Only a Boy
by Anthony De Sa
A few months back, when it
was clear that the blood transfusions marked the beginning of the end,
my mother sat my sister and me down on her bed. That same woman now
stood in front of me: gaunt, pale and tired. But her eyes breathed life
or wanted to. She moved slowly, turned her back to us, faced the
mahogany veneered dresser and pulled open the middle drawer. On top, the
photograph of my father that rested against a pewter crucifix rattled
but didn't fall. He died when I was eighteen. He couldn’t
do anything now.
"Theresa, everything
in this drawer is for you. In here I have saved things that have
mattered most to me. I want them to matter to you. I am proud of the
woman you have become. I will always love you."
My sister’s muffled sobs
did not stop my mother as she turned to me with a pained expression
"This bottom drawer
is for you. In it you will find things to remember and people to
forgive. If I have not done enough…please forgive me."
~
With his lucky Canadian
dollar in hand, a mint conditioned passport in his pocket and a gold
crucifix clinging to his neck, Manuel Antonio Rebelo left. My father
left the poverty and beauty of Sao Miguel, Azores behind to "fazer
uma America" – make it in America.
My father’s personal
victory, his sense that he had arrived in this terra nova, was realized
the first time he was able to buy our Christmas toys at Simpson’s. He
saw it as an opportunity to bury our ethnicity, leave Kensington Market,
Joe’s Fish and SASMART to shop where os ingleses shopped.
I was six and my sister
was ten on that cold winter day. As we got off the Queen Street
streetcar in front of Simpson's, my mother dabbed her kerchief with spit
and swiped our faces clean. "Stay close to me, hold my hands and
don't touch anything." Before we actually went into the department
store we were allowed to marvel at the Simpson's window displays. There
were elves that skated on mirrors made to look like frozen ponds. I
remember the reindeer that were trying to fly, legs neatly tucked under
their chests but going nowhere – blinking lights, bells chiming. As we
turned the corner it was clear by the crowd that this was Santa's window
where he sat pulling a stuffed teddy bear out of a sac. He repeated this
motion over and over again – always the stuffed bear. In that same bag
an ugly rag doll with a bewildered expression awaited her turn. It was
never going to happen.
"It's time to go
inside." My mother’s gloved hand plucked me from the crowd.
As a family we entered
Simpson's through the heavy revolving door into a blast of warm air. The
yellow glow of the department stores main floor was unbelievable:
glittering glass cases, pretty ladies, tall and thin with up- do's and
generous smiles inviting us to approach their perfume counters. Their
lips were so red - eyes well defined and cheeks rouged. According to my
father only putas painted themselves. But it didn't stop him from
acknowledging their smiles with a proud nod, unwilling to reveal the
stuttering that plagued him all his life. He blamed his handicap for
holding him back from so much in this country.
"Manuel, I don't like
taking the elevators... I always feel so closed in. Can't we just go on
the moving stairs?"
"All the way to the
sssssixth floor?" he replied.
"Please, it’s just
one of those things in this country I'll never get used to."
As a man he acquiesced,
gave in to what he believed was the frivolities of the weaker sex. He
redirected the whole family and now led us toward the first escalator.
Trailing behind, my mother looked at me and smiled. She knew how much I
loved riding the escalators. She knew it thrilled me to take in the
expanse of each floor as the escalator ascended slowly - higher. My
sister stuck her tongue out at me envious of the shared moment between a
mother and her son.
The toy department
sparkled with thousands of lights. Huge paper castles and large toy
soldiers stood on guard at the top of the escalator adorning the sixth
floor - everything Christmas. "Where do I begin?" And as if in
reply I heard my father's stuttered rebuke,
"Mmmmmake sure you
choose sssssomething good, ssssstrong. I don't want toys mmmmmade by chineses."
It was painful noticing that his eyelids fluttered shut to the rhythm of
his stutter. I always felt like he needed my help to finish the
sentence, but I never dared – none of us did.
