Let Their Spirits Dance (7 page)

Read Let Their Spirits Dance Online

Authors: Stella Pope Duarte

BOOK: Let Their Spirits Dance
10.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Tet offensive raged on in Vietnam, making my mother quieter and more helpless than she had ever been before. She never stopped thinking about Faustino Lara, Irene's son, killed in '67. She had stood with Irene at her son's open grave, and now she stood alone waiting, keeping her thoughts to herself. Irene was no help because every time she saw my mother she burst into tears. “Ay, Alicia, may God spare you what I've been through! I pray every day for Jesse, mi hijado, si todos los dias, for God to stand by his side. May God listen to me. I'm his godmother! But why did God take my son? Why, Alicia, why?” She pounded her fist in the air, and my mother looked away. Mom never answered Irene's question.

Ray Alvarez, Espi's older brother, came home from the war in '67, the same year Faustino was killed. I met him when I was still a kid in grammar school and he was starting his freshman year at Palo Verde. He looked so tall and sophisticated to me, I never thought for a second I'd marry him. He was always hanging around when I spent the night at Espi's house. I talked to him about Jesse, and he described the way things looked in Vietnam. He didn't see much action because he stayed at base camp most of the time working as a mechanic. Ray wasn't crazy like Ricky Navarro. Every time I talked to him, I felt like Jesse would really come home. “I made it, Teresa,” he said. “Jesse's no fool. He knows how to watch his back.”

Ray played guitar and sang in nightclubs. Espi said he had women watching him all the time, women with false eyelashes, rhinestone earrings, and strapless dresses who wanted to go to bed with him. Espi told me Ray never showed much interest in women until he met me. At first I couldn't believe Ray was interested in me. He was suave, experienced, a man who smelled of English Leather and tobacco. On stage, he sometimes wore a white panama hat, which made him look like a Latin movie star. I could see myself hugging Ray, but I couldn't imagine kissing him, until later. There were so many times I wanted to be close to Ray, because he was somebody who had made it. Maybe I could learn something from him that would bring Jesse back home. Espi was the only person who knew what Jesse had said to me before he left—that he wouldn't be back. After Ray and I got serious, Ray was the second person to know. I told myself Jesse's words were only a warning, something he said just in case. Still, the secret gnawed at me from the inside, festered in me. I was seeing Paul again falling from the mulberry tree in the backyard after
Mom told me to watch him and make sure he didn't fall. Paul went too far, climbing out on a bare, brittle limb. I saw the fall coming and froze with fear. El susto took over my body, and I knew I'd never be able to save him. By the time I got there, Paul was lying face down in the dirt, his lip a bloody mess. If I told Mom Jesse wasn't coming back home, I worried she might experience a susto so great, she would die like Baby Inez did.

To make matters worse, Ricky Navarro from next door started sleeping outside on a cot almost every night. This worried Mom, and she wondered if Jesse would come back just as crazy as Ricky. There wasn't enough room in his house, Ricky said. For some reason space was real important to him after he came back from Vietnam, and he didn't like feeling crowded. “The world's crazy, Teresa,” he told me one day. “La vida loca is everywhere. It's not any different here than in Vietnam. Those sons-of-bitches tried to kill me at the airport! Our own U.S. citizens, protesting the good, old American way! If I had known those fuckers were so ungrateful, I would have never gone!”

I hated the demonstrators. They were totally ungrateful. Didn't they know my brother was over there doing battle for their asses? President Johnson with his Southern drawl nauseated me. “Our boys are holding their own in Kee Sung.” He couldn't even pronounce the names right. I wondered if any of his relatives had served in Vietnam.

There were times I watched the news on TV and looked for Jesse's face to show up with all the other boys running into trenches, walking through ditches and jungles. I wanted to see him to know he was alive, a movie star fighting for right when everything was all wrong, defending people who ran back to their villages every chance they got and played both sides to stay alive. If we were right, then that meant the Vietnamese were wrong. The twisted power of war dictated that those in the wrong had no right to obstruct those in the right, there could be no rules, right must always win.

 

• C
HICANOS, HALF
A
ZTEC
, half European, hearts pounding, warriors from the past, sacrificed to Huitzilopochtli, god of war, were writing their names in blood so the sun could be fed and move over into tomorrow. That was Vietnam for us, for the Mexicas of Aztlán, la gente de razon, as Don Florencío would say.

