"Recitatif," by Toni Morrison
My mother danced all night and Roberta's was sick. That's why we
were taken to St. Bonny's. People want to put their arms around you when you
tell them you were in a shelter, but it really wasn't bad. No big long room
with one hundred beds like Bellevue.
There were four to a room, and when Roberta and me came, there was a shortage
of state kids, so we were the only ones assigned to 406 and could go from bed
to bed if we wanted to. And we wanted to, too. We changed beds every night and
for the whole four months we were there we never picked one out as our own
permanent bed.
It didn't start out that way. The minute I walked in and the Big
Bozo introduced us, I got sick to my stomach. It was one thing to be taken out
of your own bed early in the morning-it was something else to be stuck in a
strange place with a girl from a whole other race. And Mary, that's my mother,
she was right. Every now and then she would stop dancing long enough to tell me
something important and one of the things she said was that they never washed
their hair and they smelled funny. Roberta sure did. Smell funny, I mean. So
when the Big Bozo (nobody ever called her Mrs. Itkin, just like nobody every
said St. Bonaventure)-when she said, "Twyla, this is Roberta. Roberta,
this is Twyla. Make each other welcome." I said, "My mother won't
like you putting me in here."
"Good," said Bozo. "Maybe then she'll come and
take you home."
How's that for mean? If Roberta had laughed I would have killed
her, but she didn't. She just walked over to the window and stood with her back
to us.
"Turn around," said the Bozo. "Don't be rude. Now Twyla.
Roberta. When you hear a loud buzzer, that's the call for dinner. Come down to
the first floor. Any fights and no movie." And then, just to make sure we
knew what we would be missing, "The Wizard of Oz."
Roberta must have thought I meant that my mother would be
mad about my being put in the shelter. Not about rooming with her, because as
soon as Bozo left she came over to me and said, "Is your mother sick
too?"
"No," I said. "She just likes to dance all
night."
"Oh," she nodded her head and I liked the way she
understood things so fast. So for the moment it didn't matter that we looked
like salt and pepper standing there and that's what the other kids called us
sometimes. We were eight years old and got F's all the time. Me because I
couldn't remember what I read or what the teacher said. And Roberta because she
couldn't read at all and didn't even listen to the teacher. She wasn't good at
anything except jacks, at which she was a killer: pow scoop pow scoop pow
scoop.
We didn't like each other all that much at first, but nobody else
wanted to play with us because we weren't real orphans with beautiful dead
parents in the sky. We were dumped. Even the New York City Puerto Ricans and the upstate
Indians ignored us. All kinds of kids were in there, black ones, white ones,
even two Koreans. The food was good, though. At least I thought so. Roberta
hated it and left whole pieces of things on her plate: Spam, Salisbury
steak-even jello with fruit cocktail in it, and she didn't care if I ate what
she wouldn't. Mary's idea of supper was popcorn and a can of Yoo-Hoo. Hot
mashed potatoes and two weenies was like Thanksgiving for me.
It really wasn't bad, St. Bonny's. The big girls on the second
floor pushed us around now and then. But that was all. They wore lipstick and
eyebrow pencil and wobbled their knees while they watched TV. Fifteen, sixteen,
even, some of them were. They were put-out girls, scared runaways most of them.
Poor little girls who fought their uncles off but looked tough to us, and mean.
God, did they look mean. The staff tried to keep them separate from the younger
children, but sometimes they caught us watching them in the orchard where they
played radios and danced with each other. They'd light out after us and pull
our hair or twist our arms. We were scared of them, Roberta and me, but neither
of us wanted the other one to know it. So we got a good list of dirty names we
could shout back when we ran from them through the orchard. I used to dream a
lot and almost always the orchard was there. Two acres, four maybe, of these
little apple trees. Hundreds of them. Empty and crooked like beggar women when
I first came to St. Bonny's but fat with flowers when I left. I don't know why
I dreamt about that orchard so much. Nothing really happened there. Nothing all
that important, I mean. Just the big girls dancing and playing the radio.
Roberta and me watching. Maggie fell down there once. The kitchen woman with
legs like parentheses. And the big girls laughed at her. We should have helped
her up, I know, but we were scared of those girls with lipstick and eyebrow
pencil. Maggie couldn't talk. The kids said she had her tongue cut out, but I
think she was just born that way: mute. She was old and sandy-colored and she
worked in the kitchen. I don't know if she was nice or not. I just remember her
legs like parentheses and how she rocked when she walked. She worked from early
in the morning till two o'clock, and if she was late, if she had too much
cleaning and didn't get out till two-fifteen or so, she'd cut through the
orchard so she wouldn't miss her bus and have to wait another hour. She wore
this really stupid little hat-a kid's hat with ear flaps-and she wasn't much
taller than we were. A really awful little hat. Even for a mute, it was
dumb--dressing like a kid and never saying anything at all.
