Mississippi Sissy (5 page)

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Authors: Kevin Sessums

BOOK: Mississippi Sissy
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“You got a
right nice
sister,” said my grandfather to my grandmother.

My grandmother shook her head as Vena Mae disappeared into the house. “Yep. She's something,” she said, taking off her cat-eye-shaped glasses and cleaning the lenses with a dry corner of the handkerchief that Vena Mae had given her. She put the glasses back on. “But I don't know what I would have done without her all these years. Remember when Nan was born? Not an easy birth that one. Vena Mae was there for me for a lot of them down days afterwards. Me having yo' mama, Arlene, was almost as bad as when yo' mama had you. You come out plumb blue. You were a blue baby, sugar.
Weren't breathing a'tall. I had just started working as a nurse's aid back then and come running out of that room just a'cryin'. Thought we'd done had us a stillbirth. I got halfway down the hall before I heard you start t'cryin' yourself. Sweetest sound I ever heard. But why ain't you cried none today, sugar? I was thinking about that while I was cutting up one of Lola's chocolate pies.” I tightened my mask. I shrugged. “We were all so relieved when you was no longer blue in the face back then that we pulled a fast one on yo' daddy. You were born around noon and he was over at Lola's having lunch. When yo' daddy got back to the hospital we told him he had twin girls.” My grandfather laughed. My grandmother straightened her shoulders beneath his jacket. “Let's see if this really helps,” she said. She flicked off her cat-eyes. She placed her index fingers against her thumbs and fashioned her own version of an Arlene Francis eye mask. She positioned it on her face. “Now I understand,” she said, winking at me through her fingers. “I always thought you couldn't see nothing when you put this mask on. But I'll be darn, if it ain't just the opposite,” she said, now winking at my grandfather over my head. “That's your magic secret, ain't it? I figured you out, Arlene. You can see
everything
when you put this mask on. I can even see them crows yonder.”

I dropped my hands. I looked toward the fading horizon. This long, awful, to-be-forever-remembered day was drawing to a close. The crows out there looked like bits of night already arriving. I draped an arm on each of the large roots that surrounded me. I pretended I was on a throne. My grandmother's eyes, still framed by her fingers, filled with her endless tears. My grandfather also began to cry. The crows closed in. “Fuck,” I said aloud for the first time.

My grandmother gasped but did not slap me. “What did you just say?” she asked.

“Fuck.”

My grandfather went for his handkerchief.

“Sugar, that's not a word Arlene Francis would use,” my grandmother said.

I shrugged. “Call me Kevinator,” I told her.

1
Skeeter Davis, Noël Coward, and Eudora Welty


Fuck,” said Frank Hains.

I knew I shouldn't have given that last bourbon to Eudora.”

It had taken me almost a decade after that day of my mother's funeral, but I had finally found the only equivalent that Mississippi offered to a
What's My Line?
life. Frank—a John Daly-like presence in Jackson—was the arts editor of the state's afternoon newspaper, for which he also wrote a column called “On Stage.” Eudora was writer Eudora Welty. We were at a cast party for New Stage Theatre's latest production,
Long Day's Journey into Night,
starring Geraldine Fitzgerald as Mary Tyrone. Frank and Miss Welty were active members of New Stage, and he was playing host that night at Bleak House, the name given facetiously to his antebellum home by the local literati of Jackson. The Dickensian nickname derived from the house's outward
appearance of haunted dilapidation where it sat, rather spookily, on a hill opposite Jackson's lone Jewish cemetery. Inside, however, past the vast front porch, Frank—also a gifted set designer—had redone his home with a lovely simplicity. Books abounded. A collection of vintage LPs filled one whole room, alphabetized and all of them encased in brown paper sleeves. Even though he had this wide selection of music, he usually only played Mabel Mercer, his favorite, or Erik Satie or Blossom Dearie. He also liked Fred Astaire—for his voice, not his dancing—which was so like Frank; he was always looking for the different angle, the way to appreciate an artist or a piece of art in his own way so that appreciation itself became a kind of art form. There was even a Leontyne Price album of pop songs arranged by Andre Previn he loved to listen to for some rueful smiles; especially the Mississippi diva's rendition of “Melancholy Baby” with Previn on the piano and Ray Brown on bass. On the night of that latest cast party he was playing, as a tribute, a lot of Noël Coward, who had died the month before.

