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Authors: Terry McMillan

BOOK: Disappearing Acts
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Only problem is afterwards I always feel like fuckin’. But just the thought of walking to the phone booth to call up some chick and talk shit for a few minutes takes most of the desire away. I got my phone turned off after Pauline, so
nobody
would bother me. The truth is I wish I could just stop by the corner store and say to Muhammed, “Let me have five cans of some instant pussy.” Sometimes all I need is to get fucked. I don’t wanna have to talk, lie, or bullshit, just come, roll over, smoke a cigarette, and watch TV. Some women fall for this shit, depending on how bad they want you, which just means it’s been a long time since they had some or they just curious as hell if what they see is as good as it looks. I could just tell ’em that it is. But some of ’em wanna be more than just wham-bam-thank-you-ma’amed. So I try not to give it to ’em too good, ’cause they wouldn’t never wanna go home.

Basically, I guess I’m a loner. Ain’t got too many friends. Ain’t too many people worth trusting. Jimmy, a dude I grew up with, stops by every now and then to borrow a few dollars. I don’t never have to worry about catching up on nothin’, cause all Jimmy do is deal dope. Cocaine. He’s small-time, thinks he’s big-time, but he ain’t, ’cause if he was, he wouldn’t have to borrow no money from me, would have a permanent address and drive something besides them curled-over Stacy-Adams he wears. He don’t offer me none of that shit, ’cause he know, as far back as we go, I don’t
wanna be around nothin’ that even smell like dope. Gimme the damn creeps. Make me think about jail. Me and Jimmy both almost OD’d once. We was some stupid motherfuckers. We was—what? Nineteen? At the dope house, of all fuckin’ places. The shit was better than we thought it was, and in those days we was greedy as hell. We decided we was gon’ get blasted and then play strip poker with some chicks we had picked up at a party. Shit. If it wasn’t for them chicks, we’d both be dead. Jimmy’s a stupid little fat fuck, but he’s still my homeboy.

Lucky is the only dude in this building that I do associate with. He’s also the only male nurse I ever met in my life, and he ain’t no faggot either. Motherfucker always in white. Work the midnight shift at some old folks’ home. We play cards. Spades. Poker. Sometimes dominoes. Lucky is smart as hell too. He reads everything, which is why we get into some heavy debates. Like the shit that’s going on in the Middle East and Nicaragua, should Jesse Jackson run for President in ‘84 or not. That kinda shit. I like being around people who think. Who read the damn paper every day and know what’s going on in the world. Lucky’s biggest problem is that he lives at the track. Horses is his middle name. When he gets off work, he’ll catch two buses, four trains, whatever’s running, to get to the track. I hate to take his money, but hell, when you play and lose, you lose and pay. “You can suck my dick, little girl,” he always say when he losing. I just laugh and say, “Put on some more music, motherfucker, go get some Kleenex, and stop crying.” Lucky’s got a helluva music collection too. I mean serious. That’s another reason I like to sit in his room. Shit. Get us a bottle, order some Chinese food, debate about damn near anything that come on the news, and listen to Herbie Hancock or Cole Porter in the background. You can’t beat it.

And I play my music loud as hell, ’cause that’s how
I like it. Once in a while one of these dudes’ll knock on my door to complain. “Say, man, would you mind turning it down a taste?” If I’m drinking bourbon, doing some woodworking, I’ll say, “Maybe,” or just ignore ’em. They don’t fuck with me either. Maybe it’s ’cause I am six four and weigh 215. I don’t know.

Shit, I’d crack up without my music. It’s the best company you can have, really. It don’t say “no” or “maybe,” or ask no questions. Don’t want nothin’ in return except your open ears. And sometimes the words seem like they was written for you. Side Effect. Aretha. Gladys. Smokey, and L.T.D. If I’m in a good mood and ain’t doing nothin’ in particular but, say, putting up my work clothes or just playing with my dick and reading the paper, and one of these dudes knock on the door, I’ll usually say, “No sweat, man.” They probably think I’m a schizoid or something.

I do know I can be a pain in the ass, but that’s my nature. I just like to test people, see what they made of, where they coming from. I got discharged from the navy because of my temper, lack of cooperation. Couldn’t carry out, let alone follow, orders. And didn’t give a shit. Didn’t wanna go in the first damn place. A black man got enough wars to fight at home. When they said “draft” and they meant army, I said, “Not me.” Let me go somewhere halfway exciting. Submarines and ships and shit. Everybody thought it would do me some good. But how can taking orders from the white man, killing people that ain’t never done nothing to me personally, do me some fuckin’ good? It took me two years to get out.

