45. Why We Cannot Reunite

 

Mother has now accomplished something I didn’t think she’d even try to do: For the first time in my life, I’m part of a reunion.

Or am I? I’m here with a bunch of other people who lived on this block and who—with the exception of that woman whose name I never knew—haven’t been here in many, many years.

So I suppose some people would call it a reunion. Except that we haven’t been reunited. We never will be because we were never joined, save for the fact of having lived on this block. Mother and the woman whose name I never knew never left and, as far as I know, never disconnected their relationship, which of course was a consequence of living on this block. They talked about things they never talked with anybody else, including me. Now that mother’s gone, I don’t know who else she’ll talk to, if anybody. Somehow I imagine she won’t have any reunions after today.

For that matter, I don’t know if I’ll ever have one. I didn’t graduate from any school or participate in any of those other rites of passage that seem to mark other people’s lives. No war, no marriage, no Manhattan Project. In fact, I haven’t stayed on any job or lived in any place long enough to develop a camaraderie with anyone.

Then again, I’ve been told that I’ll never develop such relationships, no matter how long I live or work with anyone. I wonder if he—my guidance counselor—ever knew about Louis’s rape, or that I knew about it. In any event, he made his judgment of me not long after it happened, which was not long before I stopped going to school for good.

Funny, though, how he never talked to me about staying in school. I remember another time when I had a conference with him—I forget exactly why, but I think it was about my always low-but-still-falling grades—when I told him I wouldn’t be around for very long. “I know,” he said.

I’d already made up my mind that I was getting out of that school the first chance I got, but I still don’t know whether that’s what he meant. He was known for giving his one-sentence assessments: “You’re not staying in this neighborhood” or “It’ll be the Army or jail for you.” Then, I’d’ve accepted either to get out of that school and off this block. But his most famous one-liner, which he bestowed on one of the cheerleaders, was, “See you at the reunion.”

If he’d told me that, I don’t know whether I would’ve heard it as a sentence or a challenge. A dare, maybe—and only because I’d already developed such a thorough contempt for the place and almost everyone in it, including him. Somehow, I don’t think anybody said, “He inspired me” after spending sessions with him in his office or, in his earlier years, his social studies classes. Then again, maybe he did inspire, or at least motivate, somebody for all I know. But there’s nobody I can point to and say, “He (or she) inspired me.”

Sometimes mother instructed. Other times she empathized. But inspired, no. Adam--as much as he tried (and as much as he could) cultivate a companionship with me-- never could’ve motivated me because I knew, even before he stuck his head in that oven, that I would never, in any way, become a man who resembled him. Then again, I never expected to become a man—or even get to where I am now, on the brink of my sexual reassignment surgery—because I’ve never seen anyone do that on this block.

For that matter, I never saw anybody become a woman, or grow or change in any significant way on this block. Of course, when we’re children, we can’t imagine our parents as children, no matter how many photos we see or stories we hear about them from that part of their lives. But my mother: it seemed that she had been born as she is, as my mother. As, in other words, the one I’d always known and will probably recollect for the rest of my life. I say “probably” instead of “will” simply because predicting the course of anything in my life has never been a talent or skill of mine.

And then—then what? I’ve never had any faith in any of the religions that entangled my mother and other people and purport to teach what happens in this life and show or warn us what happens after it. According to the nuns and the brother, in whose classes I sat for as long as mother could afford it, she and I’lll be together again—or at least we’ll re-encounter each other—if both of us lead moral or immoral lives. Or we’ll be together again for a while, then part and possibly reunite later on if one of us has to purge more than the other.

If I survive the operation—I expect to, though I may become someone I can’t imagine now—there’s no way, I think, we’ll be together again. I was sent to this planet male; according to the teachings I got, I can’t enter the kingdom female. Or that’s how it seems, anyway. As far as I know, my mother didn’t commit any sin deemed irredeemable by the old men who run the church. Then again, I never quite knew whether she’d been married to, or divorced, the one who fathered me. Well, I had his last name all through school, so I don’t know; I guess they were married. Then again, she never used his name, except to enroll me in school.

I never asked mother about him, about his name. In time—not much—I realized my situation was different from what was supposed to be and I came to my own ideas about how it came to be. I knew that, one way or another, they weren’t married for all the time I can remember. I didn’t need to know anything else, really.

Maybe that’s why I never had what most people think of as curiosity. When you learn what you need (or want) to know without asking questions, you don’t learn how to ask questions. And you never expect to learn the truth about anything, about anybody, by asking questions.

When you don’t expect to know anybody long enough to be curious or need to know, you lose the need and the desire to ask questions. You don’t wonder what will become of somebody, mainly because you don’t know whether you’ll survive long enough to find out. Or whether your life will be entangled with someone else’s for long enough so that any of it matters.

Then there’s no point to meeting somebody again five, ten twenty or however many years later. I read or heard, I’m not sure of which, that people who don’t go to their school reunions don’t form long-lasting relationships throughout their lives. Well, I guess I’m another ticker on that statistical table. Maybe I can’t predict the future, but I don’t expect to come back to this block again after we bury mother. For that matter, I don’t think anyone else—except for that woman whose name I never knew—will ever be on this block again.

I’ve the feeling I probably won’t be at another funeral, except my own, if anybody decides to have one. It doesn’t matter to me, and how could it once I’m gone? But I can’t speak for other people.

I expect—I didn’t say think, much less anticipate or predict—that barring some accident or disaster, no one who knows me will die before I undergo the operation to complete my transformation. So mother’s the last person to know me only by my current name, a label chosen for the vessel I’ve inhabited through these years. For a good many years, she’s heard my voice only over the phone. Still, it was the voice of the boy, the young man, she raised. As time went on, of course, I wasn’t as young or as much of a man as the one who inhabited her house, ate her and ate her food. Had she seen me, I’d’ve borne less and less resemblance to the one she birthed.

