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Authors: June Jordan

His Own Where (9 page)

BOOK: His Own Where
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Buddy close and folding Angela inside his arms to rock with her. They swaying slow.
“I know what I feel like doing.”
“Turn it on the radio.”
“Damn, Angela.”
“Do it, Buddy, please?”
“It? What you mean.”
“Find the music on the radio. The music for what you feel.”
Buddy take the radio. He turn and turn until he find a solo horn and strings, a strong drum under them.
They make some love. Buddy drop into a dreaming. Leave his large hands like protection and support around the brown surprising sturdy breasts of Angela.
THE DREAM
Start on uptown Fulton Street around three o’clock and the streets suddenly be full of children suddenly free from school and crowds and throngs of blackbrown yellow redskin children wearing white shirts/blueskirt uniforms/army-surplus /leftover cousinspringcoats. Crowds and crowds from seven years old up to seventeen. Into every attitude and face. Into every natural style and pace of fights and chase and rap and argument. A hundred and a hundred and ten thousand blackbrown yellow redskin kids suddenly spill into the streets suddenly fill the streets suddenly free from school.
Buddy father be walking the other way alone. His arm around a brown bag of groceries and Buddy father walking careful not to hurt the hundred thousand kids swarm at him surging in the opposite direction thick to circle the stranger man his groceries. The darkbrown muscle of his motion. The dream continue around five o’clock on midtown Forty-ninth Street/Fifth Avenue and suddenly them neighborhoods be full of hundred and ten thousands hundreds of white folks suddenly leaving the towers suddenly leaving floor to ceiling windowwalls walltowall carpets cafeterias lounge areas bigbathrooms easychairs desks sofabed and couch great conference tables heavy leather books addingmachines typewriters desks
magazines furnaces that work hot water air conditioning sculpture fountains and 43,785,619 suddenly empty rooms with doors and locks and keys.
Buddy father walking the other way alone up the subway stairs. The thousand other people pushing down (the stairs) Buddy father walking careful not to let himself be hurt. The hundreds rush against around him on his arrival for the night and they be leaving.
The dream continue around midnight, and the empty towers echo harsh from the emptiness. Other people women wash the office floors, dust, straighten things. Other men sweep the corridors and rearrange the furniture and distribute a next day supply of comfortable items. Buddy father laugh among these other few men and other few women friends spending the night with him in the otherwise empty towers where he watchman of the night.
The dream continue around dawn and Buddy father working at his pocket drawing pad. Buddy father the nightwatchman at the top on the terrace roof of an otherwise empty skyscraper and now Buddy father draw the inside of the building that he guard and fill the empty tower full of people that he know.
The people and the family of the men and women who do clean and straighten up the towers for the other (morning) folk.
The children from the Brooklyn streets. The relatives of cleaning people Brooklyn children fill his father drawing of the empty towers now a skyscraper glowering full of life at night and through the night.
The dream continue bright from Buddy father drawing pad into another dream and all the crowded, cold, the peeling painted rickety and rusted the unlit shamble Brooklyn housing slide invisible into the Hudson River slide collapsing from a river pier of several thousand splinters. Meanwhile all the families all the Brooklyn people reach the evening empty towers and fill them up with cribs and toys and parties on the intercom and blankets on the leather couch and turnip greens cook steaming in the cafeteria.
 
Buddy wake from his dream kiss sleeping Angela and she wake up.
He try to talk about his dream but some of it run disappearing from his mind. Buddy tell his Angela about the high-rent houses of apartments and the vacancies, about the Empire State Building and the vacancies, the space no human being use, the cityspace for life where there be emptiness. He try to tell his Angela about the city emptiness at five o’clock, the waste, the rooms no body use at night.
So Angela ask Buddy what he think would really happen if the Brooklyn people use the emptiness,
take over space no body else will use inside the city, inside the tower buildings.
Buddy say, “Well, we could share them office buildings. I mean it’s pretty wild, you stop to think about it, all them office building empty more than all night long, and all them rich apartments in them rich apartment houses, empty, and the other terrible small houses fall apart, burn up, burn down, and babies dying sick, cold, or sleeping in a orange crate. Don’t make no sense.”
“But suppose the office folk don’t want nobody in they buildings after five.”
“Then they could stay up where they living anyhow and do your thing about the telephone. I mean they just use machines, just put them up in the garage, or something, and don’t have to use no office in the city. Or, you know what? We could compromise. At first, just use the office that nobody renting anyhow.”
“I like it, Buddy. But how you think the businessmen be sharing in the daytime with the folks from Brooklyn?”
“They learn. Even business people, they can learn. From the get-go Brooklyn folks know how to share. They teach them other people nice.”
“Buddy, you some heavy dreaming head.”
“No. You be the only dream around here, Angela. The only dream.”
seventeen
buddy and angela lying quiet.
Listen to the traffic 50 mph. The afternoon turn twilight. They decide to bathe each other clean. Too cold to strip completely so they wash each other one part at a time. Pouring water in the big sink drainaway. His legs. The fingers of her hands. And then they trade on washing hair. Her laughing screams. His laughing howl. The icy water shrink the Afros to a brilliant squeaky tangling of black hair.
Go out and wander by the reservoir. Disturb the pigeons. Breathe in the early grass. The highway gasoline. Feel strong. Feel clean. Go out and wander.
When they think about the new house that they leave behind them it seem small almost impossible so small and unpredictable. Not really safe.
Buddy say he miss the lot of people on the corners out the windows. How they living now by hiding out he miss the action of the people streets and subways and the bus.
He have been at home and out of school and Angela have been away and out of town so long they sure now that the best part of the city is the people mingle bump and spin together various.
Angela say nothing. Walk beside him quiet. Near to evening no one near enough to hear them.
“Angela, you lonely?”
He hold Angela around her shoulder. She slightly leaning on his side. They walking on.
Buddy stop.
“You come on with me. We take some flowers from a grave we find, and bring them back and plant them by the house, right here, tonight.”
“I feel spooky doing that.”
“We the only spooks out here. I hope.”
“Suppose somebody catch us.”
“Somebody catch us, you and me, you think they think about some flowers we have borrow from a grave? Last thing people think about is flowers. And if they be after us, they not after no flowers, Angela, stolen or otherwise. Listen, tomorrow we should borrow trees! Trees. Evergreen stuff. Take it to the concrete. Stand it on a stoop. Borrow trees tomorrow.”
Buddy run and snatch a branch and swinging on a tree.
Angela run and catch him hold him tight around his ankles.
“Hey, let go!”
Angela let go and flying wild among the cemetery stones. Buddy after her.
They body dodge the headstones.
Running free.
 
