Read Death Coming Up the Hill Online
Authors: Chris Crowe
it, I'd be in pieces, a
ruined, useless shell.
â
  â
  â
Angela knew my
stupid dream, too. I used to
think that a baby
Â
sister would heal my
family, and I hoped and
prayed that Mom would get
Â
pregnant and that a
new sister would bind all of
us together: two
Â
males, two females: a
perfect balance. “It sounds dumb
now. I realize
Â
my family is
too fractured to be fixed, too
off-kilter to be
Â
balanced, but growing
up, I was desperate for
a little sister.”
Â
Angela's eyes turned
soft, and she touched my cheek so
gently I almost
Â
melted. “Be careful
what you wish for, Ashe. Sometimes
girls can create more
Â
problems than they solve.”
It turned out she knew what she
was talking about.
May 1968
Week Twenty-Two: 438
Â
I'm an idiot.
Mom wasn't smoking dope, though
I almost wish she
Â
had been. I see now,
the symptoms were obvious:
she was
pregnant,
not
Â
stoned. Some guy she met
at an anti-war rally;
she wouldn't tell me
Â
anything about
the man, not even his name.
“Later,” she said, “please.”
Â
At first I'd assumed
it was Dad, because even
with overwhelming
Â
evidence to the
contrary, I still had my
childish hope that they
Â
might work things out. Well,
they did work things out, but not
how I had hoped. Dad
Â
moved out, furious
at Mom's betrayal, but he
also seemed almost
Â
relieved that he could
leave and blame their failed marriage
on her. When she talked
Â
to me, she didn't
make excuses or try to
explain; she pulled me
Â
into a hug and
whispered over and over,
“I am so sorry.”
â
  â
  â
The last day of school
felt like a wake before an
Irish funeral.
Â
Everybody was
signing yearbooks and talking
about parties and
Â
summer jobs. All the
hallways looked like a whirlwind
had blown through, strewing
Â
crumpled worksheets and
notebook paper everywhere.
Students wandered in
Â
and out of classes
without hall passes because
everyone knew that
Â
summer vacation
had begun even if school
wasn't yet over.
Â
I felt the happy
vibe, too, but bittersweetness
dogged me all morning.
Â
Seeing Angela
turned the bitter to sweet, and
the fog began to
Â
lift. Like everyone
else, I looked forward to our
summer vacation,
Â
but I knew I'd miss
the routine of school. Classes,
homework, sportsâit gave
Â
me something to do
besides worrying about
the chaos at home.
â
  â
  â
Before he turned class
over to yearbook signing,
Mr. Ruby told
Â
us he'd be teaching
a new senior course next year,
Contemporary
Â
Civilization,
it would be called, and it would
focus on current
Â
world affairs. He glanced
around the room. “It will be
challenging, even
Â
controversial,” he
said, “but I guarantee that
it will be a real
Â
education.” His
gaze settled on me when he
said, “I sincerely
Â
hope some of you will
enroll.” Angela's pat on
my shoulder confirmed
Â
what I already
knew. When fall rolled around, we'd
both be in that class.
June 1968
Week Twenty-Three: 380
Â
My mom loved Bobby
Kennedy. He stood up for
everything Nixon
Â
didn't, and even
though he couldn't possibly
replace JFK,
Â
he could pick up where
his older brother had left
off when his life was
Â
snuffed out in Dallas
in 1963. When
Bobby entered the
Â
presidential race,
even pregnancy couldn't
slow Mom down. She made
Â
phone calls, wrote letters,
and attended rallies like
it was going to
Â
change the world. A part
of her had died when Martin
Luther King was killed,
Â
but Bobby's campaign
brought it back to life. And it
distracted both of
Â
us, for a time, from
the relentless slaughter in
the Vietnam War.
Â
Wednesday night, Mom and
I watched the California
primary. Bobby
Â
Kennedy won, and
throughout his speech Mom stood and
yelled “Right on!” at the
Â
TV every time
Kennedy made a point she
liked. After the speech,
Â
reporters discussed
the election results and
Kennedy's chances
Â
in November. Then
the TV picture lurched and
rolled, and the people
Â
behind the newsmen
started running and shouting.
Mom froze and stared as
Â
pandemonium
erupted on the TV.
She faded back in-
Â
to her chair, one hand
against her cheek, while she stared
in terrible white
Â
anticipation.
The camera focused on
the swirl of people,
Â
and the reporter
disappeared from sight. Moments
later, a panicked
Â
voice crackled through the
airwaves: “Kennedy's been shot!
My God, he's been shot!”
June 1968
Week Twenty-Four: 324
Â
“It's complicated.”
That's what my mom always said
when I asked her when
Â
I'd meet the baby's
father. “Complicated” was
an understatement.
