Book Read Free

Solo

Page 9

by Kwame Alexander


  ripped out

  all the empty parts:

  brain, spine, ticker.

  What’s left?

  And now

  it’s up to me

  to put myself back together,

  to rebuild.

  To start from zero.

  Storm grabs my hand.

  I guess it had to happen, Blade. C’mon. Let’s go.

  Leaving LA

  I won’t miss

  the Hollywood Hills,

  the palm trees,

  the fake city

  and its manufactured lights.

  I won’t miss the blood suckers,

  those paparazzi,

  and the tabloid news,

  shame because of my name,

  or even

  those sunsets over

  Santa Monica Pier.

  I won’t miss this pain

  that will never leave.

  I won’t miss

  the music under the trees

  or the feeling

  of finding my own

  safe place to breathe.

  And now, I won’t miss her.

  Before Takeoff

  You want me to park and walk you in?

  Don’t waste your time.

  I can come with you.

  Bad idea. Plus, don’t you have another bad album to

  record?

  . . . .

  I’m just kidding.

  You’re right, I’m not good. But I love it, and maybe I’ll get

  better.

  You can have my room if you want.

  I’d need to get it fumigated first.

  Ha!

  Seriously though, if you postpone your trip until tomorrow,

  I’ll go home and pack and we’ll meet your birth mother

  together.

  I should do this on my own.

  Blade Morrison, flying solo.

  Yeah, something like that.

  . . . .

  . . . .

  Okay, well, get out of my car.

  Bye, Storm.

  Oh, I almost forgot, a gift for you, little brother.

  A mixtape?

  I know you still carry that CD player Mom gave you.

  Thanks. What’s on it?

  Best rock bands ever.

  Guns N’ Roses?

  Yeah, you’re a Morrison. We’re hard. Time to nix all that

  Tears for Fears crap.

  What are you talking about? “Everybody Wants to Rule

  the World” is Top Five, easily.

  Top Five bubble gum rock.

  Rock is rock.

  Said the boy who dreams of Meghan Trainor.

  My big sister is a rock bigot! I had no idea.

  I love you, Blade. I wish more than anything, you find

  what you’re looking for.

  Me too.

  Track 6: Welcome to the Jungle

  ROCKERS: GUNS N’ ROSES / ALBUM: APPETITE FOR DESTRUCTION / LABEL: GEFFEN RECORDS / RECORDING DATE: JANUARY–APRIL, 1987 / STUDIOS IN LA: RUMBO STUDIOS, TAKE ONE STUDIO, THE RECORD PLANET, CAN-AM STUDIO

  They say

  Axl Rose wrote

  the lyrics

  while visiting a friend

  and thinking back

  to when

  he first arrived

  on the LA scene.

  Before his fame.

  Before the temptation.

  Before the pain.

  A dog-eat-dog world.

  I’ve lost too much here,

  bled too much there,

  among the beasts.

  And I’m not gonna die

  in this jungle.

  You can’t bring me

  to my knees.

  I’m leaving

  all you savages

  behind.

  Part Two:

  West Africa

  Cramped

  Five hours

  after takeoff

  I have to give up

  my cushy first class seat

  with steak

  and gelato

  to board

  a connecting flight

  that only had

  one seat left.

  In coach.

  Regrets

  I realize

  that finding

  my birth mom

  was a great idea

  in theory.

  What will I say to her?

  Who is my father?

  What will she say to me?

  Do you hate me?

  I listen

  to Storm’s mixtape,

  clinging to

  Sunny’s letter,

  wishing I were

  in my roomy home

  in my own

  comfy bed.

  Track 7: Enter Sandman

  ROCKERS: METALLICA / ALBUM: METALLICA / LABEL: ELEKTRA / RECORDING DATE: JUNE 16, 1991 / STUDIO: ONE ON ONE STUDIOS, LOS ANGELES

  This is what happens

  when you let Storm

  pick your music.

  I hate the song,

  but it captures me

  in its web,

  taunts me

  like a wrestler

  strutting

  into the arena

  to fight.

  Haunts me

  like the men

  and women

  marching

  cold blooded

  into battle.

  I can’t help

  but play it again,

  to feel the rage.

  It jabs me

  to sleep

  thinking of how

  against the world

  I feel

  flying in

  and out of it.

  Dream Variation: The Ledge

  It’s still red velvet

  on the table,

  but this time

  Chapel’s here

  seated in

  a white tee

  with SB

  emblazoned

  on it.