My whole family disowned me. If I was white, I probably woulda been disinherited. My Moms said, “You’s just lost, boy, always was, always will be. Why don’t you just go somewhere far away and leave us alone?” The bitch. And my Pops. I don’t know the right word to describe him. Weak. That’s close enough.
“You could’ve had a future if you’d have followed the rules, son. That’s all it takes to make it in this world, playing by the rules.” Yeah, right. Look how far it got you, I wanted to say. A fuckin’ sanitation worker. His dream in life. Shit, I didn’t get no dishonorable, just a general discharge. I can still get some of the fuckin’ benefits. And Christine, she’s a year older than me. The perfect word for her is dumb. Just plain old dumb. How she graduated from high school I’ll never know. My folks worship Christine, and you’d swear she was the only child they ever had. That’s ’cause she’ll lick the ground they walk on. “You got too much anger in you, Franklin. That’s your biggest problem,” she said. “You’re hostile and don’t know what the words cooperate or compromise mean. Why you so mad at everybody?” She don’t even know me. Maybe if I was high yellow like she was and didn’t never have to worry about dealing with white folks, scarin’ ’em half to death ’cause I’m so big and black, I would be happy as a little fuckin’ lark too. That’s what it boiled down to. Color.

Me and Darlene was the black sheep in the family. Took after my Pops, and we got treated like black sheep too. Even now, Christine live right across the street from Moms and Pops in a “Leave It to Beaver” house with her “Father Knows Best” husband and four “Brady Bunch” kids. In dull-ass Staten Island. And Darlene: “If you’da just made it through high school, Franklin, you could be playing for the Knicks. They’ve got hardship cases, and you know it. You wouldn’t have had to go to college. Could be making bookoo cash right now.” She pissed me off. Thinks just like everybody else in America. Why is it that if you happen to be black and over six feet tall, everybody thinks you supposed to play basketball or football? But I let Darlene off the hook, ’cause she’s as nutty as a fruitcake, thanks to my parents. She change jobs like some people change their clothes. Don’t know whether she’s coming
or going. She ain’t never got no man. Living up in the Bronx, drinking herself to death. She don’t think nobody know it, but I know it.

I ain’t seen none of ’em in almost a year, and that’s just the way I like it, really. All except for Darlene. I worry about her. Every now and then I’ll call her, just to make sure she still alive. She already tried to kill herself once. And you think my folks would go up there and see her?

All they ever wanted from us was to go along with their program, which meant don’t never disagree with them about nothin’. Shit, they forgot that kids had opinions too. And it ain’t no secret that they had it in for me from jump street. All they ever felt for me was disappointment. Not love. And me being their only son, you’d think they’d be more understanding. Shit. That would be too much like right. They would love to see me drive up in a brand-new car, walk in their house wearing a suit and tie, flashing credit cards and proving to them that I didn’t turn out to be the fuck-up they thought I would. But even if I ever got to that point, I wouldn’t give ’em the satisfaction of knowing it, since they never gave me none.

But time
can
do some wild shit to your mind. For one thing, it can put you in check. Make you stop and realize on your thirty-second birthday that your life is going down the fuckin’ drain. That you ain’t moving. Ain’t headed nowhere in particular. You’re drifting, pretending like you on your way but you don’t know where. And when you sit in a tiny-ass room, smoking one Newport after another, playing solitaire with a bottle of bourbon, looking across the room at a piece of wood that could turn out to be a beautiful piece of furniture—and you know what you’re doing is good but don’t know what to do about it or where to go from here—you sorta get scared. And who you supposed to tell? A man don’t run around telling everybody that
he’s scared. Especially when he don’t know what the fuck he’s scared of. And for some reason, don’t nobody seem to think that Franklin Swift should be scared of nothing.

But time scares me.

