Category Archives: Postscript

Emily Webb

Growing Up Lucy

for Genaro

I.

I distinctly remember the moment when I became a calamity. It occurred mere minutes after learning I had become an older sister at four years old—a reckless age when scabbed knees are still considered cute.

While some of the frantic events that day linger as fragments in my memory, I still vividly recall my father trudging toward me as I lounged in my pink and cream plastered bedroom, filling my daily quota of coloring. I noticed how his bristly eyebrows crinkled together in a frustrated panic while he struggled to lure me away from my coloring book.

“Em, you need to come with me to the hospital right now,” my father pleaded between heaves of breath. “We have to go meet your baby sister.”

As he wildly whirled his hands in the doorway to hurry me downstairs, I couldn’t seem to understand what was possibly more important than finishing my Crayola opus. Sure, I knew that we had to make room for this tiny newborn in our already tiny family. I just didn’t see what all the fuss was about—my new sister was going to be another rambunctious kid just like me.

In waiting for her arrival, I had planned a gamut of adventures that would have trained this girl for her new role as my partner-in-crime. We were going to jiggle to the best tunes blaring from my Playskool cassette player, chitchat over cups of fathomed tea in my mossy playhouse, even rummage through my costume chest to flaunt the glitziest jewels and chicest outfits. Little did I realize that such overly eager impulses could get me into some tight troubles.

Caught up in the fantasy of being an older sister, I strolled over to the door of my closet and peered through its hinges to gawk at my father, who was frantically rifling through clothes to pack a suitcase for me.

“Hi, Daddy!” I shrieked through the crack, though he was too frazzled to respond. “I can see you! Look, Dad! I’m in the doo—”

Before I could even breathe out another chuckle, my father finished packing and abruptly slammed the closet door, inadvertently clinching my lips between its hinges. I still remember the searing twinge of hurt that pulsated beneath my lip tissue as I yelped for him through tears and muffled speech.

Though I knew that my father did not mean to inflict pain on my motor mouth with what felt like a closet chokehold, I realized years later that the episode was entirely self-inflicted. It was the birth of a hot mess. I bore a fat lip a week later to prove it.

II.

My mother never spent much time with her father as a child, though she cherished the moments when they’d plop in front of the tube together and watch their nightly program. In her small brick colonial in Queens, my mother would not have much of a say when it came to choosing the family programming on their single Magnavox television set. She usually had to tolerate her other five relatives wielding the dial, including my grandfather. He would often force her to sit through repeats of I Love Lucy, the celebrated six-year sitcom starring Lucille Ball, the outlandish funnywoman who cracked the televised veneer of a poised housewife with uproarious hijinks.

Though the show had been playing on air over and over again for almost twenty years, my mother would still strain her paunched baby cheeks from giggling at Lucy’s wild antics. Alongside her father, she would watch in hysterics as Lucy gulped down too many spoonfuls of Vitameatavegamin—an alcohol-based serum that was “rich in megetables and vinerals”—or when she played Harpo Marx’s reflection. She delighted in listening to her father chortle whenever Lucy would screw up another one of Ricky’s gigs at the club or bawl like a child after getting caught in her shenanigans. I can imagine my grandfather letting out his signature cackle—reminiscent of the Count from Sesame Street, though missing its Transylvanian nuances—as my mother looks over to catch his revelry and follow suit.

III.

Somehow, stories of my dumb luck or casual misfortune have become prime dinner conversation. That time I lost grip of the leash on Aunt Tracy’s dog after being startled by another dog’s bellowing bark, for example. Or the time I desperately needed to pee while stranded on a tarmac for seven hours before my first international flight, alone. Or even the time I accidentally blasted Blondie’s “Call Me” across the quiet section of my college’s library when my headphones popped out of my computer. These recurring tales of my awkward pain have caused my family to christen me with nicknames. The most popular one, as of late, has been “calamity”—in the loveliest of ways, my folks assure me, though I still dole out an eyeroll every now and then.

If you ask my mother, she will insist that I’m just as endearingly clumsy as Lucille. I would expect as much from the woman who loafs around our house in ratty, pink pajamas, printed with that iconic scene of Lucy and Ethel gorging themselves with chocolates off a speeding conveyor belt. Those pajamas have floated through almost every distinct moment of my childhood for as long as I can remember, whether my mother was scolding my mindless antics or guffawing over my latest mortifying episode. Those pajamas have watched me bloom into a calamity while trying to grasp adulthood. I just wonder how long it will take before I bloom out of it.

IV.

A grand horn medley swells with the babaloo shimmy of maracas as Lucy’s opening credits swipe across the screen and introduce that iconic episode, “Job Switching.” When the screen fades into a shot of the Ricardos’ modest living room, Ricky walks on set by slamming the front door and calling for his crazed redhead in a huff. Lucy then tramples onscreen and chirps out a loud “is that you, sweetie pie?” ready to sling her arms around her husband until she catches his fuming glare.

