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Chlorine Sky

Page 4

by Mahogany L. Browne


  & tetherball

  & T-ball

  This is how I learn to play not as big

  cause nobody got time for a girl outshining them.

  MY BIG COUSIN INGA ASKS ME

  “Who you playing small for?”

  & I pretend I don’t know what she’s talking about

  She’s five foot eleven & the tallest woman in our family

  She’s a basketball coach for the lil’ kid league during summer

  & after she saw I had handles in fourth grade

  she ain’t let me drop the rock since

  “Who you playing small for?”

  Means:

  I don’t get to slink into the corner.

  I don’t get to find a home in the shadow.

  Not when there is a court nearby.

  Inga attends Downtown Community College

  & talks to Essa almost every day

  But sometimes it’s like they don’t even like each other.

  When Essa & Inga’s arguments get too big

  & Essa screams into the phone

  Then it’s weeks before I see Inga again

  I’ll come home from the pool & she’ll be

  on the porch or sitting on the hood of her mama’s car

  waiting for Essa to come home from her classes at State

  She’ll shrug when I say where you been & then say

  “I love her, but I don’t like her. Most times, I think if

  We weren’t related, we wouldn’t be around each other at all.”

  When she’s at the house, we go straight to the court

  She makes me play her one-on-one

  She hits the ball out my hand if I’m sloppy

  She kicks at my feet planted

  & shakes her head

  “Play D! Lil’—what did I teach you?!”

  Inga calling me Lil’ tells me I’m someone’s sister

  Inga calling me Lil’ shows me I’m not out here on my own

  & everything I do means something to someone else

  & just like that I begin to play for keeps.

  On the court

  There is no mercy

  I’m a baller

  & I don’t care who is bothered by all the space

  I take up.

  SO, WHEN CLIFTON SAYS

  that sweet sweet simile

  from fourth-grade English

  I force a smile

  I hold his hand

  & look past the bleachers for Lay Li.

  The day I met Clifton at the mall

  Was the day I wore my cousin Tia’s hoodie

  From the thrift store

  & Inga flat-ironed my hair real cute

  & my bangs fell all around the front of my face

  & Essa rolled her eyes at me

  So I know I was fly.

  PAST THE BLEACHERS

  In the corner

  Next to the far side of the green gym doors

  Lay Li sits like the queen

  surrounded by some girls from Fashion Club

  They all wear their tight yellow pants

  They all shine bright

  like diamonds.

  Lay Li see me

  & usually she would wave me over

  tell whatever girl on her right side to move over.

  “She’s my right hand.”

  But not today

  We just stare each other down.

  SHE LOOKS ME HARD IN MY EYES

  & my knees lock into tree trunks

  My eyes don’t dance like my heartbeat racing

  They stare straight back hot daggers.

  I remember things will never be the same.

  I remember things

  WILL NEVER BE THE SAME

  I got my own ideas

  I got my own body

  I got my own mind.

  I let Clifton lead me to the bleachers

  on the opposite side of the court.

  I realize as I plop down

  on the bleacher seats

  ain’t no one but my mama

  & Lay Li

  ever held my hand before.

  THERE IS A RUMOR GOING AROUND

  & I know it got my name on it.

  That’s how Tre got shot

  That’s how Teneisha got got

  Rumors be the worst thing since government cheese.

  Grandma Maxi say:

  “Hands crisscrossed across the chest

  mean you got something to hide.”

  She also say “make a cheese sandwich for after-school snack”

  No matter the stomachache that come for me.

  Let Teneisha tell it

  Keeping to yourself won’t save you

  She was just at the bus stop

  & the girls jumped her for wearing blue

  & the girls jumped her for talking

  to their boyfriends at the Mack Road mall

  & the girls jumped her because she think she cute

  & I don’t want my name attached to a beatdown

  Or a rumor

  But laws of the school say I got at least one (if not both)

  coming to me.

  I FIGURE IT’S THE RUMOR

  Cause it gets too quiet

  When I walk into a room

  Like even my breath is being judged

  & my whole stomach turns on itself

  tight & rock hard

  like I just ate one of them cheese sandwiches

  I wish I could ask Lay Li what happened.