Frank Hains went to New York City several times a year to review theater and opera for his newspaper and had begun to allow me to stay at Bleak House in his absence. He also subscribed to
After Dark
magazine, and I would peruse the pages of the slender and sleekly photographed issues when I visited him for their overt appeal to the kind of eroticism I had begun to seek out anyplace I could find it. Frank would stand over my shoulder when a new
After Dark
arrived in the mail and point out his latest favorite photograph by Roy Blakey or Kenn Duncan and regale me with stories about Angela Lansbury, who was often featured in the pages, or Rudolf Nureyev, whom he insisted I resembled in some sort of Slavic/Southern sleight-of-hand. “I should be more supportive of the ballet,” he said once, staring at the latest photo of Nureyev that
After Dark
was running. “I'm much more at home in literature and drama and musical comedy and opera. Satie is just about the only thing I can stomach
that doesn't have a lyric. That, and Bach, but there's a mathematical genius to old J. B. I find fascinating. I once had a crush on a mathematician when I was, like you, a college sophomore. I know—can you picture me a sophomore? Hmmm . . . why Bach and Satie?
There's a column in there somewhere”
he said, using one of his favorite phrases as he pushed his black-framed reading glasses atop his thin-haired head, a habit of his when a concept for a column occurred to him, as if he were helping his brain to see the idea floating about his skull back there around his bald spot.

Frank's kitchen in Bleak House was as big as most homes. Theatrical posters—along with several of the photographs that Miss Welty had taken of innately elegant dirt-poor Mississippians when she worked as a publicist for the Works Project Administration during the Depression—hung along the walls of the house's “dogtrot,” the open hallway that runs through the center of so many Southern homes of the antebellum period. A couple of years earlier, Miss Welty had collected many of the photos of her Depression-era travels in a volume titled
One Time, One Place.
She always preferred to refer to them as “snapshots,” however, and recalled fondly the little Rollei-flex camera she toted around with her upon her return from her year in business school up at Columbia University, her eyes readjusting, expertly so, to the reasons that had drawn her back home.

I had first met Frank and Miss Welty when I was still in high school. A mutual friend from Forest had taken me to a book party Frank had thrown for Miss Welty at Bleak House. Although I was only sixteen at the time, I had immediately been accepted into their fold. No eye masks were needed, I discovered, but there were other requirements. A liberal political bent helped. A sense of one's own sensuality. Discernment certainly. And, most important, enough knowledge to know when to join a heady conversation or, better yet, simply to listen while others carried on one around you. I learned more sitting at Frank's big round kitchen table than I ever did in any
classroom as he and Miss Welty—who would wander over the few blocks it took to drive her blue Ford Fairlane from Pinehurst Street—went off on Richard Nixon or Vladimir Nabokov, but practically swooned over the poetic justness to be found in Jane Austen and somebody “just about the best” named Henry Green. They liked jazz, too—Miss Welty had done a lot of club-hopping in Harlem—and taught me that bourbon was never to be augmented by anything other than maybe an added ice cube if one
simply must
when yet another Mississippi August demanded such a dilution, and sipping at a slightly watered-down potation was the only reasonable exertion that such heat and humidity humanly allowed. Their refilled glasses—it was my honor to administer the respective cubes—fueled their conversation until they drifted sometimes, not often, from cerebral musings to those of the heart.

They were mostly circumspect when discussing their lost loves. Frank would often allude to his “dusky endeavors,” as they had come to refer politely to his interest in young African Americans, some of whom had touched him deeply with their aspirations and narratives of maternal love. Miss Welty welcomed these stories of nuanced carnality, as Frank was careful not to tell her the details. One especially hot night under the glow of the big light that hung over his kitchen table, Miss Welty, her upper lip damp, did hint at the feelings she had for one young man long, long ago. Frank had tears in his eyes as she lyrically, elliptically, without ever admitting the depths of her own emotions but not denying them either, told us of a young poet who could obviously still summon a profound sadness within her all these years after he had moved away from Mississippi, from her, and taken up residence in San Francisco and Italy, places more “welcoming to his kind, to yours,” she told us as her voice came to a halt and she perhaps heard only his now lost one in the sudden comfort of her silence. She finished neither the carefully diluted story nor the freshly diluted bourbon in front of her, both making it too dangerous that
night, she seemed to reason in her reverie, for her to drive back home to a house forever musty with familial love alone.