But, I guess she’d’ve recognized me. And that’s the reason why our relationship continued only over the telephone through the years. I know this; I stayed away because I didn’t want to be around anyone who’d recognize the boy, the man, I once was, even if they could see and understand who stood before them and what that person—I-- was becoming. For no one, including me, ever recognizes what is present. And there’s no way to reunite with it, and sometimes no way to connect with it in the first place.

44. Another Season

Perhaps that winter wasn’t any longer or colder than any of the others. Or it could be that people here needed to remember it that way. It’s amazing, the things people try to explain with it.

And it seems everyone has such a season. For my grandmother, it began the day her son—the brother (at least, I assume he was) mother never talked about, the uncle I never met—was born. I heard about him from my grandmother, and from other people. He died too young and far away, they said. He and a bunch of young men who died with him were memorialized, which is not to say remembered, with stones far away from this block.

What little that’s been recorded about his life didn’t include that winter, which had already begun by the time he was born and didn’t end—if it ever did—until some time long after the telegram, and what remained of him, came from Korea.

It didn’t end, either, when Adam bolted from that camp he would never name. (As best as I’ve been able to tell, it was Bergen-Belsen. What value does a name have, anyway, except that you can attach it to another name?) If there was a respite, it may’ve been been during the months he spent in a half-timber house far from any town the Allies or Nazis thought to be worth taking. Wind and snow swirled outside. It didn’t end when he got to this block.

In the logic of the TV programs I used to see and most movies and the novels they made us read in school, it somehow made perfect sense that Adam killed himself on the night before Christmas Eve. All the plot ingredients were there for preparation and consumption: impending holidays, a man alone who no longer believes (if he ever did) in God, or the gods—in other words, the hope for an end to suffering and defeat, and the promise that nothing would ever prolong his or any man or woman’s wait for it.

Of course, the logic of entertainment (however exalted its medium may be) has as much to do with life on this block as rises or falls in the exchange rate between the dollar and currencies or bars of gold no one on this block has ever seen. That logic has influenced life, or the liberty of anyone to pursue any pleasure to be derived from it, about as much as the life and death of an uncle I never met on some nameless hill in a country nobody on this block would’ve ever heard of otherwise. Why, his death couldn’t even end the winter my grandmother always talked about! It was hard; it was cold; it was coming and there was nothing anybody could do about it, she said.

In stories—like the ones I had to read for school—mourning ends when spring begins. If that were so, it’d make perfect sense that I was at mother’s funeral as winter draws near. So it’s also make sense Adam died on the night before Christmas Eve.

Somehow, though, it always seemed that whatever, whoever was lost with the early morning light was trapped, frozen in nebulous glaciers that didn’t retreat with the first rays of the equinox. Those skies, it seemed, simply moved further along like the rivers into which buds fell from trees.


43. The Colors of Other Storms


She never spoke of gathering clouds. Mother didn’t, either, but then she wasn’t one to speak about the weather.

I didn’t understand why until I saw it for myself. Of course, in her childhood home, Mrs. Littington sometimes wouldn’t see rain, or even clouds, for months at a time.

Every evening, the sun set wider and brighter behind trees that ringed the sea from her front yard, around a shoreline that arced like a boomerang back to the mountains she could see when she looked directly in front of her. For weeks, through August and September, and sometimes October, the sun—colored like the earth of the nearby hillsides—filled the waves with a power that burned foam away, leaving the most intense shade of azur—too much for the bluest of eyes, accustomed as they are to the flat colors, interrupted only by splashes of white, of the northern oceans.

She was right. I had to see that to understand why the part of the world where she grew up—even the gray city, Toulon, that she knew, where ships drifted away and disappeared beyond waves: ships heavy with their freight of secrets—is called the Cote d’Azur. The sea, the sky, at night or during the day, do not turn into shades of black or gray. Under the moon, nothing does.

And so even in Toulon, gray and gritty even before the Luftwaffe dropped bombs on it, the passage of days, of lives, happens through intensifying shades of blue and rose turning to orange, and back.

She remembered the day she left. It was close to evening. Blue hues deepened, as if the sea had engulfed the sun but couldn’t put it out. Instead, the sun refracted the depths of the sea through the stars and under bristles of cedar trees.

There was not darkness, no blankets of clouds: only more color, more intense and consuming hues, than even her eyes, which were accustomed to months of sun followed by months of rain, could take. Or take with her, she said.

Still, she never complained about this block, even though she wouldn’t’ve stayed any longer than she had to. Summer heat-- not light-- blinded people here: It led the eye to cracks in faded bricks. So did the clouds: layers of reflections of the shingles and windows of the houses here.

On this block, the clear blue sky—on those rare occasions when we really had one—suspends time, freezes motions—even those of the face—like a moments recollected from dreams. On the other hand, time, at least in every story I’ve heard or read, marches and gathers like the bodies of water that become storm clouds.

That’s how it is; that’s how it was—except in Adam’s stories. Or in Mrs. Littington’s, though she hardly ever told them. I don’t remember when I heard them: I don’t think she would’ve told my mother—or maybe she did, once or twice. But mother wasn’t interested in hearing about any other time or place but the one she was in. She’d’ve never understood what Mrs. Littington might’ve had to say about this place; she had no interest in Mrs. Littington’s Cote d’Azur or prewar Europe, for she’d never been, and never would be, any place but here.

And, through all those years we’ve spoken over the phone, mother never asked where I was: only that I had some place to say and something to eat. The sun from the Mediterranean, the wind down the Rhone—nothing like those things would’ve mattered to her.

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...