Crow Jazz
CROW JAZZ
CROW
JAZZ
short stories
MOTHER TONGUE PUBLISHING LIMITED
290 Fulford-Ganges Road, Salt Spring Island, B.C. V8K 2K6 Canada
www.mothertonguepublishing.com
Represented in North America by Heritage Group Distribution.
Copyright © 2018. Linda Rogers All Rights Reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system, without the prior written consent of the publisher—or, in case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from Access Copyright, the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency, info@accesscopyright.ca—is an infringement of the copyright law.
Crow Jazz is a work of fiction.
Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Book design by Mark Hand
Cover design and interior crows by Rick Van Krugel
Typefaces used are Bookman Old Style and Plaza.
Printed on Antique Natural, 100% recycled
Printed and bound in Canada.
Mother Tongue Publishing gratefully acknowledges the assistance of the Province of British Columbia through the B.C. Arts Council and we acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, which last year invested $157 million in writing and publishing throughout Canada. Nous remercions de son soutien le Conseil des Arts du Canada, qui a investi 157$ millions de dollars l’an dernier dans les lettres et l’édition à travers le Canada.
LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION
Rogers, Linda, 1944-, author
Crow jazz / Linda Rogers.
Short stories.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-896949-65-9 (softcover).--ISBN 978-1-896949-68-0
(PDF)
I. Title.
PS8585.O392C76 2018
C813’.54
C2018-901251-X
C2018-901252-8
Aunty, don’t let the devil use your brain.
—ADVICE FROM NIGERIAN WRITER
MAZI NZUBECHUKWA OKOYE
for our nesting children and loved ones navigating the journey home, and for Gordon Smith, dear teacher and friend who understood that painting with words was an option
A BLESSING
This is her blessing, world without end, one story after the other, every one in a different key. She’s all ears, tucked in, curled up in her Capsula Mundi, ready for liftoff, the rapture, maybe to a sacred forest, her former selves, nurse logs, rotting, panis angelicus; the holy terroir, her sinister smalldogs, little feet turning out, stirring up what comes next. She’s swallowed her fairy suitcase filled with baby teeth, waits for her cue, the obladi/oblada aubade, morningsong. It’s always morning, always the twitter of birds waking up, the idea of stretching into new bodies, this time, she hopes, an evergreen, her roots eating through compost, secrets and lies shared by the trickster, while her leaves reach up to the light. This time, she prays in her pervious shell, let’s forgo consonants. This time, let’s embrace the legato of vowels, the locus of beautiful dances, Sufis and ballerinas, green shoes growing like vines, Pinocchio’s nose. Who will be the new fact-checker, the puppet or the ventriloquist? Who will be the new whisperer, Crow again, really, or maybe cosmic lips, goddesses moving her branches? She loves green sticks that sing, children in playgrounds, a murmuration of swallows, crows throwing their voices. Lalalalalala, life goes on. Inside the newtree, She.
CONTENTS
A Blessing
The Ranger
The Tea Party
The Child City
Mud Pies
One More Story
Mr. and Mrs. Smith
Her Name
Woolgatherer
Mouse, Not, a Sixties Scoop
Lipstick Window
Utmost Happiness
Moon Cake and Rude Hour
Shadow Dancing
Bedtime Stories
Nesting
Lucy Laughed
Three Strikes
The Lineup
Shock Therapy
Darling Boy
Deadhead: What Goes Around
Blink
About the Author
Thanks
THE RANGER
He loves his fly swatter. It isn’t exactly a swatter, more of an exterminator. It has criss-cross wires and batteries with a switch. When he hits things, they pop and fry. You can smell them, not quite bacon, more like burning hair. Once I leaned in too close to blow out my candles and turned into one. THAT was a birthday.
I was a curious morsel, thin enough to slip between trees and take note of transgressions in the woods, things like live burial and extra-marital sex, and I knew that a lot of famous people had died on their birthdays. The birthday list is hugely and I knew it by heart, up to the day I forgot everything and started again. I can still rattle off a few: Shakespeare, Sidney Bechet, Milton, FDR, Raphael, King Kamehameha v and Machine Gun Kelly.
Funny details are how I remembered facts. For instance, Liszt had moles on his face, and Beethoven had a horn for hearing music. The day I forgot everything and started again was, as it happens, my birthday, which started like all others. My parents, having totalled their first car on a bumpy road designated to abort my journey, were people who hated to be reminded of failure. Since I was one of the few, my most irritating qualities being my tenacity and genetic predisposition to truth telling, my anniversaries were usually discrete.
On this occasion, I was given one dollar and a brown paper bag with one apple, one unpeeled carrot, one sandwich, two slices of pale white Wonder Bread with bologna and mystery mayo with colourful chunks that looked like vomit, one cellophane package of Dad’s Cookies and a doughnut man with no sexual appendage for my anniversary picnic. So why was my doughnut a man? I asked, of course. Why wouldn’t I? Why couldn’t it be a doughnut woman? Or girl.
I licked the glaze between his her legs first, and there were no clues, no taste of male or female, no sudden erection, and no flash flood. Then I bit, revealing my interesting dentition, two front teeth that could, as my father said with a smirk, “eat an apple through a picket fence.”