________________

Years later, my little brother, Kim—a Mississippi obstetrician/gynecologist who has also become a sculptor of some renown—presented to Miss Welty a bronze bust of herself. It was the last year of her life and she had taken up residence in the downstairs parlor of the house on Pinehurst. She was in ill health by then and no longer able to make it upstairs to the bedroom where she had written her short stories and novels, putting their freshly typed pages on her old bed, then cutting them up with a pair of sewing scissors before pinning the paragraphs and sentences back together as if literature of the highest order were indeed the piecework of her life.

Many of her favorite books had been moved downstairs also and were scattered everywhere about her—lined on shelves, stacked on the floor, overflowing a loveseat. An autographed photo of President Bill Clinton sat framed on her mantel. Kim lifted her fragile body from her daybed and gently placed her in her motorized lounger. Her head fell back onto the chair's giant pillow. “How can one accomplish this kind of work and practice the art of medicine at the same time?” she weakly asked him, her teeth slightly bucked as she began to smile in the exact smile-ready expression displayed in bronze before her.

“I kept the bust in my clinic and worked on it between Pap smears,” Kim told her.

A twinkle came to Miss Welty's eye. “We should call it
Between Paps
then,” she said, always good at titles, even in her weakened state. Kim, relieved by her success at levity, attempted, with the bedside manner he had developed in his medical practice, to engage her in more conversation but words no longer issued from her with the ease they once had. She could remember incidents from years past,
according to Kim, but had trouble with the flow of raillery that was a generational marker for a certain sort of gentlewoman of the South, of which she was one of the last and finest exemplars. He finally commented on her collection of short stories,
The Golden Apples.
The mention of that particular title sparked something deep within her. Miss Welty raised her head suddenly from her pillow. Her voice grew strong, assured. “Isn't that lovely?” she asked him. “I stole that from William Butler Yeats,” she said and, without hesitation, recited the final stanza of Yeats's “The Song of Wandering Aengus”:

“Though I am old with wandering

Through hollow lands and hilly lands,

I will find out where she has gone,

And kiss her lips and take her hands;

And walk among long dappled grass,

And pluck till time and times are done

The silver apples of the moon,

The golden apples of the sun.”

She placed her head back on its pillow. She sighed, satisfied with this last rendition of her beloved Yeats she would ever get right. Kim compared his bronzed handiwork to what lay before him: her ancient brow, her white wisps of hair, flesh's feeble decay. Reverie was all that was left her now. Were the words of that other beloved poet in her life haunting her still in the comfort of an even deeper silence? Was it he who had led her to Yeats in the first place? She turned toward the bronze for one last look. She stared into her own eyes.

________________

I had been discovered at an earlier party for A
Midsummer Night's Dream
at Bleak House by New Stage's artistic director, Ivan Rider,
and cast in a subsequent production at the theater, which enabled me to be even more securely ensconced in the only cosmopolitan bohemia that Jackson, Mississippi, offered. I was at the height of my surly, shaggy-haired teenage beauty back then—more punk than Puck—which was exactly the type that the director was looking for to play the role of the deaf-mute Toby in Gian Carlo Menotti's one-act opera
The Medium.
The production was a local sensation and enabled me to gain a drama scholarship to Millsaps College, the Methodist-supported school right up the hill from Bleak House. Frank not only designed the sets for New Stage, but also taught stage design at Millsaps and oversaw all scenic aspects for the productions of the Millsaps Players. He was even a lighting director, and Bleak House was scrupulously lit so that any guest looked lovelier in its environs. “Well, at least less haggard,” he once remarked when I pointed this out to him.

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