Authors: Carol Lea Benjamin
He covered his face and cried, but when he took his hands away, his face had changed. He wasn't sad now, he wasn't frightened, he was angry, his face whole, open, strong, his eyes round and clear, sane, his demeanor adult, powerful.
“Then it changed,” he said, strong in his knowledge, “and now
he
put my mother's dress on, and makeup, powder and rouge and lipstick, he looked so weird to me, but he said he was doing it so I'd know what to do, so I wouldn't make a fool of myself when the time came, so I could be a man. That's what he told me, so I could be a man.”
“How awful for you.”
“Gotta practice, he'd say. Gotta get ready. Gotta do it. That's what he'd say when I criedâGotta do it. I was a
child
. I couldn't protect myself. I didn't know how. And there was no one there to do it for me. No one there to rescue me.”
“That's what we're doing here, rescuing that child.”
Clifford nodded, his gaze far away. Bertram Kleinman and I waited silently, watching Cliff see something from a long time ago, something only he could see.
“When I was little, before this, four or five, I guess, Peter used to make me alphabet soup, you know, from a can, of course. I still remember it,” he said, his brown eyes glowing. “He'd bring the bowl carefully to the table, one of those flat, wide soup bowls with rims, and some of the soup would slosh up onto the rim of the bowl, and when it went back into the bowl, the letters that had washed up onto the rim would stay there, and he'd say, We need these, we need every letter, because there's a message in there. Where? I'd say, looking into the bowl of soup. In there, he'd tell me, there's a message for you in the soup. You just have to find it. And he'd hand me the soup spoon. Do you remember what a soup spoon felt like in your mouth when you were four or five, how huge it was?”
Kleinman must have nodded. Clifford smiled at him.
“That was my brother. Huge. I loved him. And he hurt me.”
“What would you like to say to Peter now?” Kleinman asked.
Clifford sat still. I could almost feel the dizziness of his trying to think of what to say and the question of who you were, of how old you were, as you said your piece.
“He wasn't all bad,” he said softly, almost inaudibly, his eyes down.
Clifford took a huge breath and let it go. He looked up now, toward the direction from which the hand with the tissues had come.
“I wouldn't like to
say
anything to him. I'd like to hurt him.”
“That's a very disturbing thought. Tell me about that. Tell me what you feel.”
Sullen now, Clifford sat staring, saying nothing, for what seemed like forever, until finally Dr. Kleinman said they'd talk more about it next time and the screen went black with thousands of swirling white dots on it.
In a moment the next session began. Clifford had on a flannel shirt, a deep rust, cream, and teal, his hair looked darker, it looked wet, curls on his brow, the rest smoothed back tight and straight, pulled into a ponytail in the back. He looked stony as he clipped on the microphone.
“I saw him. My brother.”
He exhaled through his nose in disgust.
“And what happened between you?”
“I told him that I remembered what he had done to me.”
“What did he say?” Kleinman's voice full of emotion now.
“He
said
I shouldn't make a big deal out it. You always were like that, Cuffie, is what he
said
to me.
What
a pain in the ass you always were. Imagine.
He
called
me
a pain in the ass!”
“How awful this must have been for you. How painful.”
“You're so thin-skinned, he said. I can't even talk to you. That's just stuff boys do. You don't have to make a whole production about it now, do you, it was a million years ago, we were just kids, playing. That's how boys play, Cuff.”
“And what did you say to him?”
“What
kind
of boys play that way, Peter? Tell me that.”
“What did he say?”
“He got furious.
He
got furious. Normal boys play that way, he said. So I said, Yeah? How about
your
boys? Do your sons play that way? And he jumped upâwe were in a fucking restaurantâand I thought he was going to smack me right in the face.”
“What did you do?”
“I kept right on going. Man, I couldn't stop. He was putting on his jacket, and I was sitting there shouting at him, If it's so fucking normal, then I guess you wouldn't mind if everyone
knew
about it, would you? Like your
sons
. Or your
wife
. Or, and then I was laughing at him, the way he used to laugh at me, those nice folks at your school.”
