River, cross my heart (10 page)

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Authors: Breena Clarke

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Rat used to say that the people who ran the pool must come down to O Street early in the morning and get Mr. Blind John Ransome to cut them off a piece of ice that was a perfect big block. Mr. Blind John Ransome had the job of cutting off a chunk of whatever size piece of ice people asked for when they came to the Imperial Icehouse at 27th and O streets. Even though they could buy ice off the huckster wagon, many folks came themselves to the icehouse. Of course, it was a penny cheaper if you got it yourself and hauled it away. But a lot of people came especially to see Mr. Blind John Ransome do his cutting.

Mr. Blind John was always remarkably accurate and never cut off his own fingers or anyone else's. And no one ever disputed Mr. Blind John's reckoning. He held his chin pitched higher than most people and laughed along with each person who came in saying, "John, you got the coolest job there is!"

Rat said, on that day as they left Aunt Ina's after dinner and napping, that Mr. Blind John Ransome would admit it if the people from the pool bought their ice from him. She said they should go past his stall in the icehouse and ask him. But Johnnie Mae had known that Rat would never ask Mr. Blind John any questions. She'd been scared of him. She'd hardly ever speak up to ask him to cut a nickel's or a dime's worth of ice. Clara only liked to stand around in the crowd of small children Mr. Blind John called "little shavers." The little shavers would gather around him and stare at Mr. Blind John using his ice ax to hack away at the big blocks of ice. Rich

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people would get Mr. Blind John to carve figures like horseshoes or rihhon hows out of the ice blocks for their parties. It was an added attraction that the ice carvings were done by a blind man. Mama called him a real character and Papa said watching him was better than the vaudeville show.

The string beans Johnnie Mae poured into the boiling water came alive as they touched the water. They wriggled like garter snakes. Her eyes stayed on them as they hit bottom then floated to the top. A foamy substance bubbled on the surface of the water and Johnnie Mae reached for a slotted spoon to skim it from the pot. As she stared down into the pot, something more brown than green seemed to emerge from the steam clouds.

Nervously Johnnie Mae skimmed the foam, afraid that her mother would see the brown stuff continuing to rise to the surface and think she had not rinsed the string beans properly. The fat meat with its thick, tan backside bobbed up and down in the pot. From the center of the cauldron, a mass seemed to form. It appeared to come together in the shape of a heart, disperse like a cloud, and then reformulate into a solid mass. It seemed to come together this time as a heart-shape face with amused eyes. Slender green plaits emanated from its skull and framed the face. It was a laughing Medusa with wriggling green plaits. Through the bubbles rose two small hands. The fingers came toward Johnnie Mae as if to tickle. The expression on the face was a sly menace and the fingers drew back to clamp themselves under the arms of the figure. Giggling, the figure placed string beans inside each of its nostrils. It let out an uproarious snorting laugh. The heart-shape head ducked beneath the surface and boiling water closed over it.

88 ' Breena Clarke

Next, what looked to be a small brown hand with tiny bubbles around the wrist appeared in a cloud in the middle of the pot. Appearing and disappearing, the hand teased Johnnie Mae. She stared at it. There was no sound in the room but the bubbling laughter in the pot.

Johnnie Mae felt a hand suddenly grab at her shoulder and yank her back from the stove. The pot lost its balance and spilled the boiling contents. Johnnie Mae turned to look at her mother. Alice howled when hot droplets sprayed her chest. For a moment their eyes locked. Alice's mouth widened in pain. She grabbed Johnnie Mae's hand and looked at it. There were no burns! Alice's own arm was darkening rapidly and the pain broadsided her. Johnnie Mae's hand and arm felt cool.

Johnnie Mae's jaw dropped as she watched her mother run out back to the yard and put her arm in the rain barrel up to the shoulder. Tears rolled down Mama's face. The water in the barrel absorbed the heat from her arm and drew off some of the pain. But outside the water, the barely stirring air seared her arm. The arm quickly started to wrinkle, go pale, and blisters began to form in two places.