Before she can retreat backstage, Ricky grumbles Lucy’s name with his burly Cuban accent and reels his finger inward to summon her as if she were an impudent child. Lucy’s lips curl into a guilty cringe, a response I recognize.

This time, Lucy’s crime is overdrawing her bank account. Ricky reads aloud a note that she leaves on one of her checks: “Dear teller, be a lamb and don’t put this through ‘til next month.”

As the audience chortles off-screen, Lucy winces under Ricky’s hard stare and starts to wring her hands together, as if trying to scrub the proverbial red off.

“I don’t know what’s the matter with you,” Ricky whines. “Every month, every single month, your bank account is overdrawn. Now what is the reason?”

The shrill pitch in Ricky’s outraged voice sounds similar to my mother’s when she would chastise my senseless behavior as a kid. That time I ran into oncoming traffic, the afternoon I left our basement door open and caused my baby sister to topple down the stairwell—you know, “kid stuff.”

While my mother has disciplined me for reckless antics over the years, I would never have served her as cheeky of a retort as Lucy’s when she tells Ricky, “You don’t give me enough money!”

The audience then falls into a bout of rousing laughter while Ricky and Lucy begin to bicker about who works harder in supporting the family. Sick of arguing about their responsibilities, Ricky finally challenges his wife to experience his life in the working world and apply for a job. With her head held exceedingly high, Lucy appears confident when she accepts this test of her competency, though we all know how she fares after working as a candy maker at Kramer’s Kandy Kitchen.

V.

While he would yuck it up watching Lucy raise all sorts of hell on screen, my grandfather could have been a comedian in his own right. My mother remembers the way he would spill out cheeky one-liners almost as if they were scripted. “Do as I say, don’t say as I do,” he’d say whenever his offspring caught him disobeying his own rules, or he might say, “I zigged when I should have zagged,” if he took the wrong route during a car ride. My grandfather hardly seemed to take himself seriously, even as the head of the household.

Though I still find it hard to believe that this former sailor, carpenter and World War II veteran could deliver such hilarious lines as if it were his job. I suppose there must be a kooky gene floating somewhere in our family line. While I’ve listened to my mother tell stories about his shenanigans over the years, I can’t seem to conjure enough of my own memories about my grandfather’s double life as a jokester.

When I look back on my whirlwind childhood, I can only piece together his vibrant presence in old photographs. I am often posing with my grandfather on some patriotic holiday—whether it be Memorial Day or the Fourth of July—his sanded palms cradling me close while we share a dimpled grin. I slightly remember the way my grandfather would watch over our family like a vessel, anchoring himself in an armchair at any gathering so that he could play with his grandkids and still watch the Mets game. He would often kick back and watch me ricochet around the room, cackling in awe of my boundless energy.

The only memento of my grandfather that still rings clear is his old, hearty laugh. It fueled my childish abandon when I scaled countertops for unreachable treats or played hardcore rounds of leapfrog. It made me feel daring and invincible, even when the calamity unfolded in welts and scrapes. I felt like I could do no wrong around my grandfather, no matter how impulsive or foolish I acted.

VI.

The camera cross fades into a bleak workroom at the candy factory, its walls seemingly starved of rich colors despite the black and white transmission. Enter Lucy and her faithful accomplice, Ethel (dressed in smocks and deflated chef hats) filing in behind their supervisor. As they walk into the workroom, Lucy and Ethel catch another employee sitting at a workbench and whisking her hand around in a frothy pool of chocolate.

When their supervisor comes to an abrupt halt stage right, the disastrous duo reacts on cue as they topple over each other with a jerk. With a taut frown flaunting her authority, their supervisor doles out instructions that raise the tight vessels of her bony neck.

“Ricardo, I’m going to put you to work chocolate dipping,” she beckons over to Lucy with a tone of inflated command. “You say you’ve had experience?”

Distracted by the mesmerizing efficiency of the other worker, Lucy waits a beat until she snaps out of her ditzy trance.

“Oh, yes ma’am. I’m a dipper from way back,” the redhead assures her boss with a spritely tone. “They used to call me the Big Dipper.”

Lucy turns to Ethel and rewards her punch line with a proud chortle until the audience joins in. The camera then focuses on the supervisor, her lips pursing into a firm crease and her eyes bugging out in scorn. Catching this displeased reaction, Lucy soon cuts her guffaw short and instead lets out what sounds like the bleat of a queasy doe.

“There is no room in this plant for levity, however weak,” the supervisor remarks. Lucy responds with a faint “yes ma’am,” quickly collapsing the dimples carved in her radiant cheeks.

When the supervisor decides to escort Ethel offstage and place her in a different department, Lucy hops onto a stool next to the employee hard at work and settles herself at the table, complete with a tub of melted chocolate, fresh candy and a wooden cutting board. Before she gets her hands dirty, Lucy peers over at the other worker to observe her mechanical motions. Her curious smirk signals the workings of a rascal—I can tell because I wore that same simper just before the door hinge cut my mischief short.

