Mid-chapter from my book 'Lila'
« on: May 16, 2008, 05:03:45 PM » by Ehoeveler
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This story takes place in the mid-sixties. It’s about a spoiled, anti-social teenage girl with poor grades in school and an eating disorder. She lives in a fantasy world of paper-back novels and comfort food and as days go by, she gets into more and more trouble. Her parents are Type-A social climbers more interested in their own financial status than the development of their children, so the young girl starts to form a strange bond with their housekeeper who, as you’ll see, has her own issues.
"Gaylee! les' go!" Lilas' voice ricocheted up the stairway. If any of my friends find out, I'll be sooo embarrassed. Gayle looked into her best friend and worst enemy, the hallway mirror. I really am cute if you don't get too close. The diet is working, gotta do something about those zits. Yeah, Bradley Dunne's gonna blab all over Cotillion that I've been seen at church with a Negro. Not only does he heckle me at school about my weight, he brings his friends to join in the name-calling. All year during gym he and Casey Connelly yelling "Big Bertha" and "White Whale" while I do my jumping jacks. I'm sick of it, the little jerk and his buddies never miss a chance to cut me down. I can only imagine what he'll say when I walk up the aisle with Lila modeling the Liberty City Look in what I know will be her brightest, tackiest dress. We’ll sneak in through the side.
Maybe he'll go sailing and not show up. His parents belonged to our church also. The parents rarely attended, but they'd try to make him go because as his own Mom put it, Brad was jail-bound. It was only last week that, at a country club party someone saw Brad in the parking lot breaking into Betty Hahns' white Lincoln. My mother told me all about it one five o'clock afternoon. No need for a newspaper when you had Shelby Schroeder holding forth on the chaise-lounge, sipping her afternoon pick-me-up.
No charges were pressed, but his folks thought Mr. Brad might benefit from a visit or two to St. Bedes', if only to sit and think about what it would be like to stay in Juvenile Hall. He might realize Juvie doesn't have sailing class as part of their curriculum.
Really, I told myself, Brad wasn't that 'large' of a problem, these days. Remembering one Cotillion class about a month ago, I'd noticed that he'd gained weight, put on a good twenty pounds or so. I couldn't resist nailing him right then and there. "Hi, Jail Meat. Looks like you've crossed over into Big Brad-Land. Or should I say, Big Bertha?" He tried to come back with a super-original "Piss Off". I felt a little sad. Weak and wounded, he was no longer a worthy enemy. His only friend these days was Casey who ironically had a Cola-Twinkie tummy, himself.
Lilas' sharp voice changed to a boom as she roused me out of my vengefully sweet reverie. "C'mon, an' quit lookin' at yo'sef in the mirror!" My only day of wearing a cute outfit, you bet I'm gonna look in the mirror, so stuff it, Lila. I proceeded to fix my hair.
I could tell that Shelbys' last phone call from Jamaica hadn't set well. Lila went outside to start up Shelbys' green Oldsmobile Delta 88. I heard loud car door-slamming and whumming of the gas pedal. I remembered the events from a week ago leading up to last night. My parents had gone to Jamaica for 2 weeks so Dad could sleep on the beach and Shelby could simultaneously watch him sleep and get sh-t-faced in the sun. At least she'd be outdoors, for a change.
We all jumped for joy when we found out about their trip. Freedom. We were gonna stay up late, watch Alfred Hitchcock and eat candy all night long. Lila and her daughter Marvelette were staying over. Cool. Marv and I could play Dianna Ross and the Supremes while we watched American Bandstand. Well, she’d be Dianna and I’d be Leslie Gore. I wouldn't bring Marvelette Marble to any of the little clique-y parties I was rarely allowed to go to - I got grounded alot due to poor grades - but she was fun to play with at the house.
Meanwhile, Shelbys' tipsy voice managed to reach across the Caribbean with the help of a universal drinkers' friend, Ma Bell. What can I say, she was at her chattiest during the hours of 5-6pm or midnight-til-whenever the bottle got empty, as many of her long-suffering friends discovered. Only this time, in the midst of elbow-lifting down in Ocho Rios she suddenly decided to drag her tanned butt to the nearest phone and rouse poor Lila out of a deep sleep. I’d discovered from previous sleepovers that Lila was usually dead to the world by 9 o'clock, giving us plenty of hours to make mischief in any way I saw fit.