  Why is everyone staring at me?

  But I got too many questions

  & not one person to depend on for answers.

  WHEN A RUMOR HIT THE WIND

  The room is a graveyard of friends

  These the same girls that laugh when I laugh

  But now they laugh without including me

  Now they take pictures with each other

  & I ain’t nowhere in the frame.

  HAVE YOU EVER STARTED A RUMOR?

  Like not on purpose

  Maybe you shared a secret

  & the secret got wings

  & then someone shared that

  Same secret with wings except

  They gave it a candle

  Cause it was too dark or something

  Maybe they needed some light

  & maybe the wings took flight

  With the light & maybe they

  Shared that same candle winged thing

  With someone that don’t know or don’t care

  & in the wind that flame goes

  Lighting up all the dead

  Do you know

  how it can start

  slow like a burn

  or a tickle

  until it’s not funny anymore?

  it feels like a needle

  pressing down

  before the nurse gives the vaccination shot

  it feels like a joke

  that everyone is laughing at

  except the person

  they’re joking about

  instead of laughing

  that warm glow that grows

  inside your chest & hands

  & crawls across your cheeks

  like some uncontrollable kind of happy

  it feels more like

  closing your eyes

  tight

  so tight

  the air can’t get in

  & the water can’t get out

  can you feel the sting?

  that’s how it feels

  like a forever

  sting.

  WHEN I’M ON THE BASKETBALL COURT
/>   I ain’t laughed at

  I ain’t pointed at

  I ain’t forgotten

  I ain’t really myself at all

  The only place that feel as good as the court

  Is when I’m in Clifton’s arms

  In his arms I ain’t laughed at

  In his arms I ain’t pointed at

  In his arms I ain’t forgotten

  With Clifton I feel like I’m on the court

  My heart is certain

  His hands frame my face

  Like my hands hold the rock

  His lips come to mine

  & my heart flutter the same

  As when I realize the ball into the air

  The net waving a welcome song

  Perfect aim

  No swish

  My first kiss? I Swoon

  When I’m on the court.

  IT’S TOO HOT TO THINK ABOUT THINKING

  I had my first (but third in life) kiss

  With Clifton & no one to talk to about it

  Lay Li looked at me & I looked back

  Like that

  Everything is dust

  But now that it’s Saturday

  & all my chores are done

  I have nothing better to do.

  I have no one to turn to

  I make my way around the corner

  Maybe I can play pickup

  I bop across the grass &

  As soon as my ten toes touch asphalt

  all the boys groan

  It’s too hot to think about thinking

  We play three-on-three

  My team ain’t trash but my mind is everywhere.

  I miss an assist

  I miss my free throw

  I’m fouled & I keep quiet.

  Not like me.

  The sweat pours from my pores

  The game of twenty-one is just beginning.

  Tyrone & the rest of the boys

  from the summer program

  let me play but never in peace.

  My handles

  I swerve

  Ankles intact

  Don’t travel

  Dribble

  Dribble

  Pump fake

  Tyrone falls for it

  Swings his arms for the story

  No glory

  Just a clean shot

  Look at my elbow

  Ain’t it just a shelf for a bottle of your tears

  Score

  Tyrone fouls me again

  This time I’m fouled & I am foul.

  I point my finger at his basketball shorts

  Call his game as raggedy as his clothes

  THE ASPHALT IS HOT ON MY SNEAKERS

  but it’s too hot to think

  & I can’t care about them stupid boys not wanting me to play

  Cause they can’t beat me.

  That’s why they mad

  That’s why Tyrone suck his teeth

  That’s why he pushes me when I get the ball in my possession.

  But I still talk tough

  Just like Inga taught me

  My mouth so mine

  It cut rocks into pebbles

  It cut glass into shatter

  It cut metal into sharp silver slices

  I even talk smack to Coach Willie

  When I’m on the court it’s different

  The rules are different

  & ain’t no jail

  & no Mama to worry about disappointing

  I am my own on the blacktop

  But the blacktop ain’t where folks keep their feelings

  So when Tyrone pushed me into the closet last year

  & Coach Willie let him

  I realize a girl’s mouth is a weapon

  I realize the game is fixed

  When I play ball, they say my mouth too big

  Coach Willie, our summer camp counselor,

  Say “I got the nerve to talk like a boy”

  He say I ain’t supposed to say them things.