Once she believes she can handle the candy dipping process, Lucy blithely scoops a glob of melted chocolate out of its tub and spatters it onto her cutting board. She feverishly swishes her fingers around in the bubbling liquid, looking back at her coworker every now and then to check if she’s doing it right. As she continues to play in this muddy puddle, Lucy begins to prod the chocolate with a deliriously chipper grin, almost as if she were punching piano keys in a grand concerto. Ignoring wads of candy that drop around her workspace, Lucy flings its remains into a pile on the table and spatters the chocolate dripping from her fingers into that mess. The calamity builds to a crescendo and howls of mirth rise from the audience.

Before she proceeds to muck around in this slop, Lucy suddenly flickers her wide, dopey eyes across the room when she hears a fly buzzing overhead. She follows its path until it finally lands on her coworker’s face. Acting on a sheer impulse to kill the critter, Lucy whacks her sticky hand against her co-worker’s cheek, prompting the woman to strike back with another chocolate smack.

The audience starts to hoot once Lucy turns to the camera, her face slathered in globs of chocolate. She then gasps with disgruntled breath as the screen fades out.

 

VII.

One moment that crawls into my mind when I consider my grandfather’s humor is the time he broke out in uproarious laughter after raving at my aunt in public over family dinner. As I gorged myself with plates of gnocchi and eggplant parmesan alongside my relatives at an Italian restaurant, I could hear a ruckus coming from the other end of the table where my aunt sat across from my grandfather. As the noise grew louder, I looked over to find my aunt wrangling with a wine bottle that was clutched in my grandfather’s wrinkled, wobbling grip. I assumed that he was trying to pour what might have been his third glass, but my aunt wanted to stop him since she knew that he could keep pouring.

“Stop it, okay?” she grunted in an audible whisper while hunched over her food, struggling to free the bottle from his fingers. “You’ve had enough already.”

“What’s the matter?” my grandfather whined. His grimace expressed all of his waning strength at seventy-five years old.

As he started to raise his voice—partly due to frustration and partly due to his poor hearing—I noticed how patrons sitting at other tables peered over their shoulders and gawked at this hollering old man. They were enthralled by his tantrum, as if he were a zany child.

“Will you stop?” my aunt sternly uttered under her breath, glaring at my grandfather until he released that coveted bottle. “We’re in public—people are staring.”

“So what?” he shouted in what sounded like a fit of enraged amusement. “I yam what I yam!”

Though it felt inappropriate at the time, I couldn’t help but giggle at my grandfather’s cartoonish outburst. It resounded against the restaurant walls with an odd note of both triumph and resignation. While I scanned the reactions from my family around our table, I caught my mother hiding a weak smirk as she focused her expression in her plate of angel hair.

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Nate Pritts

Wake Up Call

All of my dreams get interrupted
by waking up, by the distraction
of having to actually live—
to walk around & bump into things,
to breathe real air with consequence
& weight. Still the basil in the window
quietly getting bigger, the cilantro
brazenly becoming pungent
& filling the house. My pillow
aches with loneliness which makes it
just like the small patch of weedflowers
wanting those deer to come back.
Every morning, your face
right beside mine, & me hidden
under my hair, behind my very own face,
no matter what I dream in the dark.
Most nights I find myself
in situations I can’t get out of,
trapped through celestial mechanics
in some different story while my own
real feelings hover just out of reach
like pollen in the air in summer.
Invisible but with repercussions.
Surrounded by a flurry of questions.
Sometimes you just need to get
belligerent in the face of the whole
universe getting sappy. We fall
the way the leaves fall, slowly.

 

Alarms at Noon

I’m always talking about the soul,
about the divine hovering

like a voyeur outside my window.
But what I’m wondering is how

the early season bumblebee,
size and shape of my fist,

fits into the overall scheme
as it knocks against my window

like a drunk friend jabbing
a finger into my chest

to emphasize how we were done,
really done forever?

Such beautiful armies are gathering
on my hilltop stronghold,

all their armor glistening
like a birthday cake, the mud

turning green under their
aggressive boots. I mean tulips,

of course, & all those stick trees
getting full, baby yellow buds

screaming on the branches.
When the bluebird stared at us,

tiny beak chittering,
we saw the soft white throat,

we saw that it was good.
We guessed there were other things

we couldn’t possibly see.

 

Infinity’s Kiss        (Sunflowers)

My primary habitat is memory

                a space opened up

inside of regular time

                where duration cannot be calculated

because none of these frames of reference

                mean anything        condensed as they are

into a field of stunning engagement

all these different waves of light

                find themselves entangled

some stories move without any action

                devoid of memorable occurrence

nothing happens

but the tension builds

                anyway        clipped reactions

inexplicable to our planet or the inhabitants

                with their complex incompressible souls

we worship geometric figures

we worship remnants

we believe in something solid

                an eruption of sunflowers on the side of the house

in a memory someone is having

                we are all experiencing the thrill of past life

reified & alive now

                a single compact moment

when everything good / every pleasurable memory

                comes back to haunt us

to live ghostly        permeating the present

                & we believe in something solid

                we believe the stories we tell about ourselves
are ourselves

                we believe that everything is lost around us

& we believe everything lost can be found.


