl that hung outside at Game-World on weekends. She
weaved vibrantly through the crowd like a gazelle, tall, skinny and elegant. Her face
was like those of one generation separated from some gilded African tribe with
high cheekbones, full afro and golden green Asiatic eyes. I was too young and shy to
approach her back then but I caught her, out of the corner of my eye, watching
me enough times to think she liked me, although she might have just been
thinking I was a crazy fool of a white boy to be out here at all. And then,
like a prayer, it just so happened that she made it out to the house on one of
those weekend night excursion. She must have thought she went to the moon being
out here in the dark away from the streetlights of the city. I didn’t want to
leave the house for a minute when I knew she was here. I remember sitting on
the porch peaking through the window to see what she was doing. She was
noticeably bored and out of place or just plain scared.
Billy had snuck
out his daddy’s rot-gut MD 20/20 and what was left of some Thunderbird wine. It was
a little better of a Bum wine than Ripple and was better than cheap weed to get your
spirit and courage up but would give you one mean headache in the morning much
like the one I now had.
By the time midnight came around Billy and me were laughing
like fools and damn near punching each other off the porch like foolish kids. Everyone else had
already gone to bed including Brandy.
I being silly drunk and at the time in our life when all we
thought about were girls, sex and food in no certain order decided i was going to make my move on Brandy. I stumbled
boldly back into the house holding up the walls and was going to sneak down
this same hall hoping to get a glimpse of what I could only imagine was her
silky naked black skin that I envisioned in this heat only covered by shimmering beads of sweat like wet
pearls, but before I even made it two steps to
nowhere, Billy had started playing Richard Pryor records loud on the kitchen
table with older brother Southside and every time I would take one step in the
general direction of the bedroom where I last saw her, Billy would blurt out a
line verbatim in my direction from the record, ” That Niggers Crazy” and in my
giggling drunk stupor I would fall like a happy wino onto the linoleum floor
laughing so hard I cried and couldn’t get back up. Billy used to put his face
right up to the records as not to miss a word. You would think he was watching
TV. He knew every line and we burned through every record a hundred times and could recite them down to a T and sure enough,
he was just as funny if not funnier to me than Richard Pryor himself.
Sadly I never even got to know Brandy very well. By the time I saw her again it was some six months later
she was pregnant and hanging with a parking lot pimp of a hustler twice her age
who strutted around like a fool with his fake gangster limp. I hated the sight of him with his
little head and skinny crow like hands draped on her hunched shoulders. She
never looked my way again and her green eyes looked gray and quiet.
We really didn’t do a whole lot more back then anyway other
than tease each other about girls and make half the stuff up. It was a lot of
talk and mostly fool-hearted badgering back and forth in a battle of wits in an arena where i didn't stand a chance up against any of them. But I did get Billy good one day when I
rode up on my bike to see him all torn up and coming out of the barn in the back
sweating like a work horse with dust and hay sticking all over him. His half
cousin Lynette was in tow right behind him looking worse for wear than he did.
I know she was really just out there stacking hay with him for some spending
money and with her big hands, she was as strong as any guy and though she was
somewhat cute, except for those man hands, she was mean and dumb as a bag of
hammers. I couldn’t help myself from taunting and laughing at the sight of them.
“Man what are you doing out there in that barn? Y‘all stay
back! What’s that funky smell? Boy it smells like you burned up a whole can of
Afro-sheen in a skillet!”
Big Mike and cousin Laura |
“Damn Lynette, where you had your head girl? What’s up with
that nappy lopsided fro of yours with hay stickin all out of it?”
She ran up and hit me in the arm so hard with those big
hands as hard as any guy could and told me to what to do with myself in my puny white ass
before storming off to the house. It hurt like hell but I couldn’t stop
laughing while I held and rubbed my arm in real pain. I thought for a minute
she broke it but I kept laughing like no tomorrow and Billy was laughing beside
me just as hard.
Who knows though, he might have dipped his wick there after all
being that she got so flustered, I teased him.
It was all the more funny and insulting asking where her head had been because all the brothers around here swear black girls don’t go down south. But don’t believe that. I’ve known these girls to go down south around the world more than a couple times and likewise these same brothers claim and would swear on their mama that they themselves never ate from the vine but boy I can tell you, if walls could talk, it would sure make a bold faced liar out of just about every one of them whom all had more than just their hands twirling in the cookie jars.