I had stared at my bedroom
ceiling for hours every night practicing my hand puppetry knowing I
needed something special - something my father would approve of.
Nothing. I was certain it would come to me when I saw it. My mother took
my hand and directed me to the noise of the fire engines and police
cars. Relieved, I knew my mother would let me choose freely without my
father’s constant dialogue with himself, "When I was a boy dings
were mmmmmmade by hand. Back in mmmmmy time we would be happy wid a
candy. You kids nnnnnow have......." And the droning would never
end until he got to the part where "at your age I carried cinco
sacos de batates, sem complaints." Carrying five sacs of
potatoes up a steep hill at such a tender age was always the clincher.
He always won.
I nervously scanned
through the incredible assortment of toys looking for something that
exuded "boyishness". I had seen my father’s reproachful
glances when he saw me skipping rope with my sister in the front yard or
when he noticed my baking prowess with my sister’s Easy-Bake Oven.
"What kinds of dings
are you teaching our sssssson?"
"Manuel, what are you
talking about?" But she knew exactly what he was talking about. She
had noticed that I was a sensitive and gentle boy. It didn't seem to
bother her. Truth be told she enjoyed a boy who didn't like all that boy
stuff: less work and certainly more peace of mind.
"It's your job to
make sure he doesn't turn into a...."
I quickly grabbed a toy
plane that was nearby.
"Manuel! How can you…"
I ran through the kitchen
making jet noises. "Prepare for landing!" I commanded as I
circled the kitchen table. My father lit a cigarette and punched through
the back door. He wasn't pleased and she was to blame.
The toy I chose had to be
strong and tough. And then I saw it - him - an 8 inch high action figure
standing at attention in his box. Through the small cellophane window he
"called" me - urged me to pick him. I saw the rugged hair and
beard of G.I. Joe - a black G.I. Joe with his sparkling dog tag resting
outside his army fatigues: rough and manly with a glint of military
violence in his eye and he was going to be my Christmas gift. My father
would proudly see me playing war games with G.I. Joe and I would still
have something I could take care of like the dolls my sister had. I
reached for him and raised him to meet with my mother’s relieved and
approving face.
~
They were calling it a
true Indian summer. I wouldn't have known. Her eyes had remained shut
for eight days, her voice stolen. The words were all mine and I was
growing weary of the monologue. The stagnant silence of the room was
punctuated with the only the bleeps of monitors or the soft shoes of
nurses coming in to do their work.
"Your mother can
still hear you," a kindly nurse offered. "It's always the last
thing to go."
I couldn’t help but feel
a certain relief that there was nothing left to say.
~
My father rounded the
corner of the aisle with my jubilant sister, her Thumbelina doll tucked
under her arm. With great confidence I thrust my G.I. Joe to meet my
father’s appreciative eyes. But all I saw was his angry glare. His
hand came down hard on a display shelf. A few people turned to look in
our direction.
"With everything in
dis store you pick a preto!"
He was not going to say
"nigger".
"Put dis back."
He spoke slowly, gritting his teeth. "Agora!"
Something had gone
terribly wrong. I thought he would approve. I was sure…And as he
reached for G.I. Joe I saw the velvet trimmed cuff of my mother's winter
coat stop him.
"Manuel, Acalmar."
She paused, took stock and opted for a more pleading tone.
"You asked the boy to
choose something and he did. He chose a fine soldier to play with so
let's leave it at that…please."
My face was inches away
from their intersecting forearms. Pee trickled down my leg blotting my
corduroys. My sister’s face turned red with the fear that my father
would notice.
The store clerk had been
watching the scene. He turned to me, noticed the darkened stain around
my crotch and pant leg. "That’s a real brave soldier you chose.
He’s going to show you how to be big and strong," and as he swept
past me he patted my head and urged me to move in the direction of my
sister – to safer ground. He knew.