Nate Pritts is an alum of SUNY Brockport where he took classes with William Heyen and Anthony Piccione and spent a lot of time walking by the Erie Canal. He went on to earn an MFA in Poetry (Warren Wilson College) and PhD in British Romanticism (University of Louisiana, Lafayette). He has published six books of poetry, most recently Right Now More Than Ever, as well as several chapbooks including Pattern Exhaustion and Life Event. His work has appeared in American Poetry Review, Gulf Coast, Southern Review, Black Warrior Review, The Boston Review and Poets & Writers Magazine. He founded H_NGM_N, an independent literary press, in 2001. He lives in the Finger Lakes region of New York.

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Rachel Svenson

Continents

In November, I tried to recreate Western New York snow over the phone for Amadou Bah, who had never touched it. He had seen snow on postcards, or on the film sets behind Arnold Schwarzenegger on village movie nights, but the Gambia never experiences winter the way it hits New York. Listening to his voice, I could almost picture him on the campus sidewalk next to me, suffering the cold like he would suffer biting animals, muscles pulled tight inside someone else’s coat.

That afternoon Geneseo’s academic buildings towered over a row of salt- stained SUVs parked on the road, which tilted down into acres of snow-covered valley. I walked slowly from class with my cell phone, lodged halfway between seasons and continents, trying to pretend I was Amadou seeing it for the first time.

“It’s like pieces of icy cotton,” I explained finally into the phone, breath clouding. “It tastes like the water we drank at the marketplace this summer. Everything feels like the inside of a freezer, and the snow is everywhere, sort of like white sand on the beaches where you are. It almost blinds you when you first step outside.” As I spoke the snow melting on my boots morphed into something foreign and mystical, and I held the image in my head as if to transmit it telepathically.

“Yah, okay, very nice,” Amadou stammered uncertainly. In transit around me, the bundled students took on puppet-like qualities. I barely registered them as I approached my apartment. There was still something painful about communicating with Amadou over the language and distance barrier, as if we kept closing in on the cure for a disease then losing everything in the last crucial seconds. I desperately wanted to give him an image of my home, like the thousands I had taken back from his, but my serious thoughts were cut off by his sudden laughter.

“Rach,” Amadou managed, and then lapsed into giggles again. I could picture him doubled over slightly on the concrete wall of his family’s veranda and shaking his head against the phone. Though the joke was a mystery to me I laughed with the pleasure of hearing him laugh. Because sometimes, it was funny. Laughter was our way of compromising, meeting in the middle with something we both understood. Even that summer, face to face, humor had been our best language.

By that month in Penyem, Amadou’s village, the star Wadar would have been high on the horizon, a portent for the end of the rainy season. The harvest would be nearly complete, and the fields would be dotted with women bent against the weight of their babies, knocking peanuts from the roots of the plants. Aicha, the baby girl who was born on July 24 while my group of volunteers slept a few yards away, would be learning to smile at three months old, and choking dust would have begun to plume behind bikes and cars on the roads.

August, four months before the snow hit New York, had marked the middle of West Africa’s hot, rainy season. My group of volunteers, had accomplished our goal of building a chain-linked fence around the community garden in Penyem. We boarded a plane home from Dakar on the morning of the ninth. That afternoon, I found myself in my home city, staring through the Buffalo airport window at my father’s parked grey Sonata.

Except for a few quick, static phone calls through the African Gam-Cell company, which allowed even some of the poorest families in Penyem to own a cheap cell phone, I hadn’t had contact with my mom and dad in two months. Their faces behind the windshield looked unreal until my mom got out of the car and motored toward me, leaving the passenger door wide open.

The familiarness of her, rounding the revolving doors in black Teva sandals and half-rimmed glasses, unraveled me. We were both laughing by the time she got to me and we stood like that, locked together and swaying, as my dad waited behind, grinning and breathing like a wrestler in his hiking boots and a “Life is Good” T-shirt.

I don’t remember crying, though I must have; I remember the relief and weightlessness as my dad hoisted the purple monster of a backpack from my shoulders into the Sonata’s trunk. My mom took the African drum I’d bought for my brother from my hands, smiling at me like I was going to disappear. I grinned helplessly. My skin felt travel-thin, and I had forgotten how good it felt to have my parents lift my burdens, at least for a little while.

“Did you just get this cleaned?” I marveled, running my hand over the seats of my dad’s car. The vehicle seemed an impossibly tidy after two months of crowded African bush taxis with ripped upholstery.

My dad grinned and tapped the new air freshener dangling from the mirror. He looked both exhausted and relieved in the reflection as he buckled into the driver’s seat, his balding hair sporting a few more grays than I re- membered. “I can’t believe you’re home,” he said honestly. “Mom and I have just been talking about this day for so long, coming to pick you up—it’s kind of unreal.”