  That’s an easy one, Scarlet B—, Rutherford says, before

  Mom interrupts him

  with a look

  that says, Behave.

  This makes me laugh.

  Mom, still slicing

  the cookie

  into a millions pieces,

  doesn’t say a word.

  Sunny Bye, he adds,

  blowing a kiss

  to Mom

  then disappearing

  with a fork

  that looks

  like a guitar.

  Chapel is crying,

  or laughing,

  I can’t tell.

  When the cookie crumbs

  turn into

  spiders

  and crawl

  off the table,

  I want them each

  to sting her

  to make her feel

  the pain

  I see when

  I look

  at her.

  So Blue.

  Sorry, babe, she says,

  and then she’s gone.

  And then it’s just me

  and Mom.

  And the dining room

  is now an open field.

  And a big, red spider

  with a dreadful face

  is gunning

  straight

  for me.

  Run, Mom whispers.

  So I do.

  I run

  I run away

  I run away, fast,

  I run away, fast, toward

  I run away, fast, toward the end.

  There’s an end.

  Finally, there’s an end

  with a ledge.

  And there’s my mother.

  And if I can get to her,

  and if I can jump,

  I’ll be saved.

  And the world

  will make sense

  again.

  Blade, how about you play something else?

  Huh?

  Metal
lica, really. What happened to my kinder, gentler,

  little rock and roller?

  Wait, what are you doing here?

  Sitting

  next to me

  thirty-thousand feet

  over the Atlantic

  on a ten-hour flight

  to Ghana

  to find

  my mother

  is

  my mother?

  Conversation?

  You look confused.

  What are you doing here?

  I think you know the answer.

  Uh, no, I don’t. Is this real?

  It’s as real as you need it to be.

  I miss you, Mom. We all miss you so much.

  Things are outta control, it seems.

  Way outta control.

  That’s why you left?

  I left to find my family.

  . . . .

  I’m sorry, I didn’t mean it like that. I just mean without

  knowing, I feel empty.

  I can dig that.

  I don’t understand. How are you here?

  You’re asking the wrong question, Blade.

  I am?

  You’re at the crossroads, looking for a ride. The question is,

  where are you going?

  Ghana.

  Yeah, but when you get there, where?

  According to the website, a village. In the east.

  And when you find what you’re looking for?

  I don’t know, but it’s gotta be better than this.

  It won’t get better, until you help him.

  Who?

  Who do you think?

  I’m done with trying to help him. He’s ruined my life too

  many times. I need to move on.

  I’d ask you to play me a song, but, well, your guitar . . .

  How do you know about that?

  A mother knows. She always knows.

  I’m still dreaming, aren’t I. This isn’t real.

  Youngblood, this is as real as it gets. Just me and you flyin’

  through the sky, between the moon and the deep blue sea.

  Why’d you call me Youngblood?

  That’s Jimi Hendrix.

  I knew that. “Angel,” right?

  Best song ever. You know why he wrote it?

  Probably about a woman.

  About his mother. He had this dream, and she was on a

  camel, and in it she told him she wasn’t gonna be seeing

  him too much anymore, and two years later—

  She died.

  You figure out who the spider is?

  I can’t even say her name.

  Try again.

  She broke my heart.

  Stop running.

  Huh? But, you been telling me to run.

  Run toward, not away.

  Away from what? I’m confused.

  Wake up, Blade. Face the spider.

  I wake up

  as the plane lands,

  and my ears pop

  like knuckles.

  I’m afraid

  to open my eyes

  and not find her here.

  Welcome to Ghana, says the flight attendant.

  We exit

  onto the tarmac

  under blinding sun

  and even though

  she’s gone

  I feel promise.

  The heat

  swallows

  me whole

  even my sweat

  is sweating.

  The sign

  in the entrance hall says

  AKWAABA.

  WELCOME.

  But there is nothing

  welcoming

  about no AC

  and soldiers

  with AK-47s

  checking me out

  as I approach customs

  drenched

  and a little

  scared.

  Outside

  of the airport

  in Accra,

  what hits me faster

  and harder

  than the torrid sun

  are the loud

  taxi drivers

  boiling

  in anger

  who try

  to seize

  my suitcase

  while arguing

  like boxers

  in a ring.

  Lucky me,

  I choose the taxi driver

  with no AC

  who listens

  to Garth Brooks.