The suddenness of the pain's return brought Alice's mind back to what had happened. Johnnie Mae! She had been about to put her hand into the boiling pot of water! Johnnie Mae had stood there staring down into the water with a look of puzzlement. She had raised her arm and made as if to plunge it into the pot. Alice remembered feeling a jolt run through her. Every muscle in her body had rushed to help her child.

"Mama!" Johnnie Mae ran out to her mother. She still couldn't quite put together what had happened.

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"Johnnie Mae! Girl, your hand's not burned, is it?"

"No, Mama."

"Lord, but . • ."

"Mama, your arm . . ."

"It's hurning from the water. I reached in to keep you from getting burnt. What were you thinking about, girl?"

Johnnie Mae searched her mind for a plausible explanation. She tried to figure out the sequence of events. She had been looking at the bubbles. Had she meant to put her hand in the pot?

"I wasn't thinking of anything, Mama."

"Go quick and get your aunt Ina. Tell her I need her to see about this."

Johnnie Mae ran all the way. Passersby caught their breath, seeing the Bynum girl running. Before she reached Ina's door, Johnnie Mae started calling out, "Aunt Ina, Aunt Ina! Mama's arm is burnt."

Ina rose from her chair by the window. Still bent over from sitting, she peered out. Seeing Johnnie Mae, she called, "What is it, Johnnie?"

"Mama's hand is burnt. She wants you to come take a look at it."

Ella Bromsen appeared suddenly from behind the box elder tree. "What's happened, girl?" she said and reached out her arms to Johnnie Mae. The girl rushed toward her, but Ella stopped her at arm's length and grasped her wrists. She looked down at Johnnie Mae's hands, turning the palms up to study them.

Ina went back into the house to grab up her long-handled satchel. Johnnie Mae twisted her torso away from Ella and followed Ina with her eyes. Ella and Johnnie Mae looked for a

go ' Breena Clarke

minute like they were dancing. Johnnie Mae broke free when Ina came barreling out of the house and caught up with her, heading down Volta Place. Ella Bromsen called after, "I'll bring a poultice and a salve."

"Alice, girl, what happened?" Ina said, rushing toward her cousin sitting on the top step of the back porch. Alice's eyes were focused off into the distance. Her face wore an expression that Johnnie Mae had never seen before.

Blisters had formed on Alice's right hand, and several spots along the arm were deep red. She cupped the elbow of the burned limb and held it out toward Ina. Her face was tight and her forehead looked like a cloth being wrung out. Staring at Johnnie Mae, who was standing back near the azalea bush, Alice asked Ina, "She tell you what happened?"

"She said you pulled over the pot of boiling water. And your arm got burnt."

"Study this," Alice said, pointing to her arm. "I could have sworn she was getting ready to plunge her hand in that pot. What in the world were you grabbing for, Johnnie?"

Johnnie Mae didn't answer but slunk back into the lap of the bush. The women's stares froze her. Her mother's eyes asked for some bit of explanation. What had she done to her mother? She hadn't meant to cause this. How had she brought th

is on:

Ella came through the back gate into the Bynums' yard and saw Alice, Ina, and Johnnie Mae frozen in a tableau. Alice's arm was extended toward Ina, but both women's eyes were on Johnnie Mae. Ella carried a parcel containing three smaller bundles wrapped in Sears and Roebuck pages. "Miz Alice, let me tend to your burns now," she said quietly and

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walked ahead of the others into the house. She unwrapped the packages and laid out various roots and twigs on the kitchen table. "Y'all got a crock of cider?"

"Surely." Alice rose from the porch step and walked back into the kitchen. Ina followed and patted Alice on her back and led her to a chair.

"Johnnie Mae, won't you get your mama a cup of cider?" Miss Ella assumed command with her low-pitched, steady voice.

"Yes, ma'am," the girl answered.

With a small razor, Miss Ella sliced the green skin off both sides oi a plant and placed slithery lengths over the blisters and red places on Alice's arm. "This will draw the heat off," she explained.