"But what about if somebody tries to kill her?" I used to
wonder about that. "Or what if she wants to cry? Can she cry?"
"Sure," Roberta said. "But just tears. No sounds
come out."
"She can't scream?"
"Nope. Nothing."
"Can she hear?"
"I guess."
"Let's call her," I said. And we did.
"Dummy! Dummy!" She never turned her head
"Bow legs! Bow legs!" Nothing. She just rocked on, the
chin straps of her baby-boy hat swaying from side to side. I think we were
wrong. I think she could hear and didn't let on. And it shames me even now to
think there was somebody in there after all who heard us call her those names
and couldn't tell on us.
We got along all right, Roberta and me. Changed beds every night,
got F's in civics and communication skills and gym. The Bozo was disappointed
in us, she said. Out of 130 of us statecases, 90 were under twelve. Almost all
were real orphans with beautiful dead parents in the sky. We were the only ones
dumped and the only ones with F's in three classes including gym. So we got
along-what with her leaving whole pieces of things on her plate and being nice
about no tasking questions.
I think it was the day before Maggie fell down that we found out
our mothers were coming to visit us on the same Sunday. We had been at the
shelter twenty-eight days (Roberta twenty-eight and a half) and this was their
first visit with us. Our mothers would come at ten o'clock in time for chapel,
then lunch with us in the teachers' lounge. I thought if my dancing mother met
her sick mother it might be good for her. And Roberta thought her sick mother
would get a big bang out of a dancing one. We got excited about it and curled
each other's hair. After breakfast we sat on the bed watching the road from the
window. Roberta's socks were still wet. She washed them the night before and
put them on the radiator to dry. They hadn't, but she put them on anyway
because their tops were so pretty- scalloped in pink. Each of us had a purple
construction-paper basket that we had made in craft class. Mine had a yellow
crayon rabbit on it. Roberta's had eggs with wiggly lines of color. Inside were
cellophane grass and just the jelly beans because I'd eaten the two marshmallow
eggs they gave us. The Big Bozo came herself to get us. Smiling she told us we
looked very nice and to come downstairs. We were so surprised by the smile we'd
never seen before, neither of us moved.
"Don't you want to see your mommies?"
I stood up first and spilled the jelly beans all over the floor.
Bozo's smile disappeared while we scrambled to get the candy up off the floor
and put it back in the grass.
She escorted us downstairs to the first floor, where the other
girls were lining up to file into the chapel. A bunch of grown-ups stood to one
side. Viewers mostly. The old biddies who wanted servants and the fags who
wanted company looking for children they might want to adopt. Once in a while a
grandmother. Almost never anybody young or anybody whose face wouldn't scare
you in the night. Because if any of the real orphans had young relatives they
wouldn't be real orphans. I saw Mary right away. She had on those green slacks
I hated and hated even more now because didn't she know we were going to
chapel? And that fur jacket with the pocket linings so ripped she had to pull
to get her hands out of them. But her face was pretty-like always, and she
smiled and waved like she was the little girl looking for her mother- not me.
I walked slowly, trying not to drop the jelly beans and hoping
the paper handle would hold. I had to use my last Chiclet because by the time I
finished cutting everything out, all the Elmer's was gone. I am left-handed and
the scissors never worked for me. It didn't matter, though; I might just as
well have chewed the gum. Mary dropped to her knees and grabbed me, mashing the
basket, the jelly beans, and the grass into her ratty fur jacket.
"Twyla, baby. Twyla, baby!"
I could have killed her. Already I heard the big girls in the
orchard the next time saying, "Twyyyyyla, baby!" But I couldn't stay
mad at Mary while she was smiling and hugging me and smelling of Lady Esther
dusting powder. I wanted to stay buried in her fur all day.
To tell the truth I forgot about Roberta. Mary and I got in line
for the traipse into chapel and I was feeling proud because she looked so
beautiful even in those ugly green slacks that made her behind stick out. A
pretty mother on earth is better than a beautiful dead one in the sky even if
she did leave you all alone to go dancing.
