25. The Killer

 Far as I know, mother never got a divorce. Somehow I can’t imagine her doing it, even if she’d been married to the Marquis de Sade.

It’s not that she enjoyed abuse, and certainly not marriage-- or men much, if at all. All of her life, people said her unwillingness to “suffer fools” would leave her lonely, would lead to her dying alone.

Nor was it a matter of religion. Even though she sent me to Catholic schools for as long as she could, she wasn’t a particularly pious person. I probably spent more time in church than she did. When I asked her to tell me what all the strange prayers meant, she didn’t know them. She said she’d forgotten them; I’d recite them as best I could. But I only frustrated her.

Sometimes I think if she’d been a bit older, a bit more aware when she met the man who penetrated her loins and disappeared before I came out, she’d’ve never been married. Sometimes I think something like that about the woman whose name I never knew and other women on this block, and still others I’ve met since leaving. But not Mrs. Littington.

If selling your body teaches you anything, it’s this: all possession is temporary. Few, if any, men learn this lesson because, well, they don’t have to. They can live under the illusion that once you’ve paid for something—spent money on it—it’s yours for all time.

Which is funny, because all marriage laws, contracts, vows and ceremonies were devised by men. And they’re all based on that same principle: A man owns a woman (As I’ve since found out, in a few cultures, the reverse is true.) for a period of time: “till death do us apart” or some period that’s finite simply because all lives are. He owns her, at least as long as he’s paying for food, clothing, a roof over her head and those and other needs of the children.

But since men forget that “The good men do is of’t interred with their bones,” they believe that their dominion continues when they’re gone. By the same token, they think that some relationship continues, as long as they’re spending money to maintain it, once the man decides—or the man and woman agree—to live their lives apart from each other.

To steal a line from one of the herd that never recognized me as one of its own, divorce is simply the continuation of marriage by other means-- usually, his means.

Maybe mother’d seen enough of this block to know that when a man decides he’s going to disappear, it’s best to let him go: Initiating proceedings would simply mean making some attempt to summon him back, however briefly, to her home, whatever or wherever that may’ve been.

And for what? So they could create a document saying that the previous one didn’t exist? Or that is was a falsehood or mistake?

In other words, I think mother was smart enough to know—though, to my knowledge, never articulated it—that a woman can’t use a man’s way to resolve a situation he, or one of his kind, created.

Of course, it’s brutally difficult to grow up as a boy when no one teaches you how to fight—and I use that word in the male sense—or to run or deny. On this block, it could’ve been fatal, as it nearly was for Louis Torre. In fact, if mother hadn’t kept me in the kitchen, in the presence of women, as much as she had, I’m sure I wouldn’t’ve made it back. And I’m sure I’d’ve never been able to come with the knowledge—not the belief—that I could come back, and that after doing so, I wouldn’t have to again.

Once we’ve buried mother, I won’t have to come back. There’ll be nobody who would recognize me now, and nobody-- except for that lady whose name I never knew-- who might remember what I was.

Actually, if any of them’d been paying attention, they’d’ve thought I’d died years ago. The certificate was signed; my name appeared in a newspaper column. But they never saw the body about which the police, the coroner and a funeral director had signed documents: more papers. According to them, my last moment on this block—on this planet—or at least the moment someone realized there was a dead body—was at 2:34 in the afternoon. The 18th of June, 1992: The deceased, had he managed to sidestep his fate another six weeks, would’ve been twenty-five years old. No longer a boy, in the opinion of most of the world, but not quite a man, either. But well beyond either one, in terms of this block.

As far as anyone on this block knew, that body was mine. Anyone, that is, except mother. Anybody who’d remembered me, if she’d thought about it, would’ve been surprised that I was back on this block. Perhaps some of them,--and certainly any man, any male, if there were any left—would’ve said among themselves, “What was he doing here anyway?”

To tell you the truth, it’s a fair question. What would I’ve been doing in the basement of a house that’d been abandoned, where an old woman nobody ever saw but whom everybody knew was nearly deaf and lame, lived? Especially since, having been there before, I'd had no wish—no reason, really—to go back.

In that basement, I wouldn’t’ve known it was one of those cold, wet days that often follows an early heat wave but precedes the official beginning of summer. Or that anyone’d been waiting outside, or whether that person’d bothered to conceal his weapon. A weapon that somehow or another’d been used, after another weapon that may’ve been concealed. And, once inside, no one except for the person who used the weapon and the one on whom he’d used it would know.

Noone’d’ve found the body for days, perhaps weeks or months, had someone not phoned and claimed he’d heard “a disturbance” coming from the house. To this day, no one except the caller knows who made the call, but rumor has it that if came from another state.

So why did the police respond to it? No one’s answered that one, but rumor also has it that the killer rang the precinct. He—or she—has never been caught.

Here’s something even stranger: the police talked to my mother once, only for five minutes—about as long as it took them to conclude she’d had nothing to do with the killing. Mother doesn’t do that sort of thing, or ask it of anybody.

No one’d asked her to ID the body or to provide any information about my life since I left this block. There’d been no funeral, which surprised nobody since, for as long as I can remember, I’d told her I didn’t want one. There’s nothing I wanted less than to be laid out in full view (or at least in front of) gawkers and grievers. Especially when I couldn’t do anything about it.

