What happened to you, man?
I’d been slipping for a while. I was so far ahead of everybody else that not too many people noticed. All the dudes I started out cutting, they knew, but I could hide it real well because all the barbers around here some trash. But the dude who used to sharpen my blades, he could tell, and he confronted me and I brushed him off like he was some stray hairs, man. He got mad and left me to go work with someone else. Still, it was going good enough until Carl got killed. Everything went crazy after that. Man, I had this notion — and my wife says it’s bullshit — that I could have gotten on track if I just got a chance to cut Carlton’s hair one last time.
Got this L’Ouverture fool, he continued, all over the television screen all day every day. Dude selling more records than he deserve off this shit. Ruin people’s lives and then want to gloat about it. Talking all that political shit. It ain’t politics, it’s garbage. You know, Carl had a wife and two little boys. The oldest one’s my godson. Young little handsome boy with yellow skin and a big nose. Got thick hair. Thick, thick hair. I used to cut it. His brother’s hair too, and then Carlton stopped bringing them to the shop. Shit.
He sighed again. It was a deep sigh, and when he was done with it I felt he had emptied everything that was stagnant inside him. There was a certain point a barber went past that there was no returning from. Things were worse than I thought.
Let me finish your shape-up, he said, struggling from his seat. He flipped on the clippers and went back at it slowly and methodically.
When he finished, he handed me a mirror and I looked at my mangled hairline. He had pushed it back several inches and, of course, it was lopsided and jagged at points.
He carefully swept the stray hairs from the cape and sprinkled baby powder on the back of my neck. I offered him a twenty, but he waved away payment. I thanked him, put on my jacket, and walked from his shop. It was raining a bit when I stepped out onto the street. Several police cruisers zipped by, their sirens blazing. I heard the door lock behind me, and I looked back to see him through the window sweeping the floor. He held the broom close to him as if dancing with a woman.
L’Ouverture became like a ghost haunting my every waking thought. I took a nap upon coming home from the barbershop, and he even entered my dreams. In my nightmare he was a barber mangling my head.
I saw his angry frown, and then I saw his perfectly trimmed scalp and the perfect crisp straight line that sat perfectly above his forehead, ending on both sides in perfect right angles at his temples. His tight curls rolled into waves that bobbed up and down on the top of his head.
I wanted to stab his barber. Not just for me, but for a whole generation who were going through it. People I knew went from being beautifully trimmed to unkempt nearly overnight. Cross River hadn’t seen so many Afros since 1972. A friend of mine described it as a crisis one day as he scratched at his bush. Flakes of dandruff fell onto his navy blue shirt like a light dusting of snow. My brother bought a pair of clippers and began cutting his own hair. It was a patchy affair, and his hairline was all out of whack, cutting diagonally across the front of his head. I had never seen him like this. If vanity were a religion, he’d be a fundamentalist. Each week my brother used to visit the barbershop. An aura of freshness always surrounded his head. My brother now appeared scarred.
At a family gathering, my little sister looked up at my brother’s massacred curls and then at the ruins of my Afro and said, Y’all look like some fools.
She was right. We were loyalists, though. How could we see another barber? Such an act would feel like cheating on a sick lover. I wanted to hold L’Ouverture down and shave bald patches into his head. I wanted him to feel what we all felt. I wanted him to hear his wife howl, same as I heard mine when she came in the night of my shape-up and saw my jagged hairline.
Buckwheat, what did you do to your head? she asked.
The Barber did it, I replied.
The Barber?
She stood in the doorway, trying and failing to process what I said.
You paid for that?
I didn’t respond. I walked to the next room and switched on the computer. My wife followed.
This is serious. God, you look crazy. Was he drunk or something? You should sue him for malpractice.
I don’t look so bad; it’s a new style.
New style? You look like some sort of pickaninny.
You don’t love me anymore?
No, get a haircut.
I can’t go back to him, baby. He’s losing it.
Then find another barber.
You don’t understand; he was the best. It’s like saying find a new wife.
Buckwheat, if I died, I’d want you to find another wife.
But it wouldn’t be the same. I paused. Wait, if I died, you’d find another husband?
We went back and forth for nearly an hour while I surfed the Internet, her insults becoming ever more ridiculous and cruel. At one point she hummed as I spoke, stopping only to tell me that she was humming the theme to Little Rascals. Somewhere along the line, I joked that I was planning to get dreadlocks.
Over my dead body, she said, waving her arms in the air. This made me more adamant.
Whatever. Next time you see me, I’ll look just like Bob Marley.
She finally settled on this: You can go ahead and get dreadlocks, but they have to look nice, she said. Nothing too scruffy. I’ll make an appointment for you at my salon.
Maybe I should get my toes done while I’m there, I said. I’m not going to a hair salon. That’s girly. It’s bad enough I have to sit around in a barbershop if I want to look normal, but now you want me to sit under a hairdryer discussing panties or whatever the hell it is y’all talk about. Uh-uh. I’ll do it myself.
I’m going to see if Shane can see you tomorrow.
I heard her in the next room calling the beauty salon. She joked and gossiped with Shane before getting to the point. While she talked, my mind danced far away from her and from Shane and even from The Barber and what he had done to my hair. The bright flashing images of L’Ouverture on the computer screen pained my eyes, but I didn’t look away. I read the bio on his website and muttered to myself, realizing every few moments that I was talking to no one.
Fucking piece of dog shit, I said. I played one of his songs, and it made me tap my foot, which made me even more angry. I searched for his address on the Northside and his phone number and every piece of useless information I could find. I stumbled upon yet another interview.
Above the din of my racing thoughts and the blaring music, my wife’s screaming broke through. Do you ever hear anything I say to you? When did you start listening to that garbage anyway? Damn. You got an appointment tomorrow after work.
Q. . . . . . . .
A. Yeah, from now on it’s Black Nietzsche. L’Ouverture is more of an old-school name, something the Personality Kliq gave me.
Q. . . . . . . .
A. It’s no disrespect to Black [Terror] or the Personality Kliq at all. [Shorty] Cool, Ph. Dubois, P-Nut, Dark Kent, Octavio the Clown, all of them. I love them niggas. Poison Eros, the fifth Beatle, the tenth member of Wu-Tang, the female Phoenix Starr, she on my Haitian Revolution piece. She the first voice you hear, singing and shit. So, we ain’t broken up. As soon as we get this financial shit straight and Black pay me the money he owe, we heading right back into the studio. And let’s be straight up, Black is the greatest rapper and producer in Cross River history, one of the best in rap ever, even if the shit he’s been putting out lately is a little weird. Why you laughing? Let’s be honest, it’s wack, right? Wouldn’t nobody even care nothing about me if it wasn’t for Black. His time is done, though. Black’s an old man. He’s out of touch. He need to move over and let us young dudes get some shine. I ain’t the only one thinking like this. [Shorty] Cool got a solo piece. So do Octavio [The Clown]. P-Nut and [Dark Kent] working on something on they own. Even Poison Eros don’t fuck with Black no more. I don’t know what went down between them, but he messed up by screwing her over.