W
e're starting a unit on Vietnam, boys and girls. Does anyone know anything about Vietnam? Let's brainstorm.” Questioning faces look up at me. A few hands go up, the Vietnam War, the Vietnam Wall, rice paddies, cone hats, China, war, Li Ann's family is from there, they sleep when we get up. “I saw
Born on the Fourth of July
,” says Andy. “Were your parents with you?” I ask. Andy shakes his head. The second grade has brainstormed itself out. My assistant Lorena Padilla and I arrange the children into small groups to research facts about the country. We agree that late January is the best time of the year to do a unit on Vietnam. We can go over information on Tet, the Vietnamese New Year's holiday celebrated in late January. Lorena doesn't know that living at Mom's has brought Vietnam back to life for me. Jesse's letters are telling the story all over again. Vietnam, so far away, sinister yet beautiful, sealed my brother's fate in its red earth. I trace over red smudges on Jesse's letters carefully with my fingertips. Having Li Ann Nguyen in class will help make things real for the kids. She was born in the U.S., but her mother was born in Vietnam.

I watch Lorena sifting through our picture files for any pictures related to New Year's celebrations in Vietnam and China. Lorena looks like she's twenty, though she's actually in her thirties. Most days she wears a ponytail, blouses tucked into jeans, and tennis shoes. I owe Lorena big
time these days. She helped an assortment of substitute teachers the first two weeks of January while my face was healing. She likes to tease me about what she had to put up with: people who looked homeless, she said; one who brought in a trained parrot perched on his shoulder, a woman who everybody swears is the bag lady they see on their way to work, and a huge man, a dead ringer for a serial murderer advertised at the post office who ended up being the favorite of the class. All these people paraded through my classroom while my face returned to normal. There are still faint lines someone might notice if they tried, but I keep them concealed with Cover Girl make-up.

The assault charges are still pending. I've talked to an attorney named Sam Diamond. He was recommended to me by a friend at school who said that he defended her brother when he got into a bar fight. She said his nickname is Slick Sam, and I'm hoping his reputation will work in my favor. Slick Sam assures me that besides the embarrassment of it all, what else can happen? For sure, they won't give you time, he assures me. A beautiful woman like you, he says, an upstanding citizen, a schoolteacher for God's sake, a role model for the community who lost her cool in a fit of rage, a crime of passion. Yes, everybody understands passion, look at President Clinton! “Let me look at your face,” he says, then gets so close I can smell his toothpaste. “Marvelous skin,” he says. “Have you ever done any modeling?”

Outside the classroom windows, I see Orlando Gomez heading for recess with his first-grade class. They must be doing their “Snowman Project,” as Orlando calls it. I notice some of the kids are still drying their hands on their clothes, always a sign that they're working with paint or glue. After the Snowman Project, the kids will make valentines to hang around the room and blow up red and white balloons. After that, they'll get ready for windy March by constructing paper kites with tails made of yarn. It's like clockwork in Orlando's class, the Snowman Project, the valentines, the balloons, the kites, and finally a huge caterpillar they build for the book
Inchworm
, which leads them into spring. Everybody says Orlando should have been a watchmaker because everything he does runs like hands on a clock, which doesn't say much for days when Fireman Bob and his famous Dalmatian, Spotty, visit the school for their fire drill presentations. On those days, Orlando holes up in the teacher's lounge and sends his assistant Millie to the auditorium with the kids. Today, obviously, he's happy, there are no interruptions, only routine duties.

The weather is still cold, although I know it will turn hot very quickly. For now, it matches my heart, cold, hard. I've filed for divorce.
Ray was served papers at the All Pro Auto Parts Shop where he's a store manager. I knew it would make him mad to get the papers in front of his employees, a taste of Sandra's subpoena at Mom's. Besides, I couldn't find an officer who would take the papers into the Riverside while Ray was performing. That would have been the best revenge. So cruel, he would say, what are you trying to do, ruin my career? And I'd tell him he deserved it for everything my dad did to Mom, for Consuelo the cobweb who never disappeared from our house, for Sandra, the Latin Blast groupie who clung too long, clung too strong.