Â
I knew it was the
Age of Aquarius and
free love, but my own
Â
mother, a married
woman, carried the child of
another man. That
Â
was complicated
for everyone involved. Mom's
not stupid, so I
Â
couldn't figure out
how she got pregnant in the
first place. After all
Â
the grief she suffered
from her first pregnancy, she
had to know better,
Â
and given that I
had no siblings, it was clear
that she understood
Â
how birth control worked.
Could she have fallen in love
with some strange peacenik?
Â
Maybe it was just
a desperate one-night stand
that she fell into
Â
out of loneliness.
Maybe she didn't even
know his name. Maybe
Â
he was just drifting
through, and he didn't tell her
where he went next. I
Â
wanted to be mad
at her, to punish her for
putting that last straw
Â
on Dad's back, to make
her pay for lighting the fuse
that would blow up our
Â
fractured family,
but I knew Dad was as much
to blame as she was,
Â
and somehow I felt
that part of the fault was mine,
too. I couldn't be
Â
mad at Mom or Dad
for the complications that
entangled us all.
â
  â
  â
Even with the flak
flying around, Angela
wanted to meet my
Â
parents. She's not like
me that wayâconflict is one
thing I avoid, but
Â
she sails in, fearless.
One night, we sat under a
palm tree in her front
Â
yard while I described
my dysfunctional parents.
It didn't faze her.
Â
“Your mom sounds great. I
think I'd get along really
well with her.” Then I
Â
told her about my
dad and his old-school views on
politics, civil
Â
rights, and the war. She
laughed. “It will be like
Guess Who's
Coming to Dinner,
Â
except that I'll be
in Sidney Poitier's roleâ
the outsider who's
Â
a dad's nightmare.” I
couldn't help smiling, and she
knew she'd won. “Okay,”
Â
I said, “I'll see what
I can do.” Angela hugged
me, hard, and whispered,
Â
“This'll be a good
thing, Ashe. You'll see.” The warmth of
her embrace lingered
Â
all the way to my
front door, but when I opened
it, the sadness at
Â
home swept it right out
of me. I wished life was much
less complicated.
June 1968
Week Twenty-Five: 299
Â
Bobby Kennedy's
murder filled Mom with a new
sense of urgency,
Â
and she turned even
more passionate about the
war, civil rights, and
Â
keeping Nixon out
of the White House. Her work kept
her away from home
Â
a lot, so sometimes
I'd go to Dad's apartment
for dinner. I tried
Â
to talk about the
baby once, but Dad only
stared at me before
Â
leaving the table
without saying a word. I
tried to imagine
Â
a dinner with Mom,
Angela, and him. It was
impossible. I
Â
told Angela that
life isn't like the movies,
and that even if
Â
people need to change,
most don't want to, no matter
what you do or say.
June 1968
Week Twenty-Six: 187
Â
Why don't they publish
all the names of the soldiers
killed every week? How
Â
different it would
be to read a long list of
names in the paper
Â
on Thursdays. It would
bring the war home in a way
numbers can't. Maybe
Â
then people would see
what it's costing us to be
tangled up in a
Â
foreign jungle war
that will get worse before it's
all over. Last week,
Â
one hundred eighty-
seven U.S. soldiers died
in Vietnam, and
Â
nobodyâexcept
family and close friendsâknew
or cared. How easy
Â
it is to forget
the blood, injuries, and death
happening daily.
Â
They deserve to be
remembered by name. Think of
what it would be like
Â
to see all the names
of the dead at once. Thousands
of sons, brothers, and
Â
husbands who died for
a country they loved in a
distant, senseless war.
July 1968
Week Twenty-Seven: 198
Â
Dad got me a job
digging sprinkler line trenches
for the new hotel
Â
going up over
on Rural Road. My boss was
an old man who had
Â
spent way too much time
in the sun. The first morning,
he laughed when I showed
Â
up without gloves. He
handed me a shovel and
pointed to a guy
Â
already picking
a flat patch of hard brown dirt
in the corner. “Get
Â
busy. I want to
see nothing but backsides and
elbows until lunch.
Â
You got it?” I took
the shovel and walked over
to my coworker.
Â
A dark splotch of sweat
already stained the back of
his gray Marines tee
Â
shirt, and when he saw
me, he swung his pick into
the ground, pulled off his
Â
glove, and shook my hand.
Reuben Ortega was four
years older than me,
Â
and he'd just gotten
back from Vietnam. He lent
me an old pair of
Â
leather work gloves and
shared his ice water while we
broke our backs on the
Â
hard-packed clay in the
broiling July sun. And when
we sat in the shade
Â
of the new building
to eat lunch, he told me things
that he had seen and
Â
done in 'Nam, things that
never make the newspapers.