I felt a tap on my shoulder, turned, and saw Roberta smiling. I
smiled back, but not too much lest somebody think this visit was the biggest
thing that ever happened in my life. Then Roberta said, "Mother, I want
you to meet my roommate, Twyla. And that's Twyla's mother."
I looked up it seemed for miles. She was big. Bigger than any man
and on her chest was the biggest cross I'd ever seen. I swear it was six inches
long each way. And in the crook of her arm was the biggest Bible ever made.
Mary, simple-minded as ever, grinned and tried to yank her hand
out of the pocket with the raggedy lining-to shake hands, I guess. Roberta's
mother looked down at me and then looked down at Mary too. She didn't say
anything, just grabbed Roberta with her Bible-free hand and stepped tout of
line, walking quickly to the rear of it. Mary was still grinning because she's
not too swift when it comes to what's really going on. Then this light bulb
goes off in her head and she says "That bitch!" really loud and us
almost in the chapel now. Organ music whining; the Bonny Angels singing
sweetly. Everybody in the world turned around to look. And Mary would have kept
it up-kept calling names if I hadn't squeezed her hand as hard as I could. That
helped a little, but she still twitched and crossed and uncrossed her legs all
through service. Even groaned a couple of times. Why did I think she would come
there and act right? Slacks. No hat like the grandmothers and viewers, and
groaning all the while. When we stood for hymns she kept her mouth shut.
Wouldn't even look at the words on the page. She actually reached in her purse
for a mirror to check her lipstick. All I could think of was that she really
needed to be killed. The sermon lasted a year, and I knew the real orphans were
looking smug again.
We were supposed to have lunch in the teachers' lounge, but Mary
didn't bring anything, so we picked fur and cellophane grass off the mashed
jelly beans and ate them. I could have killed her. I sneaked a look at Roberta.
Her mother had brought chicken legs and ham sandwiches and oranges and a whole
box of chocolate-covered grahams. Roberta drank milk from a thermos while her
mother read the Bible to her.
Things are not right. The wrong food is always with the wrong
people. Maybe that's why I got into waitress work later-to match up the right
people with the right food. Roberta just let those chicken legs sit there, but
she did bring a stack of grahams up to me later when the visit was over. I
think she was sorry that her mother would not shake my mother's hand. And I liked
that and I liked the fact that she didn't say a word about Mary groaning all
the way through the service and not bringing any lunch.
Roberta left in May when the apple trees were heavy and white. On
her last day we went to the orchard to watch the big girls smoke and dance by
the radio. It didn't matter that they said, "Twyyyyyla, baby." We sat
on the ground and breathed. Lady Esther. Apple blossoms. I still go soft when I
smell one or the other. Roberta was going home. The big cross and the big Bible
was coming to get her and she seemed sort of glad and sort of not. I thought I
would die in that room of four beds without her and I knew Bozo had plans to
move some other dumped kid in there with me. Roberta promised to write every
day, which was really sweet of her because she couldn't read a lick so how
could she write anybody. I would have drawn pictures and sent them to her but
she never gave me her address. Little by little she faded. Her wet socks with
the pink scalloped tops and her big serious-looking eyes-that's all I could
catch when I tried to bring her to mind.
I was working behind the counter at the Howard Johnson's on the
Thruway just before the Kingston
exit. Not a bad job. Kind of a long ride from Newburgh, but okay once I got there. Mine was
the second night shift-eleven to seven. Very light until a Greyhound checked in
for breakfast around six-thirty. At that hour the sun was all the way clear of
the hills behind the restaurant. The place looked better at night-more like
shelter- but I loved it when the sun broke in, even if it did show all the
cracks in the vinyl and the speckled floor looked dirty no matter what the mop
boy did.
It was August and a bus crowd was just unloading. They would
stand around a long while: going to the john, and looking at gifts and
junk-for-sale machines, reluctant to sit down so soon. Even to eat. I was
trying to fill the coffee pots and get them all situated on the electric
burners when I saw her. She was sitting in a booth smoking a cigarette with two
guys smothered in head and facial hair. Her own hair was so big and wild I
could hardly see her face. But the eyes. I would know them anywhere. She had on
a powder-blue halter and shorts outfit and earrings the size of bracelets. Talk
about lipstick and eyebrow pencil. She made the big girls look like nuns. I
couldn't get off the counter until seven o'clock, but I kept watching the booth
in case they got up to leave before that. My replacement was on time for a
change, so I counted and stacked my receipts as fast as I could and signed off.