So, smack-dab in the middle of my Hitchcockian candy orgy the phone rang. I knew it was She before I even picked up. Mothers' slurring voice was loud, having to overcome the bar band at Trip Daddys‘, a watering hole I'd seen myself on the last trip. Down the road from our hotel, it was an open-air shack with a patio and a limbo pole. Every hour or so, a bar employee would postion a flaming torch between his teeth and climb up a palm tree. I wasn't allowed a cocktail but I had fun, anyway.
After giving a grumpy Lila the phone I hopped on the extension to listen in.
This particular Saturday night, after what I guaged to be four Scotch on the rocks and possibly a Mai-Tai, Shelby was having a rare 'Jesus' moment. I'd seen 'the moment' before; last time she actually slid off her chaise lounge into a kneeling position and ordered me to join her in prayer after she found out I tried smoking Pot.
Accompanied by the boisterous strains of 'Matilda', I heard Shelby pronounce in tones as serious as any priest leading his flock in the Lords' Prayer, that it was of the Grrreatest Imphhortance that I go to Sunday Service at St. Bedes'. Friday Mass at the Blessed Souls School (for Sinners like me) was not enough, apparently Mother thought I was evil enough to warrant an extra dose of kneeling and incense-sniffing on Sunday. Prone to fainting in church, I made a mental note to bring smelling salts.
I pushed back the recollection of Shelbys’ odd Saturday night epiphany with one last bobby-pin. I tromped downstairs . Noticing Lilas’ Sunday ‘chapeau’ as I got into the front seat of the car, I wondered what garbage can she’d gotten it out of. We waved to Marv and my baby sisters as we pulled out of the driveway.
I lit up a Salem, stolen from Mothers favorite clutch just before she left. If I could flick a little ash on to Lilas’ freaky-looking hat one of those yellow satin flowers might go up in flames.
A split second before I could get cigarette to lips Lilas' right hand shot out to smack me square across my mouth. I yelled out a 'What the sh-t!' as I tried to put out a still flaming match and rescue my ciggie. She pulled the Oldsmobile over on to the sidewalk in front of the Snyder house, braking so hard the back of the car bounced up and down. The heck with the cigarette, I was ready to grab that hat and ram it down her throat. My arm flailed over in the general direction of the drivers’ seat but before I could get to her hat I began to feel pain as Lila grabbed my wrist and started to bend my pinkie finger way back.
"Watchoo gonna do, girl!?" Her face was contorted, sunglasses askew. One of her eyes rolled out of focus. The flowered hat was lying on the back seat. In the first few minutes I had been furious. Now in shock, I felt like I'd landed on some strange, hateful planet. She might really break my pinkie and then do what? Break my arm and try to say I did it in a bicycle accident?
I was slapped into a new weird reality, a place where I was not the only one who told lies or did bad things. "Whatchoo gonna do white girl, tell yo Mommieee?" The word 'Mommie' was stretched out like that half-dead garden snake my brother nailed up on his bulletin board.
She was whispering in a witch-y old lady voice. "Sure, les' tell Miz Schroeder how you been actin' while she been gone. Les' tell her how you slappd' Danielle, how you went out on the roof and smoked 'dose cigarettes. When she find out about alla dat you won't be be goin' nowhere for a year!". Lila let go of my hand. I rubbed it crying like a 3-year old, sobbing all over my pretty dress. I tried to wipe away a burn spot.
Lila grabbed the hideous hat from the back seat and jammed it on her head. While straightening her sunglasses, she got the car out of park and sped up Alhambra Circle, bent on getting us to Sunday services. I wanted to bolt from the car and run back to the house but Lila was driving like a bat outta hell. No way to escape. If I’d had my way I'd lock myself up in my pink bedroom to wait for my parents until the following Friday, their arrival day. I was pretty sure I could bribe Danni into bringing me ham sandwiches and cookies.