Maps of Vietnam go up all over the classroom, with tagboard sentence strips, labeling important information in Spanish and English. Crayon drawings of Vietnam scenes are posted here and there. The children find out that waving good-bye to a Vietnamese really means “Come here.” Last names are first in Vietnamese, and calling someone with your finger is an insult because that's the way animals are called. Lorena helps the children construct Vietnamese hats suitable for working in imaginary rice paddies. The children have plans to make mudholes out on the playground to try out their new hats, but I talk them out of it and promise I'll talk to their parents to get permission for them to make mudholes at home.

I tell the children about my big brother, Jesse. Real name, Jésus Antonio Ramirez. He always went by Jesse. He was killed in the middle of a battle right outside Saigon. I point to Saigon, Ho Chi Minh City, on the map. It was when all the crazy fighting was going on in 1968 after Tet, Vietnam's New Year's holiday.

“Wow! That was almost thirty years ago, Mrs. Alvarez.”

“Yes, Brandon, but it seems like yesterday. When you lose someone you love as much as I loved Jesse, the years are nothing. Nothing.” The last word leaves me shaking my head. I look around the classroom at the pictures of Vietnam, a setting sun against palm trees on one, a house on stilts on another, jungle and more jungle on the rest. He was there. The pictures hit home. No deserts, no Río Salado, no El Cielito, a world he never dreamed he'd live in. I can't imagine Jesse drinking from a coconut, sleeping in the pouring rain, much less aiming to kill. My brother a killer? I wonder if he ever did it. Really killed somebody. I'll never know, although I would if he were alive. Jesse told me everything.

Word gets around to Mr. H., our principal, that I told my class about Jesse. Mr. H.'s name is William Horowitz. His last name sounds so much like the word “horror” to the children that he has asked to be called Mr. H. Some of the kids and teachers say the
H
stands for Hell.

“Telling the children about your brother might be too much for them and even for you, Teresa. A bit too personal,” he says as we talk in his office one morning. He runs his fingers through strands of unruly hair on the top of his head. He has aged visibly in the three years since he has taken over the job as head of Jimenez Elementary. His face is thin, his nose sticking out of it, sniffing the air for danger. His clothes are one size too big. What used to be fat is now flab.

The “ousting committee” at the school, headed by a teacher nicknamed Annie Get Your Guns, is partly to blame for Mr. H.'s pitiful appearance. The committee is a group of teachers who run the school no matter who's principal. Some of them have been in the district so long they can walk through the school blindfolded and never bump into anything. Because of the committee's success with the school board and parents, Mr. H.'s chances of staying in his position are getting slimmer by the day. Members of the committee are faithful to their commitment when working on a campaign and meet daily at someone's house or keep in touch by phone. Each day they build momentum in the push to free themselves of a “tyrant who will soon grovel,” as they put it. He didn't look very tyrannical to me standing in his office, balancing a coffee cup, with a pencil stuck over one ear.

“What do you mean, ‘too personal'?” I ask. “It's the truth.”

“Yes, but children are so susceptible. Remember the ones who got hit by the car two years ago? Kids are having nightmares to this day.”

Ironically, the school is named for the Medal of Honor recipient Lance Corporal Jose Francisco “Pancho” Jimenez, U.S. Marine Corps. Jimenez was born in Mexico City on March 20, 1946. He came to the U.S. legally at the age of ten and was raised in Red Rock, Arizona. Later he attended high school in nearby Eloy. The large Chicano community surrounding the school voted unanimously for naming the school after the war hero, who was killed on August 28, 1969, in the vicinity of Quang Nam province. Jimenez single-handedly destroyed several of the enemy forces and silenced an anti-aircraft weapon. His heroic actions saved several members of his company. He was buried in Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico, and is the only Medal of Honor recipient of the Vietnam War who was born in Mexico.

“Mr. H., who is this school named for?” I ask.

“I realize all that. And that's paying honor where honor is due. Of course that's not saying your brother wasn't a hero. Don't misunderstand me, Teresa. We also have to consider Vietnamese students at the school.”

“I have Li Ann Nguyen in my class.” My throat starts to ache. I'm
surprised at the insane thoughts going through my mind. Little weasel. That's what he looks like. An albino weasel who stayed home protesting the war when my brother was fighting in Vietnam to save his flabby ass! Calmate. Calm yourself. My fingers turn ice cold. I breathe in, holding the ambush of thoughts at bay. I shift in the chair. He looks pathetic, the little weasel. I'm a sucker for the underdog just like Jesse was.