“What happened then?” Tension creeping into Kleinman's voice.
“He split. Ran out. Stuck me with the bill. You know, I remembered something else, Dr. Kleinman. I remembered that one time when we were kids, after he had started abusing me, I said I'd tell on him, and do you know what he did?”
Silence.
“He said he'd tell everyone
I
was a little shit-eating sissy. And they'd believe
him
, not
me
. And he laughed at me, laughed at his cleverness, at the trap I was in. After that, he used to call me that. In fact, in front of my parents, you know how kids always like to tease each other so that the parents don't know what's going on? Well, he just shortened it to SES, shit-eating sissy, then just SSS, and I'd know, SSS, like a snake. He'd whisper it at the table or when we were riding in the car, he threatened me with it, he shut me up with it until I felt so bad and so beaten that I shut away the whole thing, everything he'd done, and later, now, I just
felt
like a little shit-eating sissy, but I never knew why.”
“Clifford, the word âsissy'â”
“Faggot, fairy, queer, homo, you mean
that
word?” he shouted. “Yes, and let's not forget sissy. Sissy boy. He called me that, too. That, in fact, was another of his favorites.”
“Do you feel that what your brother did had anything to do with your sexual orientation?”
“No,” he said. “Of course not.”
He sat quietly, his eyes filling, tears spilling out over the rims, not blinking, not catching those tears with a tissue, not wiping them away with his fingers. No, he just sat.
“Of course not,” he whispered. “It had to do with my feeling like a little shit-eating sissy. It had to do with my always feeling inadequate, at fault, ugly, stupid, guilty.”
I thought I heard Kleinman crying, too.
“But my sexual orientation is God-given. Peter didn't have anything to do with that. No matter what I thought when I was a little boy, Peter is not God.”
I heard Kleinman ask Cliff if he was all right, and then static indicated that the session had ended.
A week later, Clifford needing a shave, Clifford looking as if he hadn't slept in days:
“I told him blood will tell. I told him that Morton was doing to Lester, his precious Lester, what he had done to me.”
“You told him that over dinner?”
“No, I told him that by painting it.”
Les and mor
, for God's sake. Lester and Morton. Peter's boys.
That's
why it wasn't at the show.
Peter had seen it the night that Dennis left the key for him. And after Louis had invited him to the opening, he'd done what any father would do. He'd gone back, to rescue his children.
“After that first confrontation, Clifford, what did you actually say to Peter?”
“I've been painting,” he said. It was on his shirt, and in his hair.
Orange, like the basketball the young boy in the dress was holding.
Peter. In a dress.
So that's how he would hurt him!
“What do you mean, Cliff?”
“I've been painting the truth, painting him the way he really is, the way he should be seen. Oh, he thought he made
my life
a drag! Wait until he sees what I can do to
his
life.”
Bitter laughter.
“But you haven't tried talking to Peter again?”
Silence.
“Maybe in time, Clifford, you'll be able to. Right now, you need time to deal with your own feelings, with this terrible pain, so that you will be able to let go of it sometime in the future.”
Snort.
“He needs time, too, Clifford. All he can feel now is defensive, but given time, if you tell him again how he made you feelâ”
“I
told
him. I also told him I wanted him to
feel
how I felt. He's my brother, isn't he? So I want to
share
with him how shame feels, how fear feels, how it would feel to be threatened with exposure and humiliation, all the things that I felt. Thanks to him.”
“You told him about the paintings? What did he say?”
“He laughed at me. Who cares what you paint? Who'll ever see what
you
paint? And then he hung up.”
“Listen, Dennis,” I had said late last night when he picked up, half asleep, “there's something bothering me.”
“What?”
Well, to tell the truth, it was more like
wha
? It seemed Dennis had finally gotten over his insomnia. I forged ahead anyway.