We were both quiet as we rode towards church. Surprisingly, Lila drove forward on Alhambra instead of making a right turn. We were going away from our usual route to St. Bedes'. Now we were riding up Coral Way towards downtown Miami. Were we going to my Dads’ office? Nope, minutes later we were on Biscayne Boulevard headed North. Looking out the car window I was still able to enjoy the tall palm trees lining the boulevard along with a clear view of Biscayne Bay.
We passed the Freedom Tower, a center for Cuban exiles newly arrived in Miami after having escaped Fidel Castros‘ takeover of their beloved Island. At my school I'd heard many of the Cuban girls talk about what it was like to leave their homeland, how they had to sneak on to planes in the middle of the night carrying only their jewelry and a will to survive. Leaving the downtown area, I began to notice grand Spanish-style homes with beautiful front lawns and big backyards facing the bay. Then, further on, the several miles of lovely real-estate gave way to blocks of smaller office buildings and restaurants. Fewer palm trees. I was becoming scared again. This was a part of Miami I’d never seen. Even so, I could tell we were now approaching Lilas’ neighborhood, Liberty City.
There were apartment buildings, originally painted with bright Florida colors like aqua and pink, now looking faded and desolate under a broiling sun. Everything was rundown and not a tree in sight, just a lot of trashcans and street lamps. More ugly 2-story structures; I was amazed that people actually lived in them. I noticed some young boys standing in the buildings’ meager shade. They stared at us as we drove on.
Is she gonna take me into one of those buildings and kill me? What had I done to make her act this way? I thought she was my friend. Afraid to say anything, I just looked out the car window. Finally we pulled into a big lot overgrown with weeds and trash. I could see a few wilted areca palms.
This where she's gonna do it, she'll kill me here and bury me in this nasty lot. Confused and afraid, I didn't stop to wonder how she'd get away with a murder and a burial in broad daylight.
She turned towards me with a sad smile. This was nuts, more and more she was reminding me of Charlotte on a weird drunk. Unconsciously I drew back, waiting for God knew what.
"I been watchin' you fer along time, Gaylee. I see yo Momma drink liquor ev'ry day, I see yo Daddy gone ev'ry day. You don' have no freins' to speak of, an you don' love nobody". Terry O'Neill is sorta my friend, I thought. She hates most of the girls at school. That makes her my friend.
"You sit up in dat bedroom all day, but you don't do no schoolwork. What do you do all day, chile?" Emboldened by her sudden niceness I answered snottily, “I diet and read paperbacks, what's it to ya “?
Lila didn’t strike me like she’d done earlier but I felt she wanted to.
I didn‘t care. Lashing out, I said "Who do you think you are, Lila? What's wrong with you? I can't believe you hit me. You try to act like you care but an hour ago you almost broke my finger!". Lila sighed and looked back at me through her dark and pointy shades. "If you get tru dis life wid only a broke fanger, you is blessed, girl. Now, C'mon".
A blue hot sun was beaming down on the car making it necessary to find a cooler spot quickly. I got out of the car. We walked toward a large wooden structure set back in the corner of the lot. Partially obscured by mango and sapodilla trees, I hadn't seen it at first.
(Church)
The best way to describe the building would be to call it Fuchsia. A fuchsia church. It was the kind of shade my sister Danni would use to color flowers in a Disney book. I saw that the building had a small steeple like the one at my friend Evies' Baptist church. In my fifteen-year-old mind the sight of a steeple was reassuring. Not so reassuring was the crowd of colored folk standing all around in front. I felt a series of small electric shocks in my stomach. Trying to keep my voice light I ventured a "Charlotte didn't say anything about us coming here." As if I was pointing out an interesting new plant. Not getting that I was trying to behave, Lila trained those sunglasses on me in that new scary way. She was sending out the same vibes I got from her in the car, earlier.
Without another word, I grudgingly walked along letting Lila grip my hand. No doubt in my mind, I had become her prisoner. Church members stared at me, the only white girl in the whole area. A very old woman leaning on her cane looked at me and kept muttering a word that sounded like 'inyo'-something. I looked at Lila to see if she knew what the old lady was saying but her attention was focused towards an huge black man in a black robe. "Good Mornin', Docta Lobito!" Lila was at her friendly best, flashing large pearly whites. Undoubtedly, my parents had the rare privilege of seeing those pearlies the day they hired her.