My mom got in the car silently. She kept glancing at me over the seat, the corners of her mouth twitching, and then squeezing my hand and turning away in tears. I remember feeling moved but muted, unable to figure out how to convince her everything was actually alright. It was my father who slid his finger under my mother’s L.L. Bean wristwatch, as if to remind her of the here and now, and held it gently hooked there as we drove.

I thought of Amadou then, as I had every mile over the Atlantic. He had professed responsibility for everything that summer; for me not stepping in puddles on the road, for the hardest labor at the garden fence project, for his huge family’s well-being. He was capable, there was no doubt about that, and as a man and first son from his culture he wore responsibility like a God-given weight. My independent, feminist side balked at his self-importance, and yet I had needed his hand on my back to guide me away from scorpion grasses, and his effortless categorizing of the complex African family system, and his quiet reminders not to use my left hand for eating. It was the way things were. When on hot nights his mother and father curled up outside on their concrete veranda with the younger children, Amadou would sit up late like a watchdog, guarding them from something I didn’t understand and calculating his life, as he once put it, like math.

Part of me wanted to be guarded by my parents back in the States, to curl up in their familiar asparagus and rice dinners and doze on the front porch for hours while they held up my life for me. Coming home from Africa was strangely similar to coming home from college—I felt both carried by my parents and responsible for protecting them, retroactively, from the loss of a daughter to an unknown world.

Perhaps partly for this reason, the one burden I couldn’t unload on them that day was that of missing Amadou: his company, his lean body, his tight smile. His loving declarations.

My mother knew our relationship had gotten romantic. I’d told her one night on the phone, pacing between the latrine and the kitchen, just desperate for someone to make sense of what I’d allowed to happen. Shaking with nerves, I described our friendship, Amadou’s overtures, my uncertainty and growing trust. After a silence that had nothing to do with the phone connection, my mom took a deep breath.

“The best love can be the kind that you never expected,” she had said.

It had surprised me, this weird new love—it was like an electric shock. That night I had latched on to my mother’s words like a prayer, but in the car with her I could barely think of Amadou. I focused instead on the concrete things around me, on telling my parents about the spicy food, the women who lifted their arms like aggressive birds when they danced in circles in be- tween chores. I talked about the fence, a definable project. A large part of me was desperate for my trip not to become a silent stereotype or boxed-up love story, as people crave it, or perhaps as I did.

The fence had been the daily routine, the discussion topic, the meeting point of the village. Every morning, before the day’s heat could burn our lungs or get into the ground, we would gather up shovels and water bottles and walk the hundred yards to the garden, scattering clusters of goats and chickens. Three American girls, four boys and our Gambian counterparts, all men, pulled up the old, rotting fence before mapping out the new one. I loved the hand-hardening, skin-darkening work, even though our African helpers could effortlessly carry six iron posts to my two. It became a given that the men took the harshest work. The girls and I accepted our gentler tasks with resentment, carrying water and untangling wire as the men sweated.

Amadou was one of the Gambian team, slighter and quieter than the other men. He wore a red baseball cap and a sleeveless blue jersey and ducked his head in deference when he laughed. Once, on a digging day, he came up behind me and gently removed the shovel from my hands.

“Like this,” he corrected seriously, and I bit back my protests, stepping back over a bed of pungent, rotting mangoes to watch him dig the hole with fantastic efficiency.

“Thanks, I get it now,” I cut in finally.

He handed me the shovel and grinned. “Don’t strain yourself,” he advised, paternalistic.

I rolled my eyes. “I’m fine.” Amadou watched me keep digging, slowly but better. You work hard, Rach,” he said.

I looked in his face for the joke, but there was none, and I smiled back at

him, surprised by the strength of my gratitude. He picked up another shovel and worked next to me in silence.

In the U.S., my dad’s car passed a co-ed construction crew, two McDonalds, fleets of semi trucks. They gleamed like bars of gold against rows of summer trees, gorgeous and manicured; I’d never noticed how many of them lined the highways, or how smoothly the pavement hummed under the car. I thought with amazement, I can slur my English here and still be understood. I can look a man in the eye without appearing brash.

When I got home, I took a real shower with heat, and tried to stop com- paring everything around me to its equivalent in the Gambia. I didn’t want to be obnoxious about the contrast, even though I felt it acutely. I was already hoarding memories as if preparing for a hellish, mind-erasing blizzard.

A week after I got back, I got a call from Marissa in Michigan. Of our set of eight volunteers she had been the first to split off during that exhausting return trip from Dakar. After we waved goodbye at her connecting gate, the rest of us had stood awkwardly in our African garb, amidst the business-suited airport rush, for a long time. “And then there were seven,” murmured Will.

We’d all been thinking the same thing. Now that we were splitting up, I wasn’t positive anymore if I’d ever see them again.

