2.10.15



--   Mongrel


--   What did you say

--   Mongrel
                  Mawma whats a mongrel

--   Why would you say that

--   The old lady down the street  he pointed  down the block across the street  called me a mongrel She stood on her porch watching me go by and she said You boy You mongrel You keep moving I dont want you around my property
Im watching you Im watching you walk by You best know Im watching you and dont you never stop walking when
you cross in front of my property

I think shes a mean lady Her dog snapped at me through the fence pickets Liked to get at me get out from behind that white fence and take a bite of me I think

--   Maybe because youre a sweet little boy honey

--   Maybe thats what the dog thinks
Not the lady
I dont know what she thinks Something else but I dont know

Whats a mongrel Mawma

--   You neednt worry Youre not a mongrel

Im not going to explain what the old lady thinks Her thinking is wrong Shes a product do you understand product shes a product of the way she was brought up and she doesnt know any better  Its the way she was made to be  like when you make something make a product  Okay


Shes an ignorant woman
                                                                                                                                        
And thats why youre going to school So youre not ignorant like her She doesnt know any better my little boy Shes an ignorant woman and you should try to ignore her when she talks like that Her family brought her up poorly and we can never undo what she learned from them what she was told Some learning is like bleach like Mawma uses on Daddys white shirts The bleach makes sure they come out bright white Its harsh You know how Mawmas hands are red and how they smell after shes washed Daddys shirts Im afraid honey some learning is like bleach

--   Does it hurt

--   It doesnt hurt her
Unfortunately she hurts other people So dont you pay any attention to her Dont be rude Just walk by You just keep walking home and pretend her words are like a gust of wind  Let them blow past you  Pay them no heed no attention

--   It is hard when they hurt

--   She should know better But in that absence you have to know better

--   Shes not nice Mawma

--   Im afraid honey she probably never knew any better 
                                                                                         
She was bleached white



Try to remember honey

the boy felt something inside him that he hadnt a word for   he didnt like it
he would try though  as his mother asked   
 
                                                                      from the kitchen the boys grandmother overheard their conversation                                               
her long grey hair was tied back in four braids that she wound on top of her head the knot of her red flour-dusted kitchen apron was tied just beneath their relaxed tendrils   

she leaned over the hand-formed loaves of bread that laid on a dusted cuttingboard

she shook her head slowly   
                                               very slowly
she was familiar with the old woman her grandson was talking of
the old woman who provoked him
who didnt feel any shame
                
likely she felt entitled by her very being    her blood


when she had first moved into the neighborhood a wood two-flat that her children helped her to afford she went up and down the block on either side of the street to introduce herself 
their new neighbor

in the old country in the small hamlet they lived in her family knew everyone on the small block abbreviated by the surrounding farmland and fields for grazing stock it was graced with modest houses and greenyards and interspersed with small businesses a tailor a seamstress a shoemaker a very small aromatic bakery which bartered for goods rather than money exchanged

her grandson    she knew
                                             and she would not discourage him

  
when he grew older he slipped around behind the old womans house entered her yard through the alley using the adobe incinerator to bypass her tined wood fence and helped himself to her fragrant  treasured  roses

he  very carefully  cut them free with his jackknife so not to betray himself  maybe tinker a bit with her memory
fog her up  and brought them home for his mother
small bouquets
          
she admired his deliberation how he honed his stealth very nearly into an artform and the whole while the old woman suspected it was him   though she couldnt catch him redhanded  and her daughter refused to give the old woman any credence that her son was blatantly a thief

every grammar school day he walked past to and fro the front of her house
  
relentlessly she chided him

he irritated her by smiling at her words
allowing them to bypass his ears

and either before
                             or afterwards
he took small bouquets home to his mother leaving them bundled beside the kitchen sink
usually in his grandmothers care

she kept a small vegetable and flower garden in the vacant lot beside her two-flat and as often as her daughter asked about the roses she said she had picked them herself


she knew and was very familiar with the old woman and her distinct upbringing  knew her kind  from the big city
in the old country

she disliked her immensely

when she was introducing herself to everyone she recalled where the old woman said she was from


she rather enjoyed that her grandson was getting the better of the woman
and if she helped nominally telling a little white lie   so be it
she felt the old woman deserved far more than the little white lie she tendered

he was getting the better of her 

and if he was

then the old womans beliefs were wrong
they didnt hold water despite what she thought

curiously her mongrel grandson of a race the old woman found appalling was bettering her beating her at her own game  innately 
her much-professed and exalted white Aryan stock  cantilevered and upheld by the new sciences then
by evolutionary biology by eugenics by learned American professors who said a boy such as he was doomed to misery because he was born a degenerate  defective  as all who were that werent born Pure  and White   and Nordic
         
and yet her little mongrel  and she  were making an abject fool of the old woman

she left Europe to leave those sensibilities behind       
only to discover the race theorists who were touted actually lived in America
      
her grandson and she never talked about it
it was their pact

the boy and his mother didnt speak of it either until the following year when the old woman again showed up at their door with her venal accusations


Grandmother answered the door

it was her house

it was her family

she listened to the old womans words  let them pass like gusts and breezes  then dismissed her abruptly shutting the door in her face

Grandmother said she did however appreciate the woman taciturn acceptance of the door shut in her face   she also appreciated her backbone her relentless pursuit of her satisfaction
which she would never gain unless she caught the mongrel
                                                                                               You did call him a mongrel
redhanded 
  
as a family they never talked of the old woman




1439,  Day-between-Two-Ts,  9  9. 15 
 1345,  Thursday – its a hallieday,  10  9. 15