I walked over to the booths, smiling and wondering if she would remember me. Or
even if she wanted to remember me. Maybe she didn't want to be reminded of St.
Bonny's or to have anybody know she was ever there. I know I never talked about
it to anybody.
I put my hands in my apron pockets and leaned against the back of
the booth facing them.
"Roberta? Roberta Fisk?"
She looked up. "Yeah?"
"Twyla."
She squinted for a second and then said, "Wow."
"Remember me?"
"Sure. Hey. Wow."
"It's been a while," I said, and gave a smile to the
two hairy guys.
"Yeah. Wow. You work here?"
"Yeah," I said. "I live in Newburgh."
"Newburgh?
No kidding?" She laughed then a private laugh that included the guys but
only the guys, and they laughed with her. What could I do but laugh too and
wonder why I was standing there with my knees showing out from under that
uniform. Without looking I could see the blue and white triangle on my head, my
hair shapeless in a net, my ankles thick in white oxfords. Nothing could have
been less sheer than my stockings. There was this silence that came downright
after I laughed. A silence it was her turn to fill up. With introductions,
maybe, to her boyfriends or an invitation to sit down and have a Coke. Instead
she lit a cigarette off the one she'd just finished and said, "We're on
our way to the Coast. He's got an appointment with Hendrix."
She gestured casually toward the boy next to her.
"Hendrix? Fantastic," I said. "Really fantastic.
What's she doing now?"
Roberta coughed on her cigarette and the two guys rolled their
eyes up at the ceiling.
"Hendrix. Jimi Hendrix, asshole. He's only the biggest-Oh, wow.
Forget it."
I was dismissed without anyone saying goodbye, so I thought I
would do it for her.
"How's your mother?" I asked. Her grin cracked her
whole face. She swallowed. "Fine," she said. "How's yours?"
"Pretty as a picture," I said and turned away. The
backs of my knees were damp. Howard Johnson's really was a dump in the
sunlight.
James is as comfortable as a house slipper. He liked my cooking
and I liked his big loud family. They have lived in Newburgh
all of their lives and talk about it the way people do who have always known a
home. His grandmother is a porch swing older than his father and when they talk
about streets and avenues and buildings they call them names they no longer
have. They still call the A & P Rico's because it stands on property once a
mom and pop store owned by Mr. Rico. And they call the new community college
Town Hall because it once was. My mother-in-law puts up jelly and cucumbers and
buys butter wrapped in cloth from a dairy. James and his father talk about
fishing and baseball and I can see them all together on the Hudson in a raggedy skiff. Half the
population of Newburgh
is on welfare now, but to my husband's family it was still some upstate
paradise of a time long past. A time of ice houses and vegetable wagons, coal
furnaces and children weeding gardens. When our son was born my mother-in-law
gave me the crib blanket that had been hers.
But the town they remembered had changed. Something quick was in
the air. Magnificent old houses, so ruined they had become shelter for
squatters and rent risks, were bought and renovated. Smart IBM people moved out
of their suburbs back into the city and put shutters up and herb gardens in
their backyards. A brochure came in the mail announcing the opening of a Food
Emporium. Gourmet food it said-and listed items the rich IBM crowd would want.
It was located in a new mall at the edge of town and I drove out to shop there
one day-just to see. It was late in June. After the tulips were gone and the
Queen Elizabeth roses were open everywhere. It railed my cart along the aisle
tossing in smoked oysters and Robert's sauce and things I knew would sit in my
cupboard for years. Only when I found some Klondike
ice cream bars did I feel less guilty about spending James's fireman's salary
so foolishly. My father-in-law ate them with the same gusto little Joseph did.
Waiting in the check-out line I heard a voice say,
"Twyla!"
The classical music piped over the aisles had affected me and the
woman leaning toward me was dressed to kill. Diamonds on her hand, a smart
white summer dress. "I'm Mrs. Benson," I said.
"Ho. Ho. The Big Bozo," she sang.
For a split second I didn't know what she was talking about. She
had a bunch of asparagus and two cartons of fancy water.
"Roberta!"
"Right."
"For heaven's sake. Roberta."
"You look great," she said.
"So do you. Where are you? Here? In Newburgh?"
"Yes. Over in Annandale."
I was opening my mouth to say more when the cashier called my
attention to her empty counter.
"Meet you outside." Roberta pointed her finger and went
into the express line.