“It's about those three missing canvases. Have you thought about them at all?”
“Sure. I figured Louis took them to keep for himself.”
“Why take them off the frames?”
“A lot of people do that, roll the canvas so that it takes less space, you know, store it in a tube. Maybe he didn't have room for them. I understand his place is really small.”
“But he had one painting at the show that was not for sale. Why hold three out?”
“He has that right. Maybe he didn't like them. Or maybe he loved them. Maybe they were personal. Who knows?”
“I'd like to.”
“
Now
? Couldn't it wait until morning?”
I looked at my watch. It was after two.
“Sorry. I'll catch you tomorrow. I mean tonight.”
I had wanted to tell him everything I had learned, but it could wait. At least until I was sure.
The catalog listed fifty-three works. I thought that's what Louis had said, tooâor was it Veronica? Yes, she had said there were forty-seven paintings and five pieces of sculpture, and that's what was listed. Everything accounted for.
Except what had been on those empty stretchers. Two works in addition to
les and mor
.
I jumped up without bothering to shut off the VCR and went right for the photo albums, taking all three of them back to the desk. I opened the first.
The first album contained pictures of Cliff and Louie on a trip to Rome and Israel; from the looks of the other people occasionally in the photos, it was a gay tour.
The second album was a book of slides of Clifford's work. I took the loupe out of the middle drawer, took out one of the plastic pages, and, my eye to the lens, held it up to the light to see what was there. On this page, there were photos of
up
and
rising son
. Also the basenji sculpture, shot in various stages.
There were some shots of Cliff, in goggles and knee pads, painting, what looked like Saran Wrap around his watch, but it wasn't possible to be sure without projecting the slide.
The third album was the one I wanted to look at first, family pictures, the ones Bertram Kleinman had been shown, and yes, there was Clifford as a happy little boy, on a tricycle, with a litter of beagle puppies, holding hands with an older boy. A boy who was a little taller than he was and quite a bit stockier, even then. A boy holding a basketball against his hip. A boy whose head had been torn off.
I paged through the album slowly, studying Clifford's family, his mother and father, looking young and proud with their two sons, one, the younger, with blond curls, the other, the older boy, headless, and on and on, even until adulthood. Near the end of the book, I found Lester and Morton. In fact, I found the picture from which the painting in question had been made. In the photo, the boys stood close together, grinning falsely, clearly having been told to smile for the camera. Normal boys, like normal basenjis, not wanting to do as they were told. Not wanting to have their stupid picture taken when they could be playing war or climbing a tree instead. The painting, as I remember, was another story, a story of lewdness and fear, a story of incest and abuse, a story that said, Do your sons play that way? and Blood will tell.
Peter's wife, Linda, whom I had spoken to yesterday, was a short, square-looking woman with a round, flattish face, her hair neatly coiffed and sprayed, the hem of her unstylish dress landing primly beneath her knees, her children at her left, the ankles and feet of her husband to her right.
Bertram Kleinman's voice was coming from the television speakers.
Bert: “You said that to him?”
Cliff, crying: “Yes.”
Bert: “You were able to get angry at him?”
Cliff: “Yes.”
Bert: “This is marvelous, Clifford, a real breakthrough for you. This is what we've been working for.”
Cliff: “But it didn't do any
good
. He just doesn't get it. The way he doesn't get that I'm an artist. Just because I'm his kid brother. I mean, even when I told him I had signed a gallery contract for my first show, well, my first
group
show, but still, he didn't get it. He didn't even congratulate me, Dr. Kleinman.”
“What did he do?”
“He hung up on me. He said âShit,' and hung up. Do you see what I mean? What
good
did it do?”
Bert: “Clifford, we're not talking about changing Peter. Or erasing the past. We don't have the power to do either of those things. What we're talking about is
you
, we're talking about your ability to express what you feel. And toward that end, this has been a really positive step for you.”