Alice shook her head like she was trying to rearrange her thoughts. "What you make of that?" she said, her words hissing out from between clamped teeth. Without answering, Ina looked around the room, as if some explanation might be lurking in the corners or behind the cupboards.

When Johnnie Mae returned with the cup of cider, Miss Ella Bromsen was mixing the contents of her packets together. She said, "Miz Alice, you quieten your fears. We'll take care of this." She dipped out a bit o{ the boiling water that had not spilled and moistened her herbs. "Johnnie Mae, get me some lard the size of an egg," she said, pouring off the water. "Put it there." Her pointing finger was a golden brown color and Johnnie Mae saw that she had a ring of what looked like woven twigs wound around it.

Ella folded the lard into the herb mixture to form a smooth, greenish brown salve. She removed the strips of the

plant and spread the salve on Alice's arm with her fingers. Unwrapping the last packet, she drew out a long roll of cheesecloth and a ball of a thin, lacy-looking material.

Ina came up behind Ella and looked over her shoulder. "What all is that, Ella?" she asked. "That looks like a spider's web."

Ella very gently unfolded the web, raised it to the level of her face, and muttered words while gazing through it. She then lay the web over Alice's burns. "Yes, ma'am," she an-swered. "This is the web of a granny spider. It'll heal a burn before you know it."

Alice and Ina exchanged skeptical looks while Ella worked. Johnnie Mae marveled at Miss Ella. Miss Ella Brom-sen was as unusual a person as had ever drawn a breath.

She finished dressing Alice's burns by wrappng her arm with cheesecloth. "Thank you, Ella, it does feel cooler," Alice said politely with a questioning look. "What all was that you put on me?"

"Just a salve made from plants. My daddy taught me."

While Ella collected her herbs and carefully rewrapped them into her satchel, Ina started to drain off the remaining string beans in the pot. "Johnnie Mae, go about gathering up those beans from the floor," she commanded the girl, afraid that her idleness might set something else in motion.

Ella Bromsen stopped Ina as she tipped the pot over a colander. "Let's draw off a cup of that water to take auguries," she said. Ina opened her mouth to question the idea of water reading, but Ella took the pot from her decisively and poured out a cup oi water.

Ella took the cup in her left hand and swirled it counter-

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clockwise. Johnnie Mae's eyes followed the swirling cup. Ella reached out and drew Johnnie Mae to her side without taking her eyes from the cup. Johnnie Mae looked down into the cup and then up into Miss Ella Bromsen's face. She saw the yellow flecks that sometimes came into Miss Ella's eyes. Aunt Ina said Miss Ella Bromsen had the cat's eye. Johnnie Mae didn't know what having the cat's eye meant, but it was in the category o{ things that were talked about in husky whispers—the subjects that had to do with your "pocketbook" or your bosoms or bathtub whiskey or anything to do with men and women.

Miss Ella's right palm was cool when she touched the side of Johnnie Mae's face. She grasped the girl's elbow and slid her palm down to take Johnnie Mae's hand in hers. "What did you see in that water, Johnnie?" Ella's voice was sweetly coaxing. "Did you see something in the water?"

Surely they didn't actually want to hear about what she'd seen. It was Clara—pure and simple. There was a face in the boiling pot and it was Clara's face. Johnnie Mae's mouth got dry, then moisture flooded into it and set her head and stomach whirling. Heat started traveling up her body, and she thought that it was Miss Ella's palm heating her body. Miss Ella's fragrance started to overwhelm her, too—a fragrance or blend of fragrances that was hard to separate out. Miss Ella Bromsen—everyone who ever got close to her said it—didn't smell like other people. She smelled sweeter and stronger and odder, and, in the kitchen, cloying.

"Nothing," Johnnie Mae said. "I didn't see anything." She wanted to sit down. She wanted to say the right thing and sit down. The aroma of Miss Ella and Aunt Ina's nervous-

ness and her mother's fear and annoyance pressed in on Johnnie Mae.