It was all the more funny and insulting asking where her head had been because all the brothers around here swear black girls don’t go down south. But don’t believe that. I’ve known these girls to go down south around the world more than a couple times and likewise these same brothers claim and would swear on their mama that they themselves never ate from the vine but boy I can tell you, if walls could talk, it would sure make a bold faced liar out of just about every one of them whom all had more than just their hands twirling in the cookie jars.
It was all meant in guiltless fun and everything pretty much up in the
air and fair game for teasing each other and nothing really much ever was
rooted in truths. Our only hope was not to grow weary before our time.
Me and Billy 1974 |
Billy for the most part only had white girlfriends at the time and neither of us really cared for any local girls around here except for Serena and Cassidy and the rich Onion Creek country club girls across the highway.
Most of the local girls around here were not so much
all-together bad girls per say but just lonely or mostly sweet hot tempered
Mexican girls that want to lay with you and fight you at the same time. All too
many around here wanting to believe in a Cinderella story that threads a
generic vein of want and nostalgia through all the small towns around here and
I guess maybe throughout the whole world.
Around here it seems they are busting to get out while at
the same time hanging on for dear life much like Lana who had been around for
as long as I could remember going nowhere fast.
I had almost reached the end of the hall before realizing I
had forgot my boots back in the room and now had to go back and start all over
again. The sweetness of the savored thoughts of past memories including the
silk of Brandy’s skin was short lived and faded in an instance.
I moaned and groaned turning around dispersing my nostalgia
with irritability.
This time I deliberately stomped back in like a dare,
grabbing my boots at the end of the bed and grunting my blaming disapproval as
if everyone but me was to blame for my aching suffering and delay.
Everyone was half awake now and stared silently bewildered
at my intrusive rambling. I had stilled the room to my own embarrassment with
nothing to say.
Billy knew I was leaving and chided me with mocking sarcasm
by nodding with a coaxing wink in the direction of Lana just to get my goat as
if offering her up to me as if nothing better to do. And he knew he got me.
Reduced me to a bashful grin. After all I was the pathetic one here. They were
the ones who knew how to ride a wave and soothe the edges of reality and not
question it so much like I did.
Lana smiled up at me with clueless innocence while squeezing
Billy’s neck lovingly.
“Take it easy Jimbo’, Billy said sincerely as I left out
again
“I will see ya soon Billy”
I walked back out of the room for the last time with a
parting salute nod of my head and over the shoulder wave. I crept on the
outside edge of my bare feet back toward the front door now awake and fully
present. No longer did family portraits stare up at me from the doily covered end
tables and the couches and chairs that had loomed in the dark shadows like fat
monsters were now just sad in their plastic slip-covers.
The Throne |
"And I’ll never have one like any of the last few". How many times have I said that? I seem to plead a lot with a God I barely believe in, and especially pray harder when fear of the future and the unknown creeps in.
I shifted my pants adjusting myself after a quick stop in the bathroom and sighed with light at the end of the tunnel now in an arms reach.
I was relieved when I finally went through the tethered screen door and across the trodden worn threshold that was worthy of an icon of generations passing through.
Horace carson |
Out I stepped into the cool wide open dawn morning where the blasting white of the light stunned me. I eased down into the old sofa chair rocker on the rickety porch with such pleasing familiarity. I molded into the one comfortable place between the exposed cotton stuffing and springs. I couldn’t believe this old thing was still here. It made me smile. The sofa was so faded you couldn’t decipher what color it was- somewhere between a yellow orange and faded green. This old porch had held up under some serious weight over time. There had been no limit as to how many people would crowd on here for a spot out of the sun on those long hot summer weekends, and this chair was the prize spot but this was Mr. Carson’s throne, and if he were here, you didn’t question getting up and no one ever had to be asked twice especially from a man of very few words.
front fields |
That’s it, I figured I had better get going before he starts
yapping and wakes everybody up. I shushed him but he still jumped up and slimes
me with his stinky dew wet fur. “Get down you dirty mutt!” I whispered harshly.
He cowered falling down onto his belly with a whimper still waggin his tail and
trying to contain himself while inching forward on his haunches. “Stay down
there”, I again scolded him. I ached all over, moaned as I leaned back again on
the old sofa chair. I rubbed my brow hard with both hands and pressed my
eyeballs to the back of my head.
After pulling on my boots I gazed out once more over the
morning feeling an uneasy calm settling into my chest heavy enough to cry and I
might for no reason. Then like it does sometimes for no apparent reason follows
by a flash of eager anticipation-a glimpse of something bigger out there
flooded me, filling me with the anxious adrenalin of fear and excitement at the
same time.
