The Taste of Salt (5 page)

Read The Taste of Salt Online

Authors: Martha Southgate

BOOK: The Taste of Salt
3.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Rest is their feast, and all things at their will;
The noblest mind the best contentment has

when I heard all this noise. I finally looked up. Five white cops were past me and busting through the door—only reason they didn't grab me was that I was off to the side a little. I have never been so fucking scared—pardon my French. If the cops didn't get me, then Bootsy, the numbers guy, sure as hell would if I didn't get out of there that goddamn minute. And I do mean far away. Jesse Owens didn't have nothing on me that night. You ain't never seen a Negro run the way I ran
that night. And while I was running, all I kept thinking was, ‘I'm done with this. I'm done with this. I'm done with this.' ”

The night he told Sarah this story was the first night they ever made love. After he finished this story, she just looked at him. She seemed to have lost her powers of speech. But she put her hand over his. They were silent. After a while she said, “Why don't we go to your apartment?”

Ray's apartment wasn't much, though it was a step up from the nasty little room he rented when he first got to Cleveland. This place had doors and a separate bedroom, at least. They didn't talk much on the way there. But they did hold hands.

Once they were inside, they both looked a little frightened. There was so much feeling between them. Ray wished he'd had one more drink before they came up. (Was that when it started? Was that when?) He had opened the door and let Sarah walk in ahead of him. He shut the door and she turned to him and opened her arms and took him in. He'd never been taken in like that before. She enfolded him absolutely. She gave him every inch of herself and he did the same.

T
HEY DID WHAT PEOPLE
do—nothing special, nothing new. But they took their time. They kept looking
at each other and touching each other everywhere. They weren't shy or afraid.
She
wasn't shy or afraid. She showed him what she liked. She showed him what was right. Much, much later, after it was all gone, Ray would sometimes think, “If only I had kept listening to her.”

Four

My parents married in 1970, when they were in their late twenties. My mother was finishing up nursing school and Daddy was dreaming of getting off the assembly line. All things seemed possible to them. My mother loved her work and she loved her husband. My father? He loved his wife. He put up with his job. He had to. What else was he going to do? He put his energy into loving her and reading everything he could get his hands on. On the weekends, he tried to write a novel, sitting down at the typewriter Saturday mornings, a cup of coffee in hand. He slid a clean sheet of paper under the platen and rolled it in. Almost instantly, his mind would go blank. He would sit there, staring at the blank page nervously for a little while—then get up to refill his coffee cup or take a walk or something.
Sometimes he wrote a sentence or two. They never sounded very good to him, though. He couldn't imagine how Ralph Ellison had found the will to stick to the ideas and images and story until they came out clear, like raindrops on a gray day.

My mother loved to see him sitting at the keyboard. She believed something beautiful would come out of it someday. She believed that he'd find a way off the assembly line eventually. She wasn't sure how but she was sure that he would. Everybody at his job called him Professor, Prof for short. Both he and Sarah loved that.

Sarah didn't like to admit to herself that she felt a little odd about having married someone who worked on an assembly line. She had been raised to marry a college man—someone from Howard or Hampton. And a small corner of her still wanted that. She knew when he finished that book that he would show everyone what she already knew; he'd show the world how smart he was, how special. She loved that he was trying, that he was willing to try. She loved that he didn't seem to need her to take care of him—in fact, he liked to take care of her. He gave her back rubs and foot rubs, indulgences that she'd never had from anyone. He made her laugh harder than anyone she'd ever known. And he was as bright as the day was long, despite his mind-deadening job. How she loved to watch him sit with a book
in the evenings, while she knitted or read something else, the light spilling over his shoulder as he read. She loved how he had made himself. She loved
that
he had made himself. She loved that he had come from nothing and made himself an educated man.

One night, after they had been married for three years and she was heavily pregnant with me, they were sitting and reading, the way they often did. Ray didn't read aloud often, but this evening, he looked up and said to her, “Hey, doll. Listen to this.” Then he read these words:

Wave of sorrow
Do not drown me now.
I see the island
Still ahead somehow.
I see the island
And its sands are fair.
Wave of sorrow
Take me there.