Alice broke into the dizziness. "Why'd you go to put your arm in? You were reaching for something! You lose your sense? Getting ready to put your arm in boiling water? You scared the life out of me!"

"It could've been some evil thing that made her do that," Ina said. She came around behind Johnnie Mae and pushed down on the girl's shoulders. "Sit down, Johnnie Mae. What did you see in that water?"

"Yes, it could have been some evil thing," Ella put in.

"Now wait a minute! I keep a Christian home. I don't believe in hoodoo and other things." Alice roused up in alarm.

"Miss Alice, I meant no harm. I'm a Christian woman myself. But I believe that water still has a grip on her."

Ina cut back in, her eyes as round as dollars. "She's got red Indian blood, Alice. That's the reason Ella knows all the roots and herbs. And as a matter of fact..." Aunt Ina drew up her lips and completed the sentence with her eyes.

"Ina Mae, don't run off at the mouth," Alice countered, warning her cousin with her eyes and pursed-up lips. "I don't bring hoodoo in my house. You know that."

"It's not hoodoo. It's common, backcountry wisdom. She don't talk much about it — that's red Indian for you right there. You know how closemouthed they are." Ina sent Alice another knowing glance and Alice rolled her eyes and twisted her mouth.

"It ought not to still have a pull on her, but... I say you should keep her away from all water." Ella's face glowed as she spoke.

"What about bathing?" Alice asked.

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"Don't put any part of her down in the water. Not until this grip loosens."

The river water did have a grip on Johnnie Mae. It was not grasping ringers around her neck or something holding her in a vise. It was inside her. It was coursing through her veins and her vitals. When she had dived and dived trying to pull Clara up Co the surface, large amounts of the river water had got in her lungs and stomach. The water had gushed through her sinuses, leaving a recollection at the back of her throat. A recollection of the banks it flowed past—fertile, self-satisfied, green countryside and troublesome, tangled, brackish banks. Johnnie Mae still tasted the water. At odd times the taste broke through to her consciousness and brought Clara back briefly. The alchemy oi smell and taste created a picture of Clara astride a dull green horse. The horse reared up and, laughing, Clara held its reins.

"Is she regular? Has she been regular lately?" Ina piped up, suddenly thinking that there might be a simpler explanation for the girl's behavior. u Johnnie Mae, you regular?"

The former Carolinians believed firmly that most o( what bothered folks could be traced to what they'd eaten or drunk. And if they could flush their bodies of the poison that had congealed in their vitals, they could relieve most ailments of the body, mind, or spirit. Thus Alice and Ina had a firm belief in the efficacy ot laxatives.

Johnnie Mae felt herself shrinking in this company. For a few moments, she had been a woman — nearly — a grown woman like the others. But Aunt Ina had managed to reduce her to a baby again. Johnnie Mae didn't want to answer the question but her mother's eves demanded it.

u Yes, ma'am," she whispered.

g6 - Breena Clarke

Satisfied, the three turned back to their conversation. Johnnie Mae listened. Miss Ella talked about elements and putting the grip on a person. How on earth did this apply to Johnnie Mae? She wasn't frightened of water. She hadn't been gripped by anything. In fact, it was she who'd wanted to grip the small brown hand. She had tried to reach for it in the steam and had brought away nothing. Maybe if Mama hadn't grabbed her away, she might have touched the little hand. Maybe the hand still waited for her. She knew she dared not go over and look into the now empty pot on the back of the stove. Besides, though absorbed in their talk o{ the mysterious goings-on and the elements and juju and trying to top each other claiming Christian piety, Aunt Ina, Mama, and Miss Ella took turns looking over at her.