I guessed the man was in charge, a head priest, or whatever they call 'em. “Docta” Lobito came over and knelt down in front of me with the grace of a much smaller man, like a dancer. Nice after-shave, reminded me of crispy grass. He looked into my face searchingly, trying to find something. "This girl will be fine, Sister Marble".
Whaddaya mean, will be fine? I'm not sick.
Was this guy really a doctor? I felt even more uneasy; the man seemed kind, but his brown eyes were nervously darting around, looking past me. He was surveying the lot. What was he looking for?
We opened a wrought iron door and walked into a large room. No AC. Lila and I trudged up a stained cement floor to the first row of an oddly assorted group of chairs.
Some were of the folding wooden variety, others metal; a few looked like they had been brought over from peoples' dining rooms. The rows of chairs were arranged in a split semi-circle facing a large empty area. No pulpit, no cross, only a crudely done but colorful mural on the wall depicting some native African men and women kneeling and standing in a jungle clearing. I looked around to see even more crudely painted scenes of African men and women dancing. I was actually enjoying all the artwork until I saw a different type of pictorial scene at the other end of the room.
The now-familiar electric shocks came back as I looked at that wall. It was covered in drawings upon drawings of screaming children with what looked to be fire coming out of their mouths, flames burning their hair, burning all around their heads. There was a crazy wildness in the making of those images, much scarier to me than the kneelers or dancers.
This wasn't like anything I'd seen in my grand-fathers' National Geographic magazines or Alfred Hitchcock. I sure didn't see any pictures of the Baby Jesus.
Overhead, a cranky ceiling fan sputtered out a few puffs of hot air. More people were shuffling in; some of the ladies had the most amazing feather hats and the men wore shirts with bright, funny patterns on them. Overcome with heat I looked for a window, a source of air. Two small windows towards the back, near the door.
Off to the side I saw a regular LP turn table with small speakers. A metal shelf held a stack of LPs and a bunch of old books. I'd seen a shelf like that in my Dads' office supply room. My troubled mind was wanting to focus on anything familiar, anything friendly. Did they have the 'Hallelujah' record? Shelby had that record at home, If these people listened to Handel I knew they‘d be okay. Could I ask Lila to get me a Coke? It was getting hotter and hotter.
Suddenly Doctor Lobito appeared in front of the kneeling-standing mural. He raised his arms wide, the sleeves of his dark robe billowing out despite a lack of any breeze whatsoever. I didn't see anyone start the turntable but I heard music in an instant; Conga drums and a bird-like flute.
Just when I thought things couldn’t get any stranger, a gaggle of skinny, filthy children walked up from the back of the room, their footsteps almost keeping time with the music. An attractive, stern- looking young woman carrying a small whip, brought up the rear. Did she need to use it on those kids? They looked pretty tame to me.
She herded the children up to where the priest was. Her dress was unique because it was so different from the usual North Miami colored womans' 'go to church' dress. It was some sort of boldly embroidered wrap. I was surprised to see a colored woman wearing such a beautiful outfit and walking with such authority. During the week, if she was lucky, she probably had a maids’ job or cleaned office buildings but here today she was a queen. A mean queen with none of the chin-tucking, submissive demeanor needed to work for the White Man.
What was she doing with those children? They were wearing dirty clothes, almost rags. They looked sick and hungry. A couple of the older ones tried to leave to go outside but the woman snapped her whip in their direction. They robotically turned around and went back to the group.
My ears began to pulsate with the loudness of the drums. Where was Lila? In all my astonishment at the goings-on I didn't see her leave. I felt hard leather poking my arm; it was the Mean Queen. Gesturing with her whip, she was trying to push me up to join those children.
The room turned a humming white all around me as I tried to get away from her. Through thick, hot humming I heard a guttural, foreign- sounding whisper coil into my ear like foul smoke.
"Fergit the Baby Jesus, girl, an' don' be afred. Massa Docta gonna make it OK"
Right before I passed out I saw Lila winking at me, her face covered in red powder. Her plump lips were painted bright gold.
« Last Edit: May 21, 2008, 09:37:32 PM by Ehoeveler »
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