The last words echoed in the room. After a long silence she said, “That's beautiful. Who wrote that?”

Ray smiled. “It's called ‘Island.' It's by Langston Hughes. He used to live around here, you know. He went to Central High.”

“Yeah?”

“Yeah.”

Sarah reached her hand out. “Can I see the book?”

He handed it to her. She read the poem over and over. And in the days to come, she found herself murmuring the words under her breath. She said it to herself so many times that after a few weeks, she knew she'd never forget it, that the poem beat through her blood now. There were times, later on, when those words that Langston and Ray had given her were all she had to hold on to. But the day she learned that poem, a wave of sorrow seemed very far away.

S
HE LOVED HER JOB
then. She had finished school and was working at Mount Sinai, not far from home. She loved the rhythm of her days. She was a surgical nurse—there weren't too many black women doing that. The black women who did the work she did were just starting to band together—she had been at the first meeting of the National Black Nurses Association, which was founded right downtown. She stayed active in it for a long time, licking stamps and making phone calls. She liked feeling a part of something bigger than herself. She loved the precision of her job—helping, handing the doctor the right instrument at just the right time, getting to know the bloody order that resides in each human. She loved the taking-care part of her job, too—consoling sobbing wives, holding the hand of a
frightened stranger. She often felt that she was born to take care of people this way, born to stand by holding someone's hand as they suffered. Maybe that's why she stayed with my father as long as she did.

She quit working just a few weeks before I was born. The different shifts and the constant on-her-feet time just got to be too much—Ray couldn't rub it away after a while. There was no flextime back then, no way to work anything out. If you got pregnant, you left your job. Period.

She decided to quit one Friday night after a ten-hour shift. She sat on the sofa, her feet in Ray's strong hands. He rubbed intently, looking at them, sometimes offering a playful kiss to one of her toes. Suddenly, she started crying.

“Hey, hey, doll, what is it?”

“Ray, I can't keep working like this. I know we need the money and I really love the work. But my back hurts all the time and I come home and just feel like I'm gonna die. The doctor said I might have to stop when I got this far along. I was hoping I'd be different.”

He never stopped rubbing during this whole speech. When she wiped her eyes and stopped crying, he said quietly, “We'll be fine. You go on and give your notice. You gotta take care of yourself and the baby.”

My mother looked at him with wonder. He rested one of
her feet in his lap and picked up his beer to take a sip. She leaned over to kiss him, hard, not even minding the beeriness. “Thanks.”

F
IRST ME AND THEN
Tick, barely two years apart, into everything. They hadn't meant to have the children so close together. But one night they'd finally gotten me to sleep. They started kissing and just got carried away. Carried away with that night was life as the parents of an only child. I was only eighteen months old when she found out that Tick was coming. Ray tried to put a good face on it when she told him but she knew. She felt the same way. It was just too soon for another baby. They were stretched so thin already.

And Tick was a difficult baby. You wouldn't know it to look at him. He was a perfect brown butterball, dimpled and angelic looking. Until the evening, when the colic came on him and she and Ray would have to take turns walking and walking and walking and walking while Tick screamed himself into a sleep that was more like unconsciousness. It went on for hours. It went on for days into weeks into months. At first she asked her friends about it, but then their fussy babies stopped fussing and they could offer no more counsel. He cried for four hours every night for four
months. At first Ray helped her, but then he told her that he was so tired at work that he was afraid of making mistakes that would cost him his job, so then she took over.

Ray was reading less and getting up from the typewriter faster on Saturday mornings, if he sat down at all, and somewhere in Sarah's exhausted mind, out of the corner of her half-asleep, bloodshot eye, she could see that the beer he'd always enjoyed was becoming a little more omnipresent. It crept up so slowly and her life was such a blur of diapering and wiping and walking and strolling and cooking and cleaning that she couldn't be sure. But every now and then she would look at him, and he would be sitting in front of the television, a beer in his hand, and she'd realize that this was happening almost every evening.