My sister was waiting for
me, pulled me close by tugging at my sleeve and drew me down the aisle
away from my parents. As we moved away a familiar sound forced us to
turn. As if in slow motion, I saw the redness in his face and the
outstretched hand swinging away from his body. My mother staggered from
the blow, trying desperately not to fall. Her knees buckled as she
looked straight at us - eyes pleading for us to look away, as she fell
heavily to the ground.
We didn't move.
There was no sound.
My father squeezed his
hand and released it. He did this over and over again as he stuttered
something nervously that we couldn’t decipher. He didn't even look in
our direction, not even when he passed us down the aisle patting his
coat, swiping his sleeve and adjusting his cuff. He descended the
escalator and just disappeared.
We turned to look at our
mother who was only now slowly helping herself off the floor. She looked
around, concerned that someone had witnessed the fall, but thankfully no
one had. She rose, removed a tissue from her purse, dabbed the tissue
with saliva and then wiped the trace of blood diluted with spit from the
corner of her lip. She then passed her hands down the front of her
torso, smoothing out her coat and, slightly wobbly at first, walked
toward us: too humiliated to look straight at us. She grabbed each of
our hands and we pretended nothing had happened - that's what she wanted
and that's what we owed her. All she said was, "Let's go pay."
The ride on the streetcar
home was quiet - distant. The snow fell gently against the fogged
streetcar window. My sister and I sat in the seat in front of my mother.
She let me carry the Simpson's bag so that I could cover the stain on my
pants. Nothing was said. I looked out the window, my sister read her
book and we both pretended that the silent sobs of hurt and
disappointment were not our mother’s. Later that night I heard those
same sounds from the basement. I looked down from the top step and saw
her scrubbing my pants on the washboard in the laundry tub. He didn't
need to know.
The pretense dragged on
for days, through Christmas and into the New Year. One night my mother
came to my room and sat beside me on my bed. She smiled and pulled the
covers under my chin. She was about to say something when her eyes met
my night table. There she saw my neglected G.I. Joe leaning against a
large glow-in-the-dark statue of Fatima and the three shepherds. He
hadn't been touched since I took him out of the box that Christmas
morning. I had undressed him while in the bathroom and discovered he was
missing something. I knew that I wasn't strong like him or handsome like
him but I knew that at least we had to share genitalia. He wasn't whole
- he was a disappointment.
She knew that he had been
collecting dust since Christmas morning. She sensed something else that
only a mother can. She turned to me, felt my forehead and bent down to
kiss me. I could still see the faded remnants of a yellowish bruise
clinging to the corner of her right eye. I slowly turned onto my side
and just as I sensed her weight lifting off my bed…she sat back down.
"You need to know
something…Your father came to this country with nothing - knowing no
one. And yet he did well for himself. He's a proud man - he's proud of
us all."
I wasn't going to say
anything. I also wasn't going to listen.
"I don't doubt your
father loves you all but it wasn't supposed to be this way for him. Your
father had dreams and yet those he helped come here are already doing
much better than he ever will. It's not easy for him. Try to understand
that." And with this she said goodnight and gently closed the door
behind her.
~
My sister and I met a week
after my mother’s funeral to go through her belongings. I went
directly to the bottom drawer, pulled it out completely from the chest
and carefully placed it on top of her bed. I sifted through old
photographs, found a locket of my hair in a Ziploc bag and opened
envelopes stuffed with old report cards and grade school crafts. I
unraveled layers of tissue paper and then I saw him - staring back at me
- urging me to pick him the same way he had twenty-four years earlier.
He lay there in his makeshift coffin dressed in his faded army fatigues
asking to be reborn on this fateful day – resurrected.
I understood now what I
couldn't before.
I was only six when I saw
the strength in my mother. I was thirty when I understood and forgave
the weakness of my father.
Anthony De
Sa is from Toronto where he lives with his wife and three boys. He
is on sabbatical from teaching and is currently working on his first
collection of short stories, Fado.
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