  Not with my girl mouth

  & I was almost surprised

  Cause I ain’t said nothing that they haven’t already said to me.

  & with all my tough talk, I still don’t talk about nobody’s mama

  Cause Tyrone’s mama reminds me of my uncle

  Sick on that stuff

  & I don’t talk about his daddy neither

  Cause his daddy gone just like mines.

  Instead

  I say “Your handles is trash!”

  & really, that’s only a fact.

  TYRONE MAD CAUSE IT’S TRUE

  His face turns dark around the eyes

  His lips purse into a curse word

  & he pushes me against the backboard bar

  & he pushes my head

  & he tries to take the ball out my hands.

  But I already told you

  I’m too quick

  I know how to deal with these kind of boys

  The kind that don’t keep they hands to themselves.

  I pivot fast on my right

  I drop my hip & push all my weight on the same heel

  My left foot crunches into his size eleven shoes

  My whole body crashes up & then back

  I try to push his lower body through his stomach

  I try to push through his nightmares

  I want to remind him to never touch me again

  I send him thrashing to the dirty concrete

  Then I sit the ball down by his body squirming

  & walk away slow.

  I’M STILL MAD

  when I walk up the block around the corner

  away from Tyrone

  I am steaming mad

  I am

  So mad I can’t hear Clifton calling my name.

  He jogs from the bus stop up the hill above the playground

  & right towards me

  It’s like my blood is boiling

  & my heart is racing

  & my eyes see rain

  But it’s burning up outside.

  I stretch my extra T-shirt across my shoulders

  I count backwards from ten

  & try to remember what Cousin Inga said:

  “don’t play small”

  On repeat.

  It’s so loud in my head

  I never hear Clifton calling my name

  from the edge of the basketball court

  his eyes shaded by his hands

  It’s too loud.

  It’s too loud.

  My ears ringing from the noise in my blood.

  I DON’T REALIZE I’M ON THE PORCH OF LAY LI’S HOUSE

  Until I ring the doorbell & sit on the porch steps

  Her house is closer to the ball court

  But far away enough for me to gather my thoughts

  Especially in this heat.

  I want to go swimming

  I want to forget about the court for a minute.

  Lay Li’s little sisters come outside without saying a word

  I know Lay Li sent them.

  “Hi,” they say in chorus

  Both of their pigtails bouncing with plastic BoBo’s at the ends

  Of their thick braided hair

  “Hi,” I say weakly & try to smile

  Then look at my reflection in their glass screen door

  My messy ponytail

  & my basketball shorts rumpled.

  The older of the twin sisters ask: “What happened?”

  & I give her a frown as my answer: nothing.

  We si
t there in silence for one whole minute

  Before a group of kids riding by on their bikes

  Catch my attention.

  Their hands up in the air

  Their weight balanced on the black seat

  They are laughing like I used to laugh with Lay Li

  & I remember Lay Li & me ain’t really

  Got nothing to say no more.

  I don’t know why.

  I just know it is what it is.

  I just know we ain’t friends no more.

  I FINALLY STAND UP

  & younger twin says “Lay Li said she be out in a minute”

  But I shrug & say “Never mind.”

  & bounce up the block

  toward the street where my house sits alone

  Without ever looking back.

  I JUST WANT TO TELL LAY LI

  about my kiss with Clifton

  He is almost a whole five inches taller than me

  I figure this out as I count three whole “Mississippi”s

  before his lips reach mine.

  This will be my third kiss.

  But the first one doesn’t count.

  See that’s where Lay Li comes in

  & that’s why it’s important that she knows

  What happens next

  Because my quote-unquote first kiss

  happened in a closet

  In the dark

  With everyone outside the door

  Waiting to hear how it went.

  The game was called “Seconds in Heaven”

  & I ain’t really even want to play

  But Lay Li said: “Don’t be a child.”

  LAY LI GOT A WAY

  of sounding way older than she is

 

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