This next part is a little weird for me to imagine—what child, even once grown, likes to imagine her parents' most intimate lives? But if I'm going to tell it, I want to tell it all. Some of this I guess at, some of this I put together from hints, clues, asides that my mother shared with me. She was so lonely a lot of the time, especially when I was younger. Sometimes, I was the only person she had, I think. So. Anyway. Here's what I think might have happened:

She didn't know what to do. She still loved him. And he was in the house. He was working and bringing home his
paycheck. He didn't hit her. He didn't yell or curse at her or the children. He still spoke to her; he wasn't out in some bar. She didn't know what to think.

One year passed, then two, then three. She got in the habit of going to bed before Ray did. She was so tired, doing all the work to take care of the babies and the house and everything else. He didn't lift a finger—that was another thing that had changed. They used to do chores together and have a good time doing them. He'd do the dishes while she swept or something like that, and they'd joke around. But somehow he had just stopped helping with all that. She didn't have the nerve to ask him about it. It seemed too petty to talk about. He was tired from work. He had to do a lot of overtime now that she wasn't bringing anything in, and with the two kids, it was a lot to ask. It made perfect sense that he would do less around the house. Things had to be divided up somehow. Still, she wished he would notice how hard she was working to keep things nice. How hard she was working to raise good, smart, kind, polite children.

A winter night. She was lying in bed, Tick and me finally asleep. She had her hand on her stomach, under her nightgown. Not as tight as it used to be, but not bad, considering. She was thinking about how he used to touch her. There
hadn't been much of that recently either. The time when they had spent hours, days, visiting each other's bodies like favorite countries was long gone.

Much of the time, she didn't even want to be touched. She was often worn out herself. She rarely thought of making love to him anymore. But this night she did. She was still awake when he came in. He sat on the edge of the bed, and it sagged under his weight as he lay down. He was wearing only boxers and a T-shirt. He lay on his back, breathing evenly. He smelled of beer and fatigue. She rolled over toward him and reached for him. And he turned toward her—sweet surprise—and started kissing her. But it wasn't like it used to be. He seemed distracted, like he was kissing her to forget something else that was bothering him. Despite this, she felt herself responding. She didn't want to stop so she moved her head down to kiss his chest and his stomach. She tried—they both did. But nothing happened. Finally, he pulled away from her and rolled over without a word. “Ray?” she said, moving up so he could hear her. “It's all right, Ray. I don't—”

“It's not all right. Nothing is all right, damn it. Why can't you see that, woman?” He hit the mattress in front of him so hard that she could feel it vibrate. She pulled back a little, though she knew in her bones that he would never hit her. “Why can't you see that? Damn it.”

She didn't say anything. It seemed that she would never have anything to say again. The room was shrouded in silence. It was very late by the time she finally fell asleep.

T
HE NEXT DAY, THEY
didn't talk about what had happened. Just got up and she fixed him breakfast and he went to work and came home. But this time, without a six-pack. Her heart leapt at the sight of his empty hands. He played with me and Tick while she fixed dinner, another change. He ate an elaborate pretend meal that I fixed for him in my play kitchen (I don't remember this, but I like to think it happened), and he helped Tick build with his LEGOS, his voice low and patient. She was afraid to breathe. But finally, once she got us down to sleep, she went into the living room and sat next to him on the sofa. He didn't look at her. “Ray?”

He still didn't look at her.

“Ray, I'm glad you came home the way you did tonight and played with the kids and all. But will you talk to me?”

He still didn't look at her. He used to gaze at her so hard she thought he was trying to see her soul. He used to gaze at her so hard that she sometimes had to turn her head away; she couldn't stand it. Being loved that much. It made her blush. It made her nervous. It made her so happy. And now he wouldn't look at her at all. She got up and turned off
the television and stood in front of him. “Ray, please, please talk to me. I see how you're trying. I don't care, I don't care about what happened last night. I don't think any less of you, but I gotta know that we're in this together. I gotta know that you're still my husband.” She paused. “That you still love me.”

Other books

Restless Empire by Odd Westad
Sing Sweet Nightingale by Erica Cameron
The Last Rain by Edeet Ravel
The Future's Mine by Leyland, L J
The Gift of Hope by Pam Andrews Hanson
The Stone of Blood by Tony Nalley
The Bet by Rachel Van Dyken
Red Lily by Nora Roberts