--EVERBODY WANTS TO OWN THE END OF THE WORLD
My Life in Black and White
Momma says she likes her coffee the
same way she likes her men: black,
strong and steamy. She says this with a
cup of bourbon in her hand, when it’s just the two of us and the morning’s
bleak and blue-streaked from all this Seattle rain. Momma says things like that to be funny,
because she doesn’t know how to make an eight year old laugh.
Before
she leaves, Momma smokes two more cigarettes and does her lipstick and dumps
her cup in the sink with the rest of the dishes. She grabs her purse and says, “I gotta work
late tonight,” even though I already know this.
Next she says, “Find something to do.”
She means go outside and play. I
tell her I’m fine and she says, “Ta hell,” and hikes up her boobs and bra so
the lacy pink rises over her blouse. Her
skirt pulls around her thighs, her shoes are towers, and as she steps down the
hall her heels clatter like a goat.
I
listen and wait. Then I step up on the
kitchen counter, open a cupboard, go through the shoebox of old letters and
yellowed bill statements until I find it.
After I do, I step off carefully because there’s egg yolk on one side of
the Formica and a spilled ash tray on the other.
I
kneel down on the gold shag rug, a little spur of something blooming inside of
me, and open the envelope.
Here’s a picture of Douglas. That thing he’s holding is actually a strip
of hose. He puts it against this curvy
carafe and lights the thing on fire and sucks the flame through the hose until
it makes smoke and then Momma will often sidle off the love seat and lightly
punch his puffed-out cheeks and—Whoosh!
—I’ll get smoldered and smothered and Momma will cackle and say, “But damn,
don’t he look just like Puff the Magic Dragon when he do that?”
This one’s Daddy. The photograph has rippled edges and the
face of the paper stock is cracked. On
the back it says Lou 12/25/196? This was
before he and Mother met up, probably before either Kennedy brother got
shot. I know it’s just a bus driver
uniform that Daddy’s wearing but I used to pretend different, that he was an
army officer. I pictured him like that
drill sergeant in “An Officer and a Gentleman,” barking orders, a person with
power, in charge of others. One thing
I’ve learned is that a little bit of anger isn’t so bad. It’s better than what I see, which is a lot of
nothing going on, all Momma’s friends stoned to the wind, laying around like a
pile of jacked-up mummies, stiff as store window mannequins.
Great Grandma Faith came from the
North Country where it was always frozen.
You can see that much here, in the way she’s pinching her lips all
walnuty crinkled, her eyes black as jet.
Some say I got my imagination from Grandma Faith and since she died a
century or so ago, I’ll have to take their word for it. If you ask me, she looks mighty mean.
This is my dog Doogan. Some boys in our old neighborhood took up
with the rock—that’s what Momma calls crack—and they made a firecracker
necklace to tie around Doogan’s head. He
didn’t die from that but Doogan did go deaf and then that’s why he didn’t hear
the cab that ran over him. I miss him
fierce but the place we’re in now don’t allow pets, so Momma says it’s just as
well.
I don’t get all these pictures of
the same convertible and no people in it.
Must have been something special about it. What I notice is how clean the streets around
it are, how the stoops are clear of sleeping bodies and how, in one, a girl
about my age is drawing a chalk flower.
Sometimes I’ll pretend she’s my best friend and I’ll give her beautiful
names like Bethany or Alexandra.
Here’s me, the only film picture in
existence as far as I know. What’s
strange is I’ve never seen myself look like this before--pretty. Not in mirrors or reflected glass. Hey, but I realize a camera can be a darn
good liar most of the time without even meaning to. I’m an ugly runt. I know what I am. Still, something about the graininess of the
photo makes me appear mysterious, or better yet, lucky. Whoever took this Polaroid had the shakes
because I’m a blur more than a living person.
The last one in the envelope is
Little Louis. Double L, Momma always
says when she refers to my brother. He
could have been the first President from the projects. He would have been a famous poet or a singer
or surgeon, Momma was sure of it. As a
sort of insurance policy, she read his palm when he took sick so young. My Momma can be cruel but she’s a smart
woman. I ask her about Little Lou all
the time. Sometimes she’ll tell me
stories, some repeats, once in a grand while a fresh one. But even a future president doesn’t
accumulate a lot of stories before the age of five so mostly she’ll say for me
to keep my mind on my own self.
Tomorrow will begin year nine of my
life. The way I look at it, anything can
happen. It’s going to be Christmas in a
week. This time, same as the others, I
asked for a camera. I know how crazy
that is and if I didn’t Momma is always there to remind me. Her boyfriend, Lester, got me a plastic one
that clicks when you punch the taking button.
He thought buying me that toy would get him special access into my
underwear, but Lester’s a dumb ass. If
he tries anything, I’ll slice him frontwards and backwards.
Right now I spend most of my
afternoons here, climbed up over the back of the couch that’s butted up to the
window. We live in 9D on the sixth floor
of this building. There’s a view of
things. Momma says I’m a strange kid
cause where’s all my friends? The deal
is I don’t need any, don’t want any.
There’s stuff that goes on around here I’d rather not have anybody else
know.
Besides, I got plenty to do. I got this window and that whole world
outside it. Some parts are repulsive,
sure. There’s dumpsters and people
digging through them. Real cat fights
where animals rip each other’s eyes out of the socket. I seen a man beat up a girl. I seen a lot of things.
But no one and nothing’s
perfect. God filled the world with all
kinds. That’s what makes being a
photographer so interesting. Even what’s
old can be new. What’s ugly can be
beautiful from a certain angle. What’s
dark, what’s absolutely, one hundred percent, hopelessly black can bear
light.
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