I placed the groceries and kept myself from glancing around to
check Roberta's progress. I remembered Howard Johnson's and looking for a
chance to speak only to be greeted with a stingy "wow." But she was
waiting for me and her huge hair was sleek now, smooth around a small, nicely
shaped head. Shoes, dress, everything lovely and summery and rich. I was dying
to know what happened to her, how she got from Jimi Hendrix to Annandale, a neighborhood full of doctors and
IBM executives. Easy, I thought. Everything is so easy for them. They think
they own the world.
"How long," I asked her. "How long have you been
here?"
"A year. I got married to a man who lives here. And you,
you're married too, right? Benson, you said."
"Yeah. James Benson."
"And is he nice?"
"Oh, is he nice?"
"Well, is he?" Roberta's eyes were steady as though she
really meant the question and wanted an answer.
" He's wonderful, Roberta. Wonderful."
"So you're happy."
"Very."
"That's good," she said and nodded her head. "I
always hoped you'd be happy. Any kids? I know you have kids."
"One. A boy. How about you?"
"Four."
"Four?"
She laughed. "Step kids. He's a widower."
"Oh."
"Got a minute? Let's have a coffee."
I thought about the Klondikes melting and the inconvenience of
going all the way to my car and putting the bags in the trunk. Served me right
for buying all that stuff I didn't need. Roberta was ahead of me.
"Put them in my car. It's right here."
And then I saw the dark blue limousine.
"You married a Chinaman?"
"No," she laughed. "He's the driver."
"Oh, my. If the Big Bozo could see you now."
We both giggled. Really giggled. Suddenly, in just a pulse beat,
twenty years disappeared and all of it came rushing back. The big girls (whom
we called gar girls-Roberta's misheard word for the evil stone faces described
in a civics class) there dancing in the orchard, the ploppy mashed potatoes,
the double weenies, the Spam with pineapple. We went into the coffee shop
holding onto one another and I tried to think why we were glad to see each
other this time and not before. Once, twelve years ago, we passed like strangers.
A black girl and a white girl meeting in a Howard Johnson's on the road and
having nothing to say. One in a blue and white triangle waitresshat-the other
on her way to see, Hendrix. Now we were behaving like sisters separated for
much too long. Those four short months were nothing in time. Maybe it was the
thing itself. Just being there, together. Two little girls who knew what nobody
else in the world knew-how not to ask questions. How to believe what had to be
believed. There was politeness in that reluctance and generosity as well. Is
your mother sick too? No, she dances all night. Oh--and an understanding nod.
We sat in a booth by the window and fell into recollection like
veterans.
" Did you ever learn to read?"
"Watch." She picked up the menu. "Special of the
day. Cream of corn soup. Entrees. Two dots and a wriggly line. Quiche. Chef
salad, scallops . . ."
I was laughing and applauding when the waitress came up.
"Remember the Easter baskets?"
"And how we tried to introduce them?"
"Your mother with that cross like two telephone poles."
"And yours with those tight slacks."
We laughed so loudly heads turned and made the laughter harder to
suppress."
What happened to the Jimi Hendrix date?"
Roberta made a blow-out sound with her lips."
When he died I thought about you."
"Oh, you heard about him finally?"
"Finally. Come on, I was a small-town country
waitress."
"And I was a small-town country dropout. God, were we wild.
I still don't know how I got out of there alive."
"But you did."
"I did. I really did. Now I'm Mrs. Kenneth Norton."
"Sounds like a mouthful."
"It is."
"Servants and all?"
Roberta held up two fingers.
"Ow! What does he do?"
"Computers and stuff. What do I know?"
"I don't remember a hell of a lot from those days, but Lord,
St. Bonny's is as clear as daylight. Remember Maggie? The day she fell down and
those gar girls laughed at her?"
Roberta looked up from her salad and stared at me. "Maggie
didn't fall," she said.
"Yes, she did. You remember."
"No, Twyla. They knocked her down. Those girls pushed her
down and tore her clothes. In the orchard."
"I don't--that's not what happened."
"Sure it is. In the orchard. Remember how scared we
were?"
"Wait a minute. I don't remember any of that."
"And Bozo was fired."
"You're crazy. She was there when I left. You left before
me."
"I went back. You weren't there when they fired Bozo."
"What?"
"Twice. Once for a year when I was about ten, another for
two months when I was fourteen. That's when I ran away."
"You ran away from St. Bonny's?"
"I had to. What do you want? Me dancing in that
orchard?"
"Are you sure about Maggie?"
"Of course I'm sure. You've blocked it, Twyla. It happened.