It feels like it’s running out. Like I gotta go ahead and make a move. A
big
move. Hell, something drastic. And if the white man would give a black man a break, maybe I could get in the fuckin’ union once and for all. Making fourteen to seventeen dollars a hour. They tearing down and putting up new buildings everywhere you look in Brooklyn. Italians’ll renovate anything for a dollar. But be black and try to get in the damn union, and what do they do? Lay your black ass off right before the cutoff date, or wanna pay you hush money or go-home-and-don’t-show-up money—anything to stop from paying you union scale. And who can afford the fuckin’ dues when they paying you six or seven bucks a hour? So yeah, I’m still a laboror. If I can get in a few weeks of steady work at a little higher than slave wages, I could join. They give us thirty days to do it. Shit, I could buy a decent car. Be outta this dingy-ass room. I could afford a one-bedroom apartment then. Send the kids more money. Let ’em spend the night. Take ’em to Coney Island. The movies. Shit, I don’t need much.

And even though this is 1982, the white man still love to see black men lift that barge and tote that fuckin’ bale. If I didn’t do nothin’ but sit around here all day like some of these dudes, then they’d call me a shiftless, lazy, no-good niggah. Almost beg the motherfuckers for a job, and they still feel so threatened they gotta send your ass home.

But a man gets tired of begging. After a while, you feel butt naked, stripped of anything that look like pride. And they love that shit. Which is why I resent every fuckin’ brick I pick up, every wheelbarrow I
push, all the mud I sling, every wall I’ve ever put up or torn down, and one day I would love to just say, “Fuck you.”

But I made the bed, now I’m laying in it.

Which is why I’m looking into night school. I can’t work construction for the rest of my damn life. Muscles wear out. The mind act like it wanna follow. And outta all the things I may be, stupid ain’t one of ’em. One day I’d like to start my own business. Be my own man. Give the damn orders instead of taking ’em. Have some money in my pocket and money in the fuckin’ bank. That’s what it’s all about. Ain’t it?

Ask Pam. Before I got my phone turned off, she used to bug the shit outta me for money. She was worse than a bill collector. It was humiliating as hell to tell her I didn’t never have none. Sometimes all I had on me was enough for a pack of cigarettes and some coffee. I’d be eating sardines and crackers. To this day, she hates my guts. Talks about me like a dog to the kids. When I call, I have to prepare myself for the bullshit. “You ain’t been over to see the kids in months. They always asking about you.” I guess she don’t know that sometimes when I call and Derek answers, we talk for a long time. He starting to talk about girls and shit already. And he just thirteen. Last time I saw him, I took him to a closed-circuit fight and let him drink a glass of beer. I felt good being able to do something with him, and I know I need to spend more time with botha my sons. Derek’s the oldest, be a man before I know it. I don’t want neither one of ’em growing up thinking of me as a dog, as some dude who fucked their Mama and then split the scene. But respect is something you gotta earn. Right now it ain’t much I can do for neither one of ’em, so why should I go see ’em all the time when all they really want is money, sneakers, designer jeans, Walkmen—all that expensive shit I can’t afford? It’s embarrassing, to tell the truth.
One day I’m gon’ be able to do for ’em, but it’s gon’ take time.

And that’s exactly why women ain’t in the picture right now. They complicate shit. Fuck up my whole program. All they do is throw me off track. It takes me too damn long to swing back.

Zora

I’ve got two major weaknesses: tall black men and food. But not necessarily in that order.

When I’m lonely, I eat. When I’m bored, I eat. When I’m horny (and can’t resolve it), I eat. When I get excited, I eat. When I’m depressed, I eat. When I just feel like it, I eat. When I smoked, I didn’t eat as much, but smoking wasn’t half as satisfying as eating, so I made a choice. I chose food. I had migrated up to a size sixteen, and that’s when I looked at myself in the mirror and couldn’t stand it. I said
, “Just wait one damn minute here, Zora!”
and, along with some of the other flabby teachers at the junior high school where I teach, joined Weight Watchers. I lasted about a year and am now down to a slender size twelve—well, it’s slender enough, considering I’m almost five foot eight. Of course I’ve still got this damn cellulite, which drives me crazy. I can feel the ripples other people can’t see. Which is precisely why I went out and bought Jane Fonda. Now, when I wake up, before I have my coffee, I work out with Jane. I’ve been doing it with her for a few weeks now, but so far I can’t see a bit of difference.

Weight Watchers turned out to be a drag. It was just like going to the fit doctor, aka neurologist. One thing I can’t stand is people telling me what to do—after all the years I’d been told what not to eat, drink, and
think—so I quit when I thought I looked halfway decent in my favorite Betsey Johnson dress.

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