He dropped his head. She studied him. His head, cow-bent in shame — I’m sorry — chewing the cud of his words. He eased his head up. Their eyes held for a moment.
Look, I’m sorry.
No, I understand.
I’m really sorry. One of those days. I have some things on my mind. Deathrow. I didn’t mean to snap at you.
Hey — he stubbed out his cigarette in the jar lid — it’s okay. He stepped into touching distance. We all have bad days.
For a moment she did not answer. She crossed to a window overlooking the curved lake and the city’s charted skyline. I’m sorry. She watched the bronze world outside the window.
Hey, it’s okay. Tell you what, let me give you a few. On the house. Your boyfriend would like them.
Thanks. You’ve done enough.
Please, allow me.
No, really.
Are you sure?
Yes.
Well, enjoy your day.
Thanks. I will. She faced him.
If you don’t mind my asking, what’s your boyfriend’s name?
Clarence.
Clarence. Well, tell Clarence I said hello.
SHE ROLLED LIKE COAL from the oven of the building into fierce afternoon light. Unclean light. The sun immobile in the sky. Yellow-red-white fault-finding color. Nothing to fear. Unlike some models’, her deep black skin suffered no aging in the light. The sidewalk gripped her feet with concrete hands. Her legs said stop, sit down, lie down, go to bed — right here in the crowded street. She heard a gurgling in the depths under the sidewalk. Long ago, she had studied a map of the city’s lower parts, the sewage system with its drainage lines and tunnels. The hollow skeleton beneath the city’s concrete-and-steel skin. She could smell heat rise from her body, buttered with sweat.
Yuck. I need a bath.
Two tall stacks pumped metal steam in thick clouds that thinned and streamed a white message high above the rooftops: BATH. Ah yes, of course. Why hadn’t she thought of it? The New Cotton Rivers’s bathhouse. She dragged her stinking body there.
Once inside, she presented her membership card and found a cubicle. She quickly undressed. Eased the fresh shroud over her head and pulled it over her work-slick body. Her shroud ran silk against her exploring fingers. It was soft and loose. Brushed against the tops of her bare black feet. She tiptoed across the marble floor to the chapel.
The New Cotton Rivers believed that the body must be heard. You must rub Christ right into your bones so the flesh can sing praise. The Prophet 1 Faith Stimulator — patent pending — was the machine he had invented for this purpose.
The white-gloved attendant taped a black cross over each eyelid. The crosses felt like fingers, touching her, caressing, probing. Each cross transmitted three thousand biblical pulses a second. The attendant attached a crystal crown and made sure that it fit snugly around her forehead. Holding the sleeve of her robe, he guided her across the white tile to the freshly drawn bath. The water appeared still, motionless, but her feet entered and spoke of bubbling warmth.
She lowered herself slowly into the perfumed waters — frankincense and myrrh — careful not to disturb the crystals at the bottom. Crystal serves to stabilize and balance our energetic system. It has positive and negative poles. It orients us more than guides us, concentrates the attention and drives our spirit to God.
Wine?
Yes, please.
Red or white?
Zinfandel. If you have it.
I’m sure we do. One moment please.
She drew up her legs, a bird with folded wings. The attendant returned shortly with her glass.
Thank you.
Enjoy.
Once the attendant left, she disrobed.
Toes arched on the white porcelain knobs, she studied her steepled knees. Her skin tingled in the touching water. She felt the sweet solid flesh of her own bones. Wet pressure enveloped her whole body, squeezing the breath from her lungs. A pain shot through her, and another and another, then a distant echo of the first, contracting and expanding in slowly accelerating rhythm. Mercury, her blood rose and sunk, rose and sunk. Warmth spread below her waist and relaxed the knot in her belly. A familiar feeling. When she got her period, she would sit in a tub of hot water all day to cool her joints.
Clean reflections played over her dark thighs.
Little Sally Walker
Sitting in her saucer
Weeping and crying for someone to love her
Rise, Sally, rise
Wipe ya weepin eyes
Put ya hands on ya hips
And let ya backbone slip
Shake it to the east
Ah, shake it to the west
Shake it fo the one you love the best
She saw blood beneath the water and thought the soap had cut her. She tried to use her washcloth as a sponge. Squeezed it in between her legs. Red roots extended beneath the water.
Lula Mae!
The roots lengthened.
Lula Mae!
Girl, hush all that screamin. Lula Mae shut the door behind her. What’s wrong wit you. She approached the tub. The blood reflected on her white face. That’s when Porsha knew, the blood belonged to her as wind belonged to sail.
We better get ready to go up to the Rexall, Lula Mae said. She untied her headscarf and thrust it at Porsha. Here, this a clean rag. I jus put it on. Dam your blood.
WHITE LIGHT FELL gray as new rust on the sidewalk. The crowd swept her along, a cork in the current. A wind blew now but she could not tell from which direction. Something long and wet pushed up her arm and licked her elbow. Scat! The dog trotted off, trailing the red leash of his tongue. The dome of Union Station rose up ahead, surrounded by its shops and stores, a tidy sweep of stone. Her shadow ran two straight lines along the marble walls of the station, veined green and black.
The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof, the world and all that dwell therein.
What you say? The cashier spoke from the glass wicket. Light flooded it. The cashier moved as if swimming.
Told you
I got a right
I got a right
To the Tree of life
What? The cashier took her money. Do you want a transfer?
Cherubs nested in the neural tangle inside her skull, the dense network of cordlike fiber — handpicked by God himself — that obtained, stored, and transmitted information from the front backwards. She watched their wings, veined and transparent, insectlike. Scriptured wings. Walk with Jehovah, shoulder to shoulder. The Prophet 1 Faith Stimulator patent pending had done its work.
What?
She charged through the turnstile, boarded the train, found a seat, and turned her face to the window. The train pulled into motion. The windows shook, drummed deep inside her. Don’t bother me none. Her body was stone.
A legless man came rolling down the aisle on a wooden board. He rattled his change-filled can. Give if you can. Rattle and roll. Give if you can. Rattle and roll. She took a quarter from her purse, leaned forward into the aisle, and, like a game contestant, tossed the quarter at the moving can. She missed. He picked it up with stained fingers. Flipped it into his can. Looked at her with red eyes. Said through his masklike beard, That’s the way yo do it. He rattled and rolled to the next car.
The nerve. She settled back into her seat.
She saw a brilliant sun through the window. A few sailing (fishing?) vessels speckled the lake. Flocks of phosphorescent birds. Wards Tower loomed over the Loop — a towering mass of soaring walls reflected in the terminal black glow of its windows — against a radiant sky, a mile-high, gray and black tombstone. The city was a flat prairie that spread outward from the lake. No mountains or other natural formations to relieve the endless vistas of water, land, and sky. But cliffs and peaks constructed out of steel, glass, and stone. She saw a plume of smoke rise from the harbor, fan out and lift, black fingers reaching for the sun.