It was Marissa who had seemed to organize and epitomize the oddities of our group, with her high-pitched laugh, springy dark hair and collection of hemp and glass necklaces. When I picked up the phone from home, I leaped up at the sound of her voice, squealing my African name.

Jainabaaaaa!”

“Manga—kasumai! Benu kine?” I reverted to Jolla automatically. The African sounds solidified all the memories instantly—the communal dinners, the card games under mango trees, the clogged, colorful marketplaces—in a way English conversations could not.

We babbled our way through our African languages and then reverted back to English as I knelt, shivering with nostalgia, on my bed. I had been practicing not to lose those speech patterns, the vividness of the trip—my room was covered with African fabrics. I clutched the phone like a lifeline.

“I miss African fruit,” Marissa groaned. “And bush taxis, those death traps. And the kids, and building the fence.” She paused. “You must miss Amadou a lot.”

I didn’t reply. It was both mortifying and thrilling to remember that she had witnessed our romantic relationship. It was a relief not to have to start from scratch to tell the story, but picturing Amadou waiting for me halfway across the world tightened my chest. I felt thin under the weight of his expectations, my expectations, and those of my family and friends.

 

When I found the Operation Crossroads Africa program online and spontaneously applied the fall before, I had longed to seek out these strong connections. I wanted to challenge myself with cross-cultural relationships, do something that scared me. I had pictured running with local kids in the rain, holding their hands, forging close friendships over cultural barriers— but I hadn’t planned for what would happen after I left.

Amadou had dreaded that separation visibly, and expressed it often. I hated to hear the listlessness and lack of hope in his voice because it mirrored mine. I remember insisting almost angrily that new adventures were a certainty, that of course he wouldn’t be bored out of his mind forever.

That day in July we sat on our bench outside the day-care center, my group’s makeshift compound, trailing our sandaled feet in the dust while kids thudded past. My group’s approaching departure filled the hot air.

“Everything changes,” I said, groping for some big-picture concepts. With two weeks left I could still talk about leaving in the abstract. “You’ll grow peanuts and get a new radio and see your friends, and I’ll see my family and go to school and learn some amazing things…”

Amadou interrupted me. “Fuck-shit,” he said softly, more like a reaction than an insult, and I stopped, realizing how stupid I sounded.

Amadou’s elbows were propped on the knees of his favorite jeans, his eyes on the running kids. The jeans, embroidered with the name of a rapper I didn’t know, he wore even in the heat. His toes poked out of ripped Adidas sandals, rough and cracked just like his hands. The marks on them were from accidents with the machetes he used to clear brush in the fields. On his family’s cattle and peanut farm, he had told me, there was no shortage of work to build hard hands. He had stopped school after sixth grade because of his family’s money issues.

I picked at the hem of my wrap skirt, throat closing. “It’s so strange, Ams,” I managed. “I can’t imagine not being here, not waking up to cows and goats and the call to prayer, visiting your compound every day. Your family is like family to me.”

Amadou nodded. “They are your family now, you know. You are very close to me now and they know this, they are very happy.” He chuckled a little. When he laughed his cheeks made smooth, nut-colored hills and his eyes softened from their normal reserve.

“I will miss everyone,” he said, biting his bottom lip and looked at me. “It will be a long time missing, Rach.”

My heart kicked like a donkey, like a girl’s heart, as it always did when he said my name. He’d always called me by my true name, and was the only person in Penyem to ask for it. When we met at the fence, I introduced myself as Jainaba, the name I’d been given on the first day, but Amadou shook his head. “No, your American name,” he said. My name had sounded strange on his tongue, sharpened into a hard Rruh-chel, but I craved hearing it, to be reminded daily of who I really was under the African clothes, the stumbling local languages and plaited, sun-baked hair.

He shortened it to Rach later. It was these small things that I fought for so hard when I came home, battling the bad phone connection, time difference and culture shift to get in a five-minute phone call to Amadou’s cell phone. When the connection went through we reminisced almost desperately, about our group members and their absence in our lives, about fresh, dense cow’s milk, which he had presented to me in a plastic bag. We talked about the weekend trip to the beach at Gunjur where the two of us walked for hours by the fishing boats and seagulls, talking about Gambian marriage and religion. He had stopped in the waves then and peered out at the water, which he was afraid to swim in, as if looking for something.

“Ruh-chel. Where is your home?” he had asked.

I thought about it and pointed out and slightly northward to some imaginary point on the horizon. “It’s right about there. Buffalo, New York. My parents are probably starting breakfast right now.” I fought a wave of home- sickness by digging my toes hard into the sand. Amadou was still, letting the bottom of his shorts get drenched by the waves.

“That’s the U.S., right there?” He pointed, and I nodded. He squinted as if he could see the Statue of Liberty. “The U.S,” he repeated, as if he were pronouncing, paradise.