Those girls had behavior problems, you know."
"Didn't they, though. But why can't I remember the Maggie
thing?"
"Believe me. It happened. And we were there."
"Who did you room with when you went back?" I asked her
as if I would know her. The Maggie thing was troubling me.
"Creeps. They tickled themselves in the night."
My ears were itching and I wanted to go home suddenly. This was
all very well but she couldn't just comb her hair, wash her face and pretend
everything was hunky-dory. After the Howard Johnson's snub. And no apology.
Nothing.
"Were you on dope or what that time at Howard
Johnson's?" I tried to make my voice sound friendlier than I felt.
"Maybe, a little. I never did drugs much. Why?"
"I don't know; you acted sort of like you didn't want to
know me then."
"Oh, Twyla, you know how it was in those days: black-white.
You know how everything was."
But I didn't know. I thought it was just the opposite. Busloads
of blacks and whites came into Howard Johnson's together. They roamed together
then: students, musicians, lovers, protesters. You got to see everything at
Howard Johnson's and blacks were very friendly with whites in those days. But
sitting there with nothing on my plate but two hard tomato wedges wondering
about the melting Klondikes it seemed childish remembering the slight. We went
to her car, and with the help of the driver, got my stuff into my station
wagon.
"We'll keep in touch this time," she said.
"Sure," I said. "Sure. Give me a call."
"I will," she said, and then just as I was sliding
behind the wheel, she leaned into the window. "By the way. Your mother.
Did she ever stop dancing?"
I shook my head. "No. Never."
Roberta nodded.
"And yours? Did she ever get well?"
She smiled a tiny sad smile. "No. She never did. Look, call
me, okay?"
"Okay," I said, but I knew I wouldn't. Roberta had
messed up my past somehow with that business about Maggie. I wouldn't forget a
thing like that. Would I?
Strife came to us that fall. At least that's what the paper
called it. Strife. Racial strife. The word made me think of a bird-a big
shrieking bird out of 1,000,000,000 B.C. Flapping its wings and cawing. Its eye
with no lid always bearing down on you. All day it screeched and at night it
slept on the rooftops. It woke you in the morning and from the Today show to
the eleven o'clock news it kept you an awful company. I couldn't figure it out
from one day to the next. I knew I was supposed to feel something strong, but I
didn't know what, and James wasn't any help. Joseph was on the list of kids to
be transferred from the junior high school to another one at some
far-out-of-the-way place and I thought it was a good thing until I heard it was
a bad thing. I mean I didn't know. All the schools seemed dumps tome, and the
fact that one was nicer looking didn't hold much weight. But the papers were
full of it and then the kids began to get jumpy. In August, mind you. Schools
weren't even open yet. I thought Joseph might be frightened to go over there,
but he didn't seem scared so I forgot about it, until I found myself driving
along Hudson Street
out there by the school they were trying to integrate and saw a line of women
marching. And who do you suppose was in line, big as life, holding a sign in
front of her bigger than her mother's cross? MOTHERS HAVE RIGHTS TOO! it said.
I drove on, and then changed my mind. I circled the block, slowed
down, and honked my horn.
Roberta looked over and when she saw me she waved. I didn't wave
back, but I didn't move either. She handed her sign to another woman and came
over to where I was parked.
"Hi."
"What are you doing?"
"Picketing. What's it look like?"
"What for?"
"What do you mean, 'What for?' They want to take my kids and
send them out of the neighborhood. They don't want to go."
"So what if they go to another school? My boy's being bussed
too, and I don't mind. Why should you?"
"It's not about us, Twyla. Me and you. It's about our
kids."
"What's more us than that?"
"Well, it is a free country."
"Not yet, but it will be."
"What the hell does that mean? I'm not doing anything to
you."
"You really think that?"
"I know it."
"I wonder what made me think you were different."
"I wonder what made me think you were different."
"Look at them," I said. "Just look. Who do they
think they are? Swarming all over the place like they own it. And now they
think they can decide where my child goes to school. Look at them, Roberta.
They're Bozos."
Roberta turned around and looked at the women. Almost all of them
were standing still now, waiting. Some were even edging toward us. Roberta looked
at me out of some refrigerator behind her eyes. "No, they're not. They're
just mothers."
"And what am I? Swiss cheese?"
"I used to curl your hair."
"I hated your hands in my hair."