Miss Ella told Alice and Ina that there weren't any white-man doctors back up-country where she was raised. All the healing they did was with the plants and trees. Miss Ella's papa, Mr. Butter Bromsen, had been a root doctor up-country. Mr. Butter was nearly ninety now. He'd spent his first twenty years in slavery, and the next ten years before the war was over he was up-country with the People. He learnt all he knew about healing and root doctoring from the People, the Cherokee and Creek and others who lived up-country. Mr. Butter was blind now. Miss Ella said that he probably could cure himself of blindness, but he said he was tired of looking now anyhow. Miss Ella said she was a child oi her papa's old age so she was determined to take in all he knew.

Johnnie Mae stood against the wall, listening. Suddenly Ina turned and asked, "Johnnie, have you been dreaming about water?"

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"No, ma'am. I haven't," she answered.

Ina asked. "Ella, you have something to take for the irregularity. 1 "

"Yes, ma'am. It's hest to drink yarrow tea. You'll be regular as clockwork by the morning."

Pearl Miller did not arrive in the sixth-grade classroom on the first day of the school year in September 1928. She didn't arrive until ten days after the first day. By that time, all the seats were assigned and everybody had staked out a clique to gossip with. Before Pearl arrived, there had been only two new faces. One was a boy whose cousin was already in the class and the other was a tiny little girl from across the bridge. This new girl, called Dumpling, lived in the shantytown on the Virginia side of Key Bridge and arrived at school with a strand of sweat beads on her forehead from the long walk.

On school mornings, Georgetown children were pushed out of their front doors when the swarm of other school-bound youngsters appeared in their block. The eight of ten Wardleys who were still school age and lived all the way west near Georgetown University started out for school early. At each block children joined the eastward throng and kept with it until they got to school. Many of the bigger children kept on going east out of Georgetown, on across into Washington

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city, to go to the Armstrong high school or the prestigious M Street school. Children who lived east of Wisconsin Avenue amassed at each block, too, and proceeded in a throng west to Wormley School. Excited chattering and thundering brogans signaled this throng of children wearing run-over, dog-eared leather shoes. Some children's feet pulled out of their shoes with every step. Some children's shoes were so tight that their toes curled under and came to rest on top of neighbor toes. Some oi the ill-fitting shoes were stuffed with newspapers. Some had cardboard soles, causing children to leave pieces of cardboard all along the route. Early or persistent or lucky mothers found soft leather lace-up shoes with the smooth soles of the hardly worn—and no scuffs—at the church rummage sales or got them from the white folks they worked for. Lexter Gorson, the shoe-shine man, was swamped just before school started. He rehabilitated the rummage and hand-me-down shoes by putting a high gloss on them. The recently arrived country folk quickly yielded to the decorum of the city: Shoes on the feet of all schoolchildren. All school-age children must go to school.

Because Johnnie Mae was one of the tallest girls in the class, she was assigned a seat in the back of the classroom, near a window. Lula Lavery, who'd been Johnnie Mae's best friend the previous year, was seated nearer the middle of the room. She was mad not to be closer to Johnnie Mae and madder still that Johnnie Mae seemed unconcerned about their seat assignments. Lula turned around in her chair when all were seated and waved to Johnnie Mae. Johnnie Mae only stared back blankly.

Though Pearl Miller was of medium height and actually a

hair shorter than the girl seated in front of her, she was told by the teacher, Miss Elizabeth Boston, to sit across the aisle from Johnnie Mae Bynum.

Sit was all Pearl did the first week. She sat bolt upright in her chair and placed her body directly behind the girl in front of her. She did not speak one word to anyone. She did not even answer when her name was called in the roll by Miss Boston. Johnnie Mae glanced sideways at Pearl on each of these mornings, wondering at the stock-still girl. Pearl reminded her of a field rabbit facing down a dog; hands folded on the desk, legs clamped together, head straight up on her neck, she stared directly in front of her. When the class went into the school yard for recess, Pearl walked behind Mildred Gloe. She stood alone next to a bush and spoke to no one. Johnnie Mae's three friends from the river — Lula Lavery, Hannah Jackson, and Sarey Tyler—clustered around her in a display of compassion. Johnnie Mae, however, had little to say to them and did not smile.

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