Read My Book of Life By Angel Online
Authors: Martine Leavitt
Also by Martine Leavitt
Keturah and Lord Death
Heck Superhero
Tom Finder
The Dollmage
The Taker's Key
The Prism Moon
The Dragon's Tapestry
MY BOOK OF LIFE BY ANGEL
â
MARTINE LEAVITT
GROUNDWOOD BOOKS
HOUSE OF ANANSI PRESS
TORONTO
Copyright © 2012 by Martine Leavitt
Published in Canada in 2012 by Groundwood Books
Chapter headings are quoted from
Paradise Lost
by John Milton, Modern Library edition, 2008, edited by William Kerrigan, John Rumrich and Stephen M. Fallon.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Distribution of this electronic edition via the Internet or any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal. Please do not participate in electronic piracy of copyrighted material; purchase only authorized electronic editions. We appreciate your support of the author's rights.
Groundwood Books/ House of Anansi Press
110 Spadina Avenue, Suite 801, Toronto, Ontario M5V 2K4
We acknowledge for their financial support of our publishing program the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF) and the Ontario Arts Council.
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Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Leavitt, Martine
My book of life by Angel / Martine Leavitt.
ISBN 978-1-55498-317-9
I. Title.
PS8573.E323M9 2012 jC813'.54 C2012-902715-4
Cover illustration by Anna
+
Elena
=
Balbusso (www.balbusso.com)
For the families of the Eastside angels
Bid her well beware
.
.
.
W
hen Serena went missing
I looked in all the places she might go
and she Âwasn't anywhere,
just like a lot of the other girls Âweren't anywhere.
I thought oh no
when Serena didn't show up at her corner one night
and not the next night or the next,
and then she didn't show up to church Wednesday.
She always went to church Wednesday
and told her man Asia it was for free hot dogs
but it was really for churchâ
she told me that secret.
Once a man came
who smelled so bad everybody pulled away,
but Serena said, welcome, you are with friends,
have a hot dog.
She said she picked me to love
because of my name Angel and because of my face,
but then she loved me just because.
She said that.
She said her heart's desire was to see an angel.
She said, if I could see an angel
that would mean I'm still God's little girl.
S
he said,
Angel, if you get scared sometime
on a bad date,
do thisâ
She stared big-Âeyed at nothing over my head
and said,
angel, angel
.
.
.
I laughed, said, you see an angel?
She said, no not yet,
but just saying it or thinking about one
has powers.
Really, Serena? I said.
Ha ha really?
you think there is such a thing as angels?
She said soft, maybe.
But she meant yes really.
T
he ï¬rst time Call told me
to get out there
and me scared and not knowing anything
and Call watching from the café across the street
saying no more candy for freeâ
that ï¬rst time Serena said, I'll tell you what I know.
She said, your eyes be always on the man
you don't have eyes for anyone but him
you don't have business with anybody but himâ
that's the only way he can stand it,
if you aren't alive except when he needs you to be.
Serena taught me about drinks and dinner,
told me how to make it go fast, how to fake it.
She said, and don't you forget
your name suits you.
W
hen she Âwasn't at church Wednesday
I said, Asia, where is she?
He said, she's run out on me.
I thought, but did not say,
she gave me her running-Âaway money
to hide under my mattress
and it is still there.
L
ast church Wednesday
Serena said to me,
Angel, you write about Nena
who had a pretty Âhouse
and pretty parents
and was a ten minute walk from Micky D's.
One day she didn't go home for supper
and then she didn't go home for curfew
and then she didn't go home.
Nena went for a burger
and ended up at Hastings and Main.
Her man, the one who found her, lonesome,
said to his friends,
it's the ones from good homes
who follow orders bestâ
it's the ones from good families
who have the best social skills,
who never learned how to ï¬ghtâ
they make the best money.
S
erena said to me,
tell the story of Connie
who said, I'm leaving the life behind,
who said, I'm going to testify against the man
who brought me Âhere and dogged me awful.