“Suppose I get support from Li Ann's family. Would that make you feel better?”

“It's not what makes me feel better, Teresa. It's what's best for the children and their parents. We don't want all-out war on the playground, no pun intended. Everything I say these days seems to bug somebody, no matter how I say it.”

“I can't believe I'm hearing this!” I stand up. I notice the pencil stub stuck over one of Mr. H.'s ears. It looks stupid. It brings me back to the moment, dissipates the past, so I can talk to him without going for his throat. “There's a pencil stuck on your ear.”

“Oh thanks, Teresa. I was working on some bubble sheets. Deadlines—there's so many deadlines! We just got through with state testing, and now they want us to restructure all the district tests. You wouldn't be interested in working on the committee, would you?”

“I was on the committee that made the ones they're restructuring! A fine thank-you for all the work we did. But I guess they have to spend district money somehow before the year's over.”

I listen to angry voices in the next room. Shirley, the school secretary, walks in dragging one of the fourth-grade boys by the arm. I secretly thank God I'm not a fourth-grade teacher.

“Oh, no, not Jason again!” says Mr. H., spilling coffee on his white slacks.

“He was out fighting again at recess. Eric is in the nurse's office. Jason gave him a whopper of a bloody nose.” Jason squirms out of Shirley's grasp as I walk out. His reputation for notorious behavior is known throughout the district. Last year, teachers from other schools in the district pitched in and paid his mother's rent so she wouldn't move into their area. The fifth-grade teachers have already drawn straws to decide who will get Jason next year, and there are rumors that the loser is resigning. The other teachers are thinking of picketing to stop the resignation.

I watch Mr. H. stick the pencil stub back on his ear. Keeping the assistant principal busy is another ploy used by the “ousting committee” to overwork Mr. H. More power to the “ousting committee” and Annie Get Your Guns!

I walk out into the school office and see the huge glass cabinet with mementos of Pancho Jimenez. In one of them, he's standing in a cowboy outfit with his mother, Basilia Jimenez Chagolla, and his younger sister, Maria del Pilar. He was the only son of his mother. His father was killed in an accident months before Pancho was born. Pancho could have received a deferment as a sole surviving son but refused to do so. There's another picture showing President Nixon presenting Pancho's mother with the Medal of Honor in 1970. Pancho's gravesite in Mexico was not decorated with the headstone of a Medal of Honor recipient until many years later due to the unpopularity of the Vietnam War. Pictures of Arizona's three other Medal of Honor recipients, Jay M. Vargas, Maj. U.S. Marine Corps, Nicky D. Bacon, Sgt. U.S. Army, and Oscar P. Austin, PFC U.S. Marine Corps, also hang on separate frames on the wall. A real uniting of Arizona's best in Vietnam.

Clara, the office assistant, hands me a pink telephone message as I walk up to the front desk. “Your husband, I mean your ex-husband-to-be, called an hour ago and said he needs to talk to you before you leave school.” I take the message, crumple it, and throw it in the trash. Instantly, I am filled with remorse as I watch Clara's eyes glitter with anticipation of new gossip.

“By the way, Teresa, do you want to be called Mrs. Alvarez, or
Ms.
Ramirez?” She puts an inflection on the word “Ms.” Clara reminds me of a vulture asking its dying victim if there are any last words.

“Mrs. Alvarez for now. It would be too hard for the kids to try to call me anything else so late in the year. Next year I'll use Ramirez.”

“Must be hard. I mean the divorce and all…but I'm glad you made it back in one piece. I mean you look great…I guess what happened over the holidays was a real nightmare, maybe…” Her voice trails off as if she wants me to fill in the blanks.

“Yeah, it was hard.” All of a sudden I feel tired. Tired of thinking about the divorce, Ray, Sandra, the kids, my mother, and now Jesse.

Clara loves rumors, thrives on rumors. I read the words of the latest gossip on her face:
Ray's living with that hot little number he picked up at one of his gigs. Always a younger woman, ain't that a damn shame, after all you've been through with him. What can you expect from men anyway
? All she really says is, “I'm here if you need my help, Teresa.” Right. Help from the Rumor Queen.

Other books

Reap & Repent by Lisa Medley
MY THEODOSIA by Anya Seton
In Your Honor by Heidi Hutchinson
The Tell by Hester Kaplan
SweetlyBad by Anya Breton
The Extraction List by Renee N. Meland