He say war or whore?
Yall been fightin a war or a whore?
What kinda fightin yall do over there?
Sam, these niggas ain’t do no fightin.
Yeah. Ain’t been gone but a year.
What kinda fightin can you do in a year?
Shit, take a year to learn how to kill a man good.
Boy, Sam said, that train reared back like a horse to keep from hitting me. Lucifer didn’t crack a smile. Like worn-out brooms, his eyebrows cast shadows over the soft light of his black eyes.
Sheila could not remember where Lucifer the boy ended and Lucifer the man began. The stern face of the seven-year-old child she had seen for the first time at one Sunday service was the same stern face of the forty-seven-year-old adult she had seen this morning, the boy-man-husband who would never set foot in a church today. Unless somebody died. With her white fingers, Georgiana would dress her two grandsons for church — fine clothes too that her white hands scrubbed and washed and pressed for; fine clothes, not the cheap tight-fitting wash-once-and-wear-once Jew Town clothes — greased their thorny naps, shiny as grapes, and hurried them off to Mount Zion. Georgiana would hammer home the importance of religion, cause, as everybody knew, Pappa Simmons spit when he heard the word ligion. He wasn’t much on ligion, or anything else white after those crackas back home had cheated and tricked him out of everything he had. If I’da kept my hand on the plow, he said, I’d still be back there in bad man boss’s cheating fields. So much fo the weak will inherit. Lucifer and John — Sheila seems to remember that damn fool Dallas as one with the Jones brothers; yes, she recalls three boys, a trio, so she sketches Dallas in one or two remembered scenes, a faint image like chalk on paper, a tentative figure that scatters and disappears at blown breath — would cut the fool in church. And Beulah would spend Sundays at the baseball park—Damn, fool, can’t you hit no ball? Don’t be scared of it. He pitch mean but knock his teeth out! So after service, Lucifer would fix her a plate of food, carefully placing her buttered roll so that it wouldn’t topple off of the plate, and bring it to her at the T Street apartment Sunday evening. Miss Beulah he called her. Thank you, Beulah said. You a fine boy. An angel. Wish I could make it to church. But I can’t. Lucifer also mowed the courtyard — mowing with Pappa Simmons’s rusty scythe, mowing with that same expressionless face and the same hollow eyes. He would always take time to speak, How you, Miss Sheila? — and carried Sheila’s groceries.
One morning, he spoke:
Miss Sheila, may I speak to you?
Lucifer.
I never seen nobody get the Holy Ghost like you.
Sheila didn’t know if she should blush. Had he embarrassed her?
I mean. I never seen nobody do it that pretty.
Her eyes lit up inside. Yes, it had happened to her last Sunday, as it seemed to eventually happen to all of the church’s sisters. Bloat with the Holy Spirit. Music beats round the rim of your ears. Air flows solid and cold with fire. Your lungs crumble, sprout legs, then run free of your body, leaving a black hole in your bosom. A stranger enters. Yes, a stranger inside you, shaking the bars of your chest, gnawing through the iron with her teeth, flailing her arms, kicking her feet, running from one corridor to another and screaming FIRE! breaking free of the cage and into the light, running dead into the glowing face of the spirit. So you must keep moving cause your body is FIRE! red ants ravaging skin. And the striding shadow of the spirit riding you, holding on, with one hand thrown up in testimony, against your strong steady bucking. White-gloved ushers hold on too.
You know John and Gracie spending time together.
She looked at the set of Lucifer’s shoulders. He was over six feet tall and weighed better than two hundred pounds, though he wasn’t a handsome man. Yes. I know. Seen the spirit in her eyes.
Well, I decided. You the one I want. He said it real matter-of-fact, like asking for a job.
Is that right?
Yes, ma’m.
She thought a moment. Decided to feel him out. A levelheaded young man. Both feet on the ground. An earthling. So unlike his brother John. What makes you think you can have me?
Jus informin you.
Sheila didn’t know what to say.
Jus informin you. His eyes were clear black stones, hollow and unchanging, eyes without taste or heat. Keep em open while we do it. Keep em open.
Thanks.
You welcome.
Anything else?
Well. He paused, hesitant perhaps. I don’t want nobody but you.
Really?
I don’t ever want nobody but you. He was still, quiet, waiting, a ticket conductor.
From then on, Lucifer met her in the courtyard each morning. Miss Sheila, thought you might need me to carry yo bags. She let him carry the bags to the El. Then she rode the train and took two buses to the Shipcos’ house in Deerfield, far beyond the sprawling arms of Northern Central. After work, she returned and found Lucifer’s waiting eyes on the platform, unmoved, heavy as stone. So it would be. Morning and night, Lucifer stood heavy on the platform, the wood boards swaying beneath him. I don’t want nobody but you.
He rarely revealed emotion, whether happy or sad. He kisses the flesh around her slip straps. He had put time into constructing this face. Spent his life building the hard outer hull, only for her to be drawn into the soft inner life. His tongue works two places at once. He invited her inside. His tongue wiggles between the halves of her breasts. Walk around. Explore on any terms you want. I don’t ever want nobody but you.
Sheila heard, Here, these for you. Two black pearls heated her open hand. Light flashed against the black pearls and the whole world rearranged, a black flood.
With his reliable wings, Lucifer launched full flight into the dark future. She followed.
The first time he came inside her, he jerked twice, and she felt him plop out two seeds of sperm, two black seeds that bided their time. That was Lucifer, still, quiet, waiting.
BIRDS SHATTERED THE GLASSY TRANSPARENCY of the morning. Soared, suspended in air, light pulsing in their wings. Waves of air heated Sheila’s face. The Oriental woman’s eyes rushed toward her, two black circles coal-burning, flicking and fading. With something sharp at heart, she looked around the bend, silver rails curving and disappearing behind a building corner. The train appeared, gliding slowly and silently several hundred yards down the track. These slow Els, slower than the subway, even during rush hour. Sheila, Hatch said, these trains so slow. How come they jus don’t fly? She always took the subway home through the rapid shortening evening. El in the morning, subway in the evening. Each day: half and half. She didn’t like the subway, trains smashing through the darkness, darkness black as the space inside a hoodlum’s hood, so she took the Dan Ryan or the Englewood El to work. But they an eyesore. What you see outside the window. Dull glass in vacant lots, trails of bold grafitti, cementless chimneys, the bowed legs of collapsing porches, burned-out buildings like moth-eaten suits, rusting cars like rotting apple cores, and garbage stacked high.
Somewhere down in the street hammers and saws were busy. The sun was up, all the way clear of the distant lake behind Red Hook and Stonewall. Metal. Everything is metal. The lake enclosed the projects in a bubble, like a toy paperweight. Sheila expected shaken plastic snow to fall. In the far distance a freight train curved into view like a black snake. She counted fourteen cars. The long train like a chain linking the two projects.