As I’ve heard, the cops’ve never arrested anybody, and not long after the burial, they stopped investigating possible suspects.

All I know for certain is that I wasn’t there when it happened. But I could’ve given the constables enough information to make them suspicious.

I know of one thing that’ll lure a certain kind of man to a basement that isn’t his own. Actually, to be more exact, I know of one kind a person who can do that: one young enough to be a son, nephew or grandson. So while I may not know who the bait was, I know what it was and that it was switched, yanked away from him.

Maybe he never saw the pre-adolescent boy someone used to entice him. I also suspect—very strongly—that whoever led him down the stairs wasn’t his killer. He’d’ve known better; so would’ve the killer. How else would the killer’ve gotten the hammer and bayonet—and the man who fathered me—inside those concrete walls?


24. A Name Without a Memory

The way someone dies really doesn’t matter. Whether he’s claimed by metal or fire, through external ruptures or spontaneous combustion, or whether she breaks down from exhaustion (Contrary to popular belief, it is men who are consumed, who implode, from emotion.), the outcome is still the same. Someone is dead, and someone else isn’t.

Probably the most pertinent phrase ever written by a man (apart from “You have given me language, And the profit on’t is, I can curse”) is “The good men do is of’t interred with their bones.” Now, I’m not, I’ve never been, one to seek out a spirit or other essence that might live on after a person. Most of the dead—I include nearly all men and the person whom, I will soon cease to be—are best left buried. Most, in fact, would soon be forgotten had they not left behind—or someone hadn’t made—tangible monuments to them.

Whether they’re streets, bridges, churches or other machines, they remain as names. In time, people only know the name—whether it’s on a sign or enshrined in speech.

23. To Forget and Not to Dream

Sometimes I think memory is the curse of the human race. If it is, then recollection is the biggest practical joke, after consciousness itself, every played on our species. And forgetfulness is, if not its salvation, then at least a balm, a palliative: an opiate.

How many people have awakened from nights, weekends, or even whole weeks they couldn’t remember? Try as they might, they can’t explain the markings on their faces or the pain, throbbing from inside their temples, they didn’t have before those stories they were convinced were their lives stopped temporarily.

It happens to women all the time. They get stretch marks, sagging lines, sadness, resentments and all sorts of fatigue-not to mention twenty, fifty or a hundred pounds they didn’t have when their husbands began to express their ambitions as promises. The home they’ll make (where he won’t want to stay), the children, the cars and other objects ostensibly for the family he’s sworn to provide for and protect: all of these things, except for the children, pass just beyond the woman’s grasp—like dreams.

And they weren’t wanted or requested—at least not consciously—any more than those repetitive non-realities that parade through our sleep.

So I’ve made no effort to recall my dreams or any of my old wishes: I couldn’t tell you what I “wanted to be” when I “grew up”—or, for that matter whether I ever had any such daydreams. Maybe they weren’t so strong anyway; maybe there’s never been anything but necessity: I realize now that nothing could ever’ve motivated like the need to under go the transformation I’m about to complete (or, at least, the most dramatic part of it). It drove me, I now understand, long before I could even recognize it.

I wonder how much mother could recall. How did the girl she once was (This is as much as I know of that part of her life.) become the girlfriend—or whatever she was—to the man/ boy who injected her with his seed, which, in the swirling saline inside her, turned into the hallucinogenic pill from which her child descended, through airless haze, to mornings that didn’t surprise either her or the child even if they weren’t prepared for them?

Then again, not much in her life (or what I know of it), or mine, or anyone else’s was ever a matter of preparedness or lack of it. What could’ve prepared her for me? No one knows what to do with a kid who’s stuck with somebody else’s gender—least of all the child him or her self.

I can’t recall the part of my life when I didn’t know that the difference between boys and girls lay underneath their clothes. I’m not sure I can remember the time when I didn’t know that a man could erupt in hot, sticky streams from the touch of my hand—or his. Or that my organ between my legs—which soon be sliced open and spread--could do the same to another man’s touch, to my own—or to a woman’s. Or that women have organs—of which I will soon have rather pale imitations—they could touch to mine or that I could touch

And what did mother recall—or did she?—during our phone conversations? Or at the moment of her death? And what about the women at her funeral? Does Mrs. Littington recall the days when she lived across the street from me and mother or –Hey, is she still married? Is he still alive?

Actually , I hope she’s not thinking of the boy she accused of teaching her then-seven-year-old son how to curse—in English. Which is pretty funny, especially if you consider that he spewed all those bad words at me—for what, if anything, I don’t know.

Or that woman whose name I never knew. She never could direct her frustrations over changes at me as Mrs. Littington did, but mother’s boy wasn’t welcome. Nor, to my knowledge, were any of the other boys, of any age.

Someone—Vivian, I think—once said she wouldn’t want to revisit her childhood, not even the pleasant parts. She believed that reopening the pleasant surprises would make the house of mirrors behind the doors of the present even more painful and grotesque. And of course she didn’t want to relive the pain she endured from rapes and beatings she suffered.

Epilogue: Another Return

The street was dark, but not in the way she remembered. Curtains muted the light in the windows the way clouds veiled the daylight that af...