Out of breath they slow and start to search for flowers they could carry back with them and plant again outside the house.
Buddy have to use a flashlight. Mostly finding imitation this and that in plastic. Or else they finding dead plants left to shrivel in the grave-yard.
Angela whisper urgent: “Wait, Buddy. Over here. What’s that?”
They see some moss in the moonlight look like old tinsel lying down. Look like a growing snow-flake. Buddy loosen the earth under and around the patch and then he lift two handfuls clinging soil.
Now Angela shine the flashlight careful so they quickly reach the reservoir and then the house and plant the small green moss almost invisible beside the doorway.
The benchbed seem too hard. They try to sleep together huddling in the highway house.
Well I never come home
my love sing love and the
oversea sky
I never come home.
Well I know I’m not ready to die
my heart like the wind
want to roam
I know I’m not ready to die.
They try to sleep in the house. They give it up and go out to the ground.
 
You be different from all the dead. All them tombstones tearing up the ground, look like a little city, like a small Manhattan, not exactly. Here is not the same.
Here, you be bigger than the buildings, bigger than the little city. You be really different from the rest, the resting other ones.
Moved in his arms, she make him feel like smiling. Him, his head an Afro-bush spread free beside the stones, headstones thinning in the heavy air. Him, a ready father, public lover, privately alone with her, with Angela, a half an hour walk from the hallway where they start out to hold themselves together in the noisy darkness, kissing, kissed him, kissed her, kissing.
Cemetery let them lie there belly close, their shoulders now undressed down to the color of the heat they feel, in lying close, their legs a strong disturbing of the dust. His own where, own place for loving made for making love, the cemetery where nobody guard the dead.
His mouth warm on her lips. They wrap up together shivering strong and tired. Angela dream.
DREAM
See suddenly different neighborhoods.
The city split by sound.
Jazz sound territory. Blues. Country and Western turf.
Supermarket Muzak. Heavy classical and not so heavy not so classical. And the hospital. A silent zone.
All the people be like Angela who hold a radio. Use it like a compass on a music map. Tune the dial to what you want. Some hard rock coming very soft. You go the right direction then the sound grow louder on the radio.
If you don’t, it don’t. When the sound reach very loud you be along with all those other folk who want to hear the same sound at the same time. In a park. A office building. A ocean liner.
You never know where you will end up or who you maybe meet there where you going.
 
Could be like calypso. Buddy dancing on the way.
Call out. Is it louder? Is it louder? Maybe thirty thousand people in the street with Buddy dancing on the way. And everybody have a radio. That make a big fantastic street sound by itself.
People laugh and talk. Men help young Mommas cross the street. Lift up the strollers. Be like a protest marching only now the people getting into music. Really moving into it.
One time on a Sunday she and Buddy follow along to the entrance to the Zoo. There be these twelve-year-olds have put together a steel wash-tub /broomstick group and everyone stay listening and dance. Another time she and Buddy finish up on Fulton Street. All the trucks be detour. And Sparrow and the Duke of Iron real professionals play in the open air. A superparty.
And for some silence there be stations on the radio like a seashell on your ear. Sound like the wind can blow away your mind.
A whistle windsound.
People follow it. Be like a Sunday service. Everybody whisper. Put they fingers to they lips. Follow the silence into someplace like a hospital, a church, a beach, a rooftop, a playground. People like a Quaker meeting silent several hundred silent standing or for example in a library some sit and read or write some meditate.
Or on the grass like a seashell of silence the thousands standing and sit there.
BOOK: His Own Where
7.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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