I inherited those teeth. They came with a fastball. He’d lost his in a baseball accident, and I got them back in an orgasmic collision. When he reached up to catch a fly during a major league tryout, he looked at the sun and the ball hit him square in the mouth. So Dad became a lawyer. I always thought “mouthpiece,” gangster slang for lawyer, meant a washed-up baseball player with false teeth who’d missed his true vocation and went to work for crooks.
My father was also a golfer. He was the guy who brought in the clients because the rich klutzes who hired him thought a fellow who could hit a ball was on the ball. That might have been true. He golfed with lots of famous people, the president of the United States (the one who played football without a helmet), Zsa Zsa Gabor’s husband, Bing Crosby. Bing Crosby recommended him to Errol Flynn, my mother’s childhood hero, who phoned up the night he was busted with a fourteen-year-old. My parents were out. I took the call. Errol was in the jug, and he needed my dad, who turned up hours later in his party clothes, on that occasion, tails. He’d been dancing with the Queen. Two days later, Errol died of a heart attack.
My mother told me sudden death was what happened to old men who slept with little girls. That was all she ever told me about sex. I could, if not careful, end up with an old dead man on top of me, and that would absolutely ruin my debutante year.
I was still smart as a whip then, smar
t enough to memorise the licence plate numbers of all the perverts who cruised Chancellor Boulevard offering rides to little girls, smart enough to know when adults were telling the truth and when they lied, which was most of the time.
Who wouldn’t want a kid like that out of the house, playing in the woods, making forts and taking notes on woodland behaviour? I don’t blame them. They say the truth shall set you free, but my dad knew better. All his clients in jail knew better. Certainly Errol Flynn did in the jail beyond reckoning. There is no word for swashbuckling in the Hell-cells where they lock up the pederasts.
I had a knack for pedophiles. It was as if my magnetic brain, filled with leached amalgam from multiple fillings, sent out signals. Fillings were free. My dad exchanged them for pro bono advice, and our dentist was a perv. And they came like moths to light bulbs. The problem was I never forgot a face, a voice or a licence number. After I overcame my artificial modesty (I read Lady Chatterley’s Lover under the covers when I was six) and admitted “penis” was a word I could handle in court after denying I knew its meaning to a curious cop, I was your ideal witness: clean, focused, articulate.
They came in droves: in cars (“Want to play with my little dolly?”), in trucks (“Officer, that was a meat sandwich in my hand.”) and out of the woods with their pants down. I was a fast runner and a hell of a high jumper thanks to ballet classes, but under normal conditions, could easily have been overtaken by a long-legged adult male. A man with his pants down is not so fast. Women are another matter, but that is a story for another day.
Nowadays I am not so adversarial, not the lawyer’s daughter. I would hand over a life-sized doll and a pass to an enclosed comfort home for adults with inappropriate sexual urges. I have learned that jail without hope and joy is the solution to absolutely nothing, a barbaric solution to childhood trauma, and that people are not always what they seem to be.
The forest was the opposite of jail in my childhood days. There were no narcissistic parents battling for supremacy in my woods, no ugly noises apart from the occasional crashing intrusion of perverts and The Ranger, who collected lost balls and lost kids, mostly the light footsteps of woodland creatures and birdsong.
I built forts out of tree branches and ferns, which also served as spears for repelling whatever threat interrupted my sylvan meditations. Recently, an artist friend has been rediscovering forts, evidence of a lost civilisation of children who created alternatives to irrational authority and technological babysitters. She posted one on Facebook, and I swear the tipi-shaped twig structure was my framing, a survivor of rampant real estate development.
One of the premium places to build was in the woods surrounding the golf course. These woods had been cleared and offered fern-sprinkled glades already levelled for child homesteaders. The golf course was far enough from our mothers and close enough that we could make it home for dinner without getting lost.
My fort was stocked with provisions stolen from home, loaves of Wonder Bread, which I liked with the crusts torn off, comic books and the requisite jar of Vaseline for Night Revels. Night Revels involved undressing with friends on the Solstice, covering the body with petroleum jelly and dancing in the moonlight. This would be followed by games of “doctor,” the proto-lesbian activity essential to every girl’s development.
Except for urgent calls of nature, golfers avoided these zones, where sliced and otherwise random balls often landed. These balls were a danger to us, but danger, then as now, was thrilling. We were simultaneously in a war zone, surrounded by poisoned grass and foot soldiers of commerce preoccupied with doing business and whacking gutta percha to kingdom come and sometimes into sand traps.
Perverts, wild animals and wild balls aside, the real danger was The Ranger, who hunted lost balls in the margins of mid-century civilisation. I have no idea who gave The Ranger his honorific. Now, I suspect, it was not the course managers, with nothing to gain from a terrifying unkempt man lurking in the shade on Ladies Day, when women golfed. The Ranger may have come from my lexicon, which included references to The Lone Ranger, pale man on a pale horse who kept the law on the rough parameters of Indian Country and settlement with his cynical sidekick Tonto.