The women were moving. Our faces looked mean to them of course
and they looked as though they could not wait to throw themselves in front of a
police car, or better yet, into my car and drag me away by my ankles. Now they
surrounded my car and gently, gently began to rock it. I swayed back and forth
like a sideways yo-yo. Automatically I reached for Roberta, like the old days
in the orchard when they saw us watching them and we had to get out of there,
and if one of us fell the other pulled her up and if one of us was caught the
other stayed to kick and scratch, and neither would leave the other behind. My
arm shot out of the car window but no receiving hand was there. Roberta was
looking at me sway from side to side in the car and her face was still. My
purse slid from the car seat down under the dashboard. The four policemen who
had been drinking Tab in their car finally got the message and strolled over,
forcing their way through the women. Quietly, firmly they spoke. "Okay,
ladies. Back in line or off the streets."
Some of them went away willingly; others had to be urged away
from the car doors and the hood. Roberta didn't move. She was looking steadily
at me. I was fumbling to turn on the ignition, which wouldn't catch because the
gearshift was still in drive. The seats of the car were a mess because the
swaying had thrown my grocery coupons all over it and my purse was sprawled on
the floor.
"Maybe I am different now, Twyla. But you're not. You're the same
little state kid who kicked a poor old black lady when she was down on the
ground. You kicked a black lady and you have the nerve to call me a
bigot."
The coupons were everywhere and the guts of my purse were bunched
under the dashboard. What was she saying? Black? Maggie wasn't black.
"She wasn't black," I said.
"Like hell she wasn't, and you kicked her. We both did. You
kicked a black lady who couldn't even scream."
"Liar!"
"You're the liar! Why don't you just go on home and leave us
alone, huh?"
She turned away and I skidded away from the curb.
The next morning I went into the garage and cut the side out of
the carton our portable TV had come in. It wasn't nearly big enough, but after
a while I had a decent sign: red spray-painted letters on a white
background-AND SO DO CHILDREN****. I meant just to go down to the school and
tack it up somewhere so those cows on the picket line across the street could
see it, but when I got there, some ten or so others had already assembled-
protesting the cows across the street. Police permits and everything. I got in
line and we strutted in time on our side while Roberta's group strutted on
theirs. That first day we were all dignified, pretending the other side didn't
exist. The second day there was name calling and finger gestures. But that was
about all. People changed signs from time to time, but Roberta never did and
neither did I. Actually my sign didn't make
sense without Roberta's. "And so do children what?" one of the women
on my side asked me. Have rights, I said, as though it was obvious.
Roberta didn't acknowledge my presence in any way and I got to
thinking maybe she didn't know I was there. I began to pace myself in the line,
jostling people one minute and lagging behind the next, so Roberta and I could
reach the end of our respective lines at the same time and there would be a
moment in our tum when we would face each other. Still, I couldn't tell whether
she saw me and knew my sign was for her. The next day I went early before we
were scheduled to assemble. I waited until she got there before I exposed my new
creation. As soon as she hoisted her MOTHERS HAVE RIGHTS TOO I began to wave my
new one, which said, HOW WOULD YOU KNOW? I know she saw that one, but I had
gotten addicted now. My signs got crazier each day, and the women on my side
decided that I was a kook. They couldn't make heads or tails out of my
brilliant screaming posters.
I brought a painted sign in queenly red with huge black letters
that said, IS YOUR MOTHER WELL? Roberta took her lunch break and didn't come
back for the rest of the day or any day after. Two days later I stopped going
too and couldn't have been missed because nobody understood my signs anyway.
It was a nasty six weeks. Classes were suspended and Joseph
didn't go to anybody's school until October. The children- everybody's
children-soon got bored with that extended vacation they thought was going to
be so great. They looked at TV until their eyes flattened. I spent a couple of
mornings tutoring my son, as the other mothers said we should. Twice I opened a
text from last year that he had never turned in. Twice he yawned in my face.
Other mothers organized living room sessions so the kids would keep up. None of
the kids could concentrate so they drifted back to The Price Is Right and The
Brady Bunch. When the school finally opened there were fights once or twice and
some sirens roared through the streets every once in a while. There were a lot
of photographers from Albany.
And just when ABC was about to send up a news crew, the kids settled down like
nothing in the world had happened. Joseph hung my HOW WOULD YOU KNOW? sign in
his bedroom. I don't know what became of AND SO DO CHILDREN****. I think my
father-in-law cleaned some fish on it. He was always puttering around in our
garage. Each of his five children lived in Newburgh and he acted as though he had five
extra homes.