She said, I'm going to protect other girls
and get that boy in jail.
On courtroom day, there he was,
wearing a pink tie,
and in every seat of the courtroom
Âwere his buddies,
saying with eyes,
if he goes down,
so do you.
Write how Connie failed to prove to the judge
that she was in imminent and present danger
so her man walked away
and Connie got found dead
strangled by a pink tie.
S
erena said,
John the john has made you read that poem,
has taught you fancy words and fancy grammarâ
Angel, you tell about Blood Alley
and Pigeon Parkâ
the cardboard tents
and the water rats
and the delousing showers,
the SROs and the cockroaches,
the people drinking out of puddles
and all the girls going missing
.
. .
Tell all that, Angel.
I
said no.
She said yes.
I said no.
She said yes.
I said no that is dumb.
Then Serena didn't show at church Wednesday,
and I got a book to write in.
I
stopped to listen to the street preacher
who talked about God's top ten
and how everything you do is recorded in a book of life
and angels will read from it someday.
Is this what you want your story to be? he said.
Is this what you want everyone to hear?
I imagined that,
to hear everything about me
read out loud by an angel
like I used to read to my little brother Jeremy.
I held my notebook
and wished I could write my story over
and in this new story I gave up Call's candy forever
and I called my dad and he came and got me
and him and me and Jeremy
drove away from Call forever,
and when we got there,
there would be Serena.
S
o I tried to make it come true.
I called Dad from the pay phone near the library
and it was sorry this number is no longer in serÂvice
so I wrote him a letter and even mailed it,
saying,
Serena my friend is missing
I am cleaning up my act like you said
and I vow my deepest vow
that I won't take Call's candy forever.
I wrote on the front of my book
My Book of Life by Angel
Which Is My Real Name,
and This Is My Real Story
for Maybe an Angel to Read.
I wrote in my book,
Serena, when you come back
I will tell you about my vow
and my letter to Dad
and I am sorry I laughed at your idea of angels,
I want an angel too.
I
wrote
my angel Âwouldn't be one of the long dead
who has forgotten being alive,
who is used to sitting on a throne
and being buddies with God.
My angel would be a fresh-Âdead one,
still longing for chocolate cake,
still wishing she could come back
and ï¬nd out who won American Idol.
That's the one I wantâ
just a juÂnior one
who might not mind saving
a girl like me.
Subtle he needs must be, who could
seduce angels
.
.
.
I
n the Vancouver Downtown Eastside,
where Call lives and now me too,
all the doors and windows are barred at nightâ
the street is the jail
and there's no escape.
Where Call lives
people know how to sleep sitting up
and how to eat without teeth
and how to carry their Âwhole world
on their backs.
Where Call lives
most of the churches are shelters,
with beds for the bedless
and soup for the soupless.
Call has a good haircut and good shoesâ
shoes with laces double-Âknotted and hard Âsoles
and stiff heels
and pockets in his shirtsâ
he could walk into an ofï¬ce
and nobody would blink.
But Âhere they blink.
Here, he is gentry.
He says, I am the beginning of gentriï¬cation
at Hastings and Main.
C
all wants to be the boss of something.
He Âcan't do it in the real world
so he will be the king of Eastside.
He is always disappointed with Eastside.
It lets him down every day.
I
met Call because of shoes,
because I stole shoes.
Noâshoe,
just the one on display,
the one everyone touches, picks up,
tries to stuff their foot into,
the one people say, oooh that is so sweet,
or,
why would anybody want that?
Serena said once,
Angel, shoes are going to be the death of you.
M
y mom died of holes.
People who get cancer can feel lumps,
but my mom felt spaces, holesâ
she Âcouldn't explain it better.
The doctor said she had osteoporosis,
but Mom said she had holes in her bones.
She said her memory was bad
because of the holes in her brain
and she would laugh.
Then she died of a hole in her heart
she had since she was born
but nobody knew.
Serena said,
that put a hole in you, Angel,
which you tried to ï¬ll up with Call.