In those days, I thought the masked outlaw-man was OK. Later he achieved star status when I had the opportunity to watch his half-hour show in the lobby of a Stratford hotel with the also legendary Glenn Gould, who bought me ice-cream and drove me home in his red convertible after I hid myself in Row G during his sound check.
The Golf Ranger was no hero. The psycho-pale of some redheads, bald with a few ginger threads with wretched clothing, he carried a five iron, whacking low-lying plants and shrubs and scaring squirrels as he charged through the bush with his pack of feral hounds. He never spoke, just raised his club and shook it as I or we ran screaming to the safety of the highroad that ran parallel to the golf course, chased by yapping dogs, but only as far as the end of the trees. I was fast. My friends were fast, but we all knew about the disappeared.
On those long evenings of the full moon when we left by window (all my friends tried for a ground-floor bedroom or at least a room with a window that could be reached with a stepladder or high chair) and congregated in the forest, we told Ranger stories, repeated and embellished what we had heard from other kids. Rumour had it he boiled the golf balls and the kids in the same pot to make dog food. When he could stick a fork in the golf balls, then the kids were cooked. His dogs would never eat an underdone kid. That’s how he got rid of the evidence.
When we saw dogs with bones, we trembled in fear. When we found bones buried in our gardens, we knew they were parts of a missing neighbour, some boy or girl who hadn’t been fast enough, whose name was never spoken again. It was embarrassing for parents to lose track of kids, and so they kept the disappearances quiet.
“Fatso!” some kids yelled at other kids, not to be mean but to give a warning, “The Ranger’s gonna getcha!” But not me. I read “sticks and stones” backwards. I knew words were powerful, and they could hurt.
“Fuck off!” I yelled at the dogs, and they understood, returning to their tyrant with tails between their legs, hugging the ground, I assumed, all the way home. “Home” I assumed was a rundown shack in the burbs with a whiskey still and a child fire burning night and day. The Ranger probably had a bushed scraggly wife and a handful of brats in rags, too thin to eat and black and blue like the McKenzie kids whose paediatrician father was later charged with abusing his patients and hitting children who were afraid of needles, and sent to jail forever and a day.
We set traps for The Ranger: holes covered with ferns, bear traps, decapitating wires and tempting dog-shit sandwiches wrapped in waxed paper, but he outsmarted us, coming and going as he pleased, always leaving with a bag full of hurt golf balls. If then were now, we’d have him on camera and social media, worldwide perv alerts.
Even though I was a junior detective who collected evidence for crimes reported in the Vancouver Sun, our conflict ended at the end of the woods. I was afraid to spy on The Ranger at home. That was too dangerous. He knew where I lived. I am remembering all this now, but there were decades when I couldn’t. I just couldn’t.
My birthday was on a Saturday, an all-clear day because The Ranger took weekends off, collecting all the lost balls Monday to Friday, after the frenzy of bogies and drunken swings that marked the release of businessmen from work at the office and the demands of children. God forbid they should take the kids swimming or out for a family hike. I really get it that the Hate Pumpkin needs to get away from his family and murder balls on his weekends away from high office.
My father gave me a silver dollar to chase The Ice-Cream Man, possibly an unkind joke because I had never before managed to catch him. You had to hear the high notes, the ice-cream jingle, and then as now, I am not so good on the high register. My siblings warned me, and off I went, flying down the street with my shoelaces undone. The Ice-Cream man, the Ice-Cream man, I repeated the mantra. It was my birthday. I was g
oing to buy an ice-cream sandwich.
After three blocks, the Ice-Cream Man stopped for a bunch of kids who were ready and waiting at the corner with their sweaty change. I sat down on the curb, catching my breath, cash in one hand, brown paper bag in the other, waiting my turn, and watched him serve Rainbow Popsicles and fruit slushies to the other kids, who joined me on the curb as they were served. Maybe it was the way he looked at me, the I know who you are look I saw in my worst nightmares. There was something familiar about the Ice-Cream Man, surface smiley and perky in his white uniform and hat at an angle with a top note of sinister in his little jingle. Something vile rose in my mouth and sat there. Something held me back.
Then he turned his back, and I knew.
The Ice-Cream Man was The Ranger. I dropped my money and my lunch and ran for the woods, took a shortcut, grabbing spears should he follow. I took a chance, like John Landy who lost the four-minute mile after turning around to see who was behind him, but The Ranger wasn’t following. It was his day off. That made me one lucky puck, but not for long.
They say you can see death coming. It arrives in slow motion, like a ball aimed at your head, and that’s where it caught me, right, as they say, in the middle of my forehead. My world spun and went black, an aperture slowly closing, then opening. I saw clouds in my sleep and the sun at the end. I heard angels singing.
I was knocked out cold. When I woke up, it was night, and because I am an intuitive creature, I found my way home to my cellmates and the babysitter. Our parents had gone out for the evening. My dinner was in the oven. I ate it and hurled, then, taking a hint from the sitter who was pointing at my head and laughing, I looked in the bathroom mirror. A golf-ball-sized goose egg.
“What happened?” she asked, but I had forgotten. In fact, I had forgotten pretty much everything, including the licence plate numbers of every pervert who drove by the university woods and the times tables. I even forgot it was my birthday.