I couldn't help looking for Roberta when Joseph graduated from
high school, but I didn't see her. It didn't trouble me much what she had said
to me in the car. I mean the kicking part. I know I didn't do that, I couldn't
do that. But I was puzzled by her telling me Maggie was black. When I thought
about it I actually couldn't be certain. She wasn't pitch-black, I knew, or I
would have remembered that. What I remember was the kiddie hat, and the semicircle
legs. I tried to reassure myself about the race thing for a long time until it
dawned on me that the truth was already there, and Roberta knew it. I didn't
kick her; I didn't join in with the gar girls and kick that lady, but I sure
did want to. We watched and never tried to help her and never called for help.
Maggie was my dancing mother. Deaf, I thought, and dumb. Nobody inside. Nobody
who would hear you if you cried in the night. Nobody who could tell you
anything important that you could use. Rocking, dancing, swaying as she walked.
And when the gar girls pushed her down, and started roughhousing, I knew she
wouldn't scream, couldn't-just like me and I was glad about that.
We decided not to have a tree, because Christmas would be at my
mother-in-law's house, so why have a tree at both places? Joseph was at SUNY
New Paltz and we had to economize, we said. But at the last minute, I changed
my mind. Nothing could be that bad. So I rushed around town looking for a tree,
something small but wide. By the time I found a place, it was snowing and very
late. I dawdled like it was the most important purchase in the world and the
tree man was fed up with me. Finally I chose one and had it tied onto the trunk
of the car. I drove away slowly because the sand trucks were not out yet and
the streets could be murder at the beginning of a snowfall. Downtown the
streets were wide and rather empty except for a cluster of people coming out of
the Newburgh Hotel. The one hotel in town that wasn't built out of cardboard
and Plexiglas. A party, probably. The men huddled in the snow were dressed in
tails and the women had on furs. Shiny things glittered from underneath their
coats. It made me tired to look at them. Tired, tired, tired. On the next
corner was a small diner with loops and loops of paper bells in the window. I
stopped the car and went in. Just for a cup of coffee and twenty minutes of
peace before I went home and tried to finish everything before Christmas Eve.
"Twyla?"
There she was. In a silvery evening gown and dark fur coat. A man
and another woman were with her, the man fumbling for change to put in the
cigarette machine. The woman was humming and tapping on the counter with her
fingernails. They all looked a little bit drunk.
"Well. It's you."
"How are you?"
I shrugged. "Pretty good. Frazzled. Christmas and all."
"Regular?" called the woman from the counter.
"Fine," Roberta called back and then, "Wait for me
in the car."
She slipped into the booth beside me. "I have to tell you
something, Twyla. I made up my mind if I ever saw you again, I'd tell
you."
"I'd just as soon not hear anything, Roberta. It doesn't
matter now, anyway."
"No," she said. "Not about that."
"Don't be long," said the woman. She carried two
regulars to go and the man peeled his cigarette pack as they left.
"It's about St. Bonny's and
Maggie."
"Oh, please."
"Listen to me. I really did think she was black. I didn't
make that up. I really thought so. But now I can't be sure. I just remember her
as old, so old. And because she couldn't talk-- well, you know, I thought she
was crazy. She'd been brought up in an institution like my mother was and like
I thought I would be too. And you were right. We didn't kick her. It was the gar
girls. Only them. But, well, I wanted to. I really wanted them to hurt her. I
said we did it, too. You and me, but that's not true. And I don't want you to
carry that around. It was just that I wanted to do it so bad that day--wanting
to is doing it."
Her eyes were watery from the drinks she'd had, I guess. I know
it's that way with me. One glass of wine and I start bawling over the littlest
thing.
"We were kids, Roberta."
"Yeah. Yeah. I know, just kids."
"Eight."
"Eight."
"And lonely."
"Scared, too."
She wiped her cheeks with the heel of her hand and smiled.
"Well that's all I wanted to say."
I nodded and couldn't think of any way to fill the silence that
went from the diner past the paperbells on out into the snow. It was heavy now.
I thought I'd better wait for the sand trucks before starting home.
"Thanks, Roberta."
"Sure."
"Did I tell you? My mother, she never did stop dancing."
"Yes. You told me. And mine, she never got well."
Roberta lifted her hands from the tabletop and covered her face with her palms.
When she took them away she really was crying. "Oh shit, Twyla. Shit,
shit, shit. What the hell happened to Maggie?"
1983
facultyfiles.deanza.edu/gems/quigleyjill/recitatifessay.doc