And with that moment and without another thought I sprang up
like on a string, patted ‘Pup’ on the head and took a giant enthusiastic leap
off the porch and landed my heals with a hard thud on dirt and limestone that
shook my spine and the cobwebs loose. While stretching my arms I was startled
by a soft familiar motherly voice muffled through the kitchen screen. It was
Mrs. Carson telling me to take care of myself and stay out of trouble. Not a
breath of disappointment or judgment in her voice, which somehow made it all
the worse. Shame for all my life poured over me at that moment with the love
that woman felt for me and who
asked for nothing ever in return. Loved me like a son. Loved me no less than
any one of her elleven kids, grand kids, great grand kids. I was at the top of the
list. It was no secret I was one of her favorites and I know if nothing else,
she will forever say a prayer for me.
Mrs. Dorothy Carson |
“Thanks Mrs. Carson for everything, tell everybody I said goodbye”.
I had felt someone had been watching me and I wondered if she had known when we had come in during the night but then again she knows just about everything. Her life moves in a pace of mountains growing with the unwavering faith of her Lord watching over her. And I know she could almost tell me the future if I asked her but I am just as afraid of knowing it as not.
I went over and
opened the creaking door on the dew covered Rambler wiping my hand across the
wet windshield then dipped and plopped down on the cold vinyl seat. I lit a
stale cigarette blowing the smoke against the foggy glass, sat and paused the
world for one whole eternal moment before shattering mother natures peaceful dawn
silence with a spinning fly wheel starter and coughing rumble of a cranky old
six cylinder with a bad exhaust that sent a plume of wet smoke up into the
universe.
The air all around reeked of methane gas and crude oil.
Drifted in across flatlands all the way from Midland Odessa or up from Lockhart
and Lagrange. It’s a smell hard to get used to for most but grows on you
nonetheless. Familiar as mothballs and old wool blankets. Strangers to it just
say ‘what the hell stinks around here?’ I figured it would air out somewhere
between here and the border of Mexico and wouldn’t pay it any mind if it
didn’t.
When I shifted into gear I felt the early morning loneliness
of departure hanging onto me like a bad dream, my familiar sadness trailing close behind me.
It’s the way it feels when there seems to be nothing around but one big 'son of a bitch' of a universe and you’re all that’s in it. It’s like missing your
mama a thousand miles from home. Not quite sure what there is to be afraid of
but it’s big, you’re awfully small and so alone that God’s not even out there
and the big sky is gonna open up any minute and swallow you up and my passenger
seat for this journey never felt more empty.
I crawled down the long dirt drive, crunching gravel under
the tires and then with a wave and glance in my mirror, turned slow and long
onto hard pavement of the old farm and market road. The only signs of life I
saw on the main road were a couple of old sharecroppers puling an empty hay
trailer behind a spitting old John Deere. They were so out of place and old like a Bible..It's amazing there is still share cropping
around here in this day and age. From here all the way east to River
Road Louisiana, whole families still sewing the land with hands deep in the soil. I could just make out the cloudy yellow cataracts of their shiny eyes
that were as piercing as the wrathful eyes of Jesus back there on the ceiling.
Soulful and strong they were like Indian Chiefs. These Old Timers looked as if
they still had a bit of slave souls somewhere in their hearts.
Their leather skin was pure black, old and weather hardened into blue
like a blacksmiths coal. Salt of the earth disciples.
“Those are angel spies. Don’t you know them are angel spies
for the lord?”, I could almost hear Mrs. Carson saying things like that, teasing the kids and putting a little needed fear of God into them. Definitely made you think twice. I still think about it.
Southern things just stick to you like that.
The house faded in the distance. I turned toward old San Antonio back roads towards Buda and soon dipped across a low water bridge over a mud creek where I could still hear our voices as kids mucking about like it was yesterday….
The house faded in the distance. I turned toward old San Antonio back roads towards Buda and soon dipped across a low water bridge over a mud creek where I could still hear our voices as kids mucking about like it was yesterday….
Loved every word of it. Now what's this shit about you not being able to write? Seriously, love it!
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Love the story, the imagery, your heart! Keep writing and forget about grammar, its just a bunch of rules somebody decided on. Your voice is powerful written just the way you write. All LOVE! Ally
ReplyDeleteLOVE YOU PAL!
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