I remember reading much further into his tone, too: reverence and resignation and bitterness and disgust and understanding and misunderstanding. I stepped back to give him space for something I couldn’t, or perhaps didn’t want, to interpret. So many Gambians thought the US had everything, and I wanted to tell Amadou that lots of people lost their dreams in that paradise he talked so much about. Instead I was silent and we walked on. Later he showed me a childhood game he played with his brothers, where they pushed their feet into the wet sand to build little compounds, and drew lines for roads with their tiny fingers.

 

Months later, in New York, my house seemed filled with people. Neighbors stopped on the porch to see how my trip had gone, and my friends wanted to see pictures, which I flipped through so many times I memorized the order. My aunts called, eager to hear how the traveler was. I had become the family poster child for world travel, and felt smothered by the role, convinced I was fulfilling some awful stereotype and that the trip would be cheapened by their assumptions. Everything, it seemed, made me cry. My brother Eric, a year younger than me, sat up late with me going through my pictures again and again, listening to me tell him how Amadou had told me he would never joke with a woman, and how when he used English incorrectly he seemed to hit poetic truths I hadn’t considered. The tears seem wasteful, now, boxed up by time.

My parents, like my brother, were overly gentle. They were conscious, I think, that their daughter was going through something they could only guess at. They forgave my long silences, my excessive comments on the absurdity of our luxuries, the dishes I left out on the table. I had repeated for them the reminder I’d heard in my volunteer group, and from the Operation Crossroads orientation—that “return culture shock” would be more intense than in the other direction. My mother gathered this information up grate- fully and ran with it, telling friends and family over the phone that I was “adjusting.” I was grateful for the buffer, but didn’t understand the process myself. My own house felt like an inn, there to house this transitory version of myself temporarily.

With only a week left before my senior fall semester would start, I was driven home from my friend’s house with a high fever. I recognized the signs of malaria immediately—intermittent waves of fever, chills, and full-body aches—from the symptoms of my group members on the trip, and my mom skipped school to take me to the hospital the next morning.

In the same waiting room we’d sat in months before, for immunizations against the disease it seemed I’d gotten anyway, we sat in front of the televisions. My mom read her book diligently, her way of keeping calm, and sat up when a nurse approached us.

“You’re lucky,” the nurse said. “We only have one foreign diseases doctor in residence, and he’s in today. He’s one of the best doctors we have.” Her look was one of unmistakable pride. Dr. Kumbo, we learned, was famous for his intelligence, skill and also for the compassion and personality that made the resident nurses stand straighter behind their clipboards and say his name as if he, himself, was the cure.

We waited longer than we wanted without complaining in the little examination room. I clutched the exam table, grateful for my mother’s sol- id presence in the room, and fought foggy waves of nervousness. When Dr. Kumbo opened the door, he apologized for his lateness and shook our hands before leaning gracefully on a stool. He was shortish, younger than I had expected, maybe in his thirties with a full head of blond hair and comfortable eyes.

“You’ll probably have a lot of interested people coming in to ask you the same five questions,” he said apologetically. “We don’t get a lot of African dis- eases in here. But this is a private discussion, just so you know, and they don’t have to know anything we don’t want them to know. They’re just curious, as good medical professionals should be.” As he spoke, the waves of fear and sick inconsequence subsided.

“Will you give us a moment alone?” he asked my mother. My mom looked at me and raised her eyebrows, but left the room. I can only guess at what she was thinking.

Dr. Kumbo sat on the stool again. “I’ll be concise here,” he said kindly. “And I need you to be as honest as possible with me. Did you have sex while you were in Africa?”

The room was suddenly dislodged from the continental world, floating in some landless space and containing only me in my sweater and jeans, the exam table, the cabinets full of medical supplies, the man in front of me. I nodded, unable to speak. At that crossroad in my mind, Dr. Kumbo had ceased to be a doctor, and had become instead my only guide to surviving the next indefinitely long section of my life, with its own scorpion grasses and strange growths and unmarked roads.

Dr. Kumbo was nodding acceptingly.

“Were you safe?” he asked.

“Yes!” I was defensive. “We’re still in close contact. I talk to him every couple of days.” We agreed to give it a shot, I wanted to tell the doctor. I told Amadou that I would come back to the Gambia to visit when I got enough money. I needed to defend our relationship from something I couldn’t define, partly because I had a good idea of what Dr. Kumbo was going to say to me next.

“I ask you this because there are some things we have to rule out,” he said kindly. “You probably just have malaria, or something similarly non-life threatening, but there is a slight risk that you may be HIV positive.”

Shame washed over me like a cold bucket shower. I covered my face with my hands.

“A very slight chance,” Dr. Kumbo emphasized. “But it’s my responsibility to inform you of it. Okay?”

I nodded dumbly. My muscles felt shredded; the fever pounded at the backs of my eyes. You got yourself into this, I berated myself. You got yourself into this.

Dr. Kumbo studied my face gently for a second before taking off his gloves.