  On the way to the village, we pass

  gas stations

  and malls

  and condos

  and fancy cars

  and junksters

  and traffic lights

  and traffic

  and car horns

  and road rage

  and more traffic

  and homeless

  and women

  carrying kids

  on their backs

  and tubs

  on their heads

  filled with

  plantain chips,

  coat hangers,

  pillows, and

  everything

  you could possibly

  ever need

  to buy.

  Conversation with Taxi Driver

  My brother from America? he asks, in an almost-British

  accent.

  Yes.

  Trump country.

  . . . .

  Is America great again, he says, more like a joke than a

  question.

  How far is the drive?

  Can’t drive too fast on these roads.

  How much is the fare to Konko, sir?

  Not too much.

  Apparently, Ghanaians don’t answer questions.

  First time in Ghana?

  Yes.

  What’s in the east?

  I’m going to see family.

  Right. That’s a good thing.

  . . . .

  We have rainy season now, boss.

  That’ll be good, ’cause it’s crazy hot.

  Sorry no AC. I can get it fixed. You need a driver while

  you’re here, then Mr. Easy is your guy, he says, handling

  me a card.

  I think I’m good.

  This is your American music. Like it?

  I’m more of a rock and roll fan.

  Kendrick Lamar! Yeah, I like him too.

  Not exactly, but cool.

  LeBron James.

  What?

  You know LeBron James?

  Nah, you’re funny. Hey, do you happen to have an

  iPhone charger?

  I don’t, but she does, he says, pulling over to the side of

  the road, almost hitting a girl with a dozen chargers

  strung over her shoulder.

  Like I said,

  everything

  you could possibly

  ever need

  to buy.

  Texts from Storm

  1:25 pm

  You make it okay?

  What time is it there?

  Are you awake?

  1:25 pm

  Dad’s doing better.

  He woke me up EARLY

  to record. Believe that!

  1:25 pm

  I think we got a

  future hit, Blade.

  Hope you like it!

  1:26 pm

  Lyrics are sad, but

  I think it may be THE ONE.

  He says it’s perfect

  1:26 pm

  because there’s real

  motion in the emotion.

  Chapel caught Van

  1:26 pm

  with Cammie. Karma

  is a beast. Miss you, little

  brother. How’s Africa?

  Texts to Storm

  1:31 pm

  This place is

  beautiful and dirty.

  Sorta like us.

  1:31 pm

  Kind of a mix

  between New Y
ork

  and Mississippi.

  1:31 pm

  Crowded and sparse

  at the same time. Desolate,

  but not neglected. Anyway,

  1:32 pm

  I’m headed to a village

  called Konko to find

  Lucy. Not sure if this

  1:32 pm

  is all going to work out.

  Not even sure I’m

  gonna make it to the

  1:32 pm

  village. These roads are

  BADDDDDD! and the taxi

  drivers are worse.

  1:33 pm

  HELPPPPPP!

  BTW, good luck

  with the song!

  Junction

  After two hours

  of winding

  cratered roads

  in a beat-up Honda

  with no shock

  absorbers

  to absorb

  the shock

  of forty-seven miles

  of unpaved roads

  with scattered potholes,

  the taxi driver

  finally stops.

  Konko, he says, and points

  to a long road

  on the right

  of the junction.

  Thank you. Mr. Easy, I respond. How far of a walk?

  Not far. Maybe four. Maybe five.

  Minutes?

  Kilometers.

  . . . .

  The Morrisons

  have fast cars

  and drivers

  and sometimes

  we don’t even walk

  from the main house

  to the tennis court.

  That’s what

  golf carts

  are for.

  But today,

  beneath copper sun

  I walk

  past skinny pigeons

  and skinnier goats

  for what

  seems like

  weeks

  down a long, hot,

  red dirt road

  that scalds

  through my memories

  and seems

  to never

  ever

  end.

  Two Hours Later

  The girl

  getting water

  has a smile

  that glows

  and flows

  like the waterfall

  her midnight arms

  pump

  into pails.

  Hello, I say.

  Hello, she replies

  not looking up,

  with an accent

  so thick

  and smooth

  it rolls

  off her tongue

  like butter.

  Conversation

  Hi, do you speak English?

  Yes, boss.

  I’m looking for Konko.

  Well, you have found it.

  Cool.

  I am Joy. Welcome.

  That’s your name, Joy?

 

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