“I traveled a lot when I was younger, about your age,” he said. “I traveled to India, the Philippines—all over the place, anywhere I could go, I just wanted to go.” He tossed the gloves into the trash from his seat and rested his naked hands comfortably on his thighs. His gaze was steady, and by the way his voice changed I could tell he was uncharacteristically off the record. Empathy lifted my head. A central part of me understood the desire he described: to bust outward, to send your mind out before your body to all corners of the globe.

“I did some things I regretted,” he said. “With girls. We were young, I was stupid, far less prudent than you were. And there was no love there, as it sounds like you had.”

I cried to hear someone say it out loud.

He went on, “My experience from then on ended up being the catalyst that brought me here, to sit in front of you, to be a doctor of travel-borne diseases. I guess what I want to say is,” and he took a deep breath, searching carefully for words, “Travel brings out parts of you that you didn’t know existed. It changes your normal systems. You end up making decisions you wouldn’t expect of yourself in a million years.”

We looked at each other and I let out a laugh of relief or absurdity or nerves or all three. Dr. Kumbo closed his eyes as if to say, “I know, I get it.”

For a few minutes my mother, the hospital, the approaching semester, all were completely forgotten. What was left was an acute awareness of my solitude; I was suddenly inside a body I didn’t know or understand, a new physical landscape. The Rachel I had known was now polluted by an unknown toxin, overrun by outcroppings of guilt, pride, and longing, and ravaged by the strain of trying to fall asleep and wake up in another country. As I waited for my mother to come back into the room, I understood instinctively that my only destination from then on would be health. Not college, not Penyem, not Amadou. With the retreat came an overwhelming and surprising sense of peace.

The hospital performed some tests, and I stayed the weekend at the hospital, propped up in an otherwise empty room because my quarantine forbade roommates and discouraged visitors. This didn’t seem to bother my parents. My mother smoothed my forehead and brought me tupperware containers of strawberries. I kept the possibility of HIV a secret from her, and everyone, ashamed and determined to ride it out by myself; I wouldn’t receive conclusive tests until six months had passed. I fought my fever and slept. There was no room to imagine Amadou’s face as it would look if he were here, standing dwarfed by endless walls of chilled sterile tools, or tasting the relative luxury of hospital food, or staring down from the fifth floor of this brick and steel palace.

He called me that Sunday on my cell phone, breaking into my reverie of repair.

“Rach,” he said, his voice muffled by the bad connection. “I haven’t heard from you. You okay?”

“I really am,” I said, astonished at how easy it was to talk to him suddenly. His voice had changed for me; he seemed farther away even than he had before. The IV machine hummed peacefully next to me. I assured him I was well taken care of, that the malaria was under control. The HIV threat stayed lodged in my throat. I could tell Amadou was worried, but he subsided at the peace in my voice.

“Rach,” he sighed. I imagined him sitting on the edge of his straw bed, staring out past his door curtain into the afternoon courtyard, where chickens and goats scratched the dirt.

“Amadou,” I answered.

It was the start of a ritual we would establish in the next months of phone

contact, a cycle of repeating one another’s names, asking after the other’s parents and siblings, comparing our weather patterns as New York dipped into snow and the rains stopped in Penyem. The things that connected us now were few and simple.

That winter, November, I woke up with a shiver that had nothing to do with snow. I had dreamt that I was at a barbecue in the suburbs and felt a twitch in the air behind me. When I turned, hotdog in hand, I saw that Amadou was ripping a hole in the air, and through the hole I could see the red dust of Penyem.

“We are having a race,” he told me, his face blank with assumption. “Come and watch—I’ll win it for you.”

I called him that day. My brain hurtled ahead to marriage and moving to his village and growing peanuts, or flying him here to the cold, lonely de- mands of American capitalism, and I chilled at the thought of being trapped together in the wrong climate. I realized I was falling in love with New York— as irreversible and unexpected a love as I’d ever experienced. In the release, I felt again that familiar suspension between continents, rooted in both and neither.

“I thought I could do it,” I told him on the phone. “I really did.”

“Rach,” Amadou replied, voice shaking a little, “S’okay, you know. You are in the U.S, it’s very difficult.” I nodded as if he could see me, and he said, “You know I keep always on the good side, don’t worry much about me.”

It was what I needed to hear to pull out of Africa and root myself on that New York slope; Amadou knew this, I think, and granted me that leave as a parting gift. Navigating my campus that semester, searching out African clubs and classes and aesthetics, I protected and sometimes hated the weight and weightlessness of his gift, bursting as it was with sacrifice, and empty of accusation. Evidence that he was somewhere turning away with his own set of gifts, facing a familiar country made foreign.

 


 

Rachel Svenson is our first contributor to Post Script. Svenson graduated in 2010 with a degree in English (concentration creative writing). After graduating she moved to Brooklyn, and waitressed for a few months before being hired as a teaching assistant at VOICE Charter School, an elementary school in Queens. She is currently working odd jobs while submitting applications to MFA programs in New York City. Her advice to graduating seniors would be to carve time for creative projects, even if the choice is a tough one.

 

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