Maybe You Never Cry Again (3 page)

“Hey,” he said, grabbing me. “Why you runnin'?”

And he turned around and saw these five guys coming toward us, and he looked dead at 'em—and they froze the hell up. All five of them. Stopped on a dime. Looked
scared.
And Darryl said, “You guys fuckin' with my brother?”

And the one guy—he was like shakin'—the one guy said, “We—we didn't know he was your brother, man.”

“He's my brother all right. And if you want to fight him, he'll take you. But he'll take you one at a time.”

Man, these guys were
nervous.
Darryl was known in the neighborhood. Didn't take shit from no one. He was mean and crazy. Kids called him Karate.
Nobody
messed with Darryl.

Now the guys were trying to back down; telling Darryl that we didn't have to fight; that maybe we should forget the whole thing; and how sorry they was. But I looked at Darryl. I
wanted
to fight. And he walked us back into the park and I took the leader on, one-on-one. And I'll tell you: I tore his ass up good.

“Represent
this,
motherfucker,” I said. The sumbitch was scared to get up.

And my brother said, “It's over, see? If any of you bother my brother again, you better shoot me in the back of the head, because I'm coming for you.”

Darryl and I left the park and he walked me to the corner. He didn't say nothin'. Didn't tell me I fought good or anything. He must've figured I knew I'd fought good and that I must've felt that inside me. It wasn't for him to judge my fighting, anyway. It was for me. And then he said, “See ya.” Like it was nothing. And off he went down the street.

“Where you goin'?” I said, hungerin' for him.

“Practice,” he said, not even turning to face me. “I got me a new band.”

“Band?”
I hollered. I didn't know he had a band.

When I got home, I went into the kitchen to get a glass of water. My mama said, “How you doin', Bean?”

“Good,” I said.

“You know,” she said, “funny thing about life. Most people, they got a problem, they crank and moan. What they don't think about is fixin' it themselves.”

I didn't say nothin'. I just listened.

“But if you fix it yourself, you're going to find that there's always going to be one person in the world you can turn to.
You.

“Yes, ma'am.”

“One person you can depend on.”

“Yes, ma'am.”

“Thinking is something people don't do enough of, Bean. It's a strong man that knows how to sit in the dark and be alone with his thoughts.”

“I'm trying, Mama.”

She had it down.
Suffering is the best teacher of all. If you want people to respect you, you got to respect yourself first. Life don't change unless you make it change.

Mac-isms, I call 'em. They're with me to this day. I
use
them to this day.

 

Later that same evening, before dinner, my grandma came into my room, clutching her worn Bible. “Read to me, son,” she said. When I was a kid, she used to read to me all the time, but now her cataracts were so bad she could hardly see. Still, she knew that Bible inside out. Every last detail: who did what where and who was who's brother and that bit with the burning bush and so on and so forth. Someone had sure drummed that book into her head when she was a little girl.

“Men are weak, son,” she said. “They like sheep. They followers. And usually they follow the wrong man down the wrong road.”

“Yes, ma'am.”

“You remember your seven deadlies?”

“Yes, ma'am.”

“Tell them to me,” she said, and she closed her cloudy eyes to listen.

“Pride, greed, lust, anger, envy, gluttony, and sloth.”

“Gives me the shivers just to think on it, son. Lot of wickedness in this world. Takes a strong man to find the right path and follow it.”

We went down to dinner, and my grandfather was already waiting at the table. He looked at me like he wanted to slap me up the side of the head.

“Messing with that bad element!” he said. “Pass them there bread rolls, boy! You never gonna learn.”

He didn't mean anything by it. He just didn't know how to spin things the way my mother and grandmother did. There wasn't any lesson in it—which was odd, seeing how he was a deacon. But it was just the way he was. Wasn't warm or affectionate, either. Never once put his arms around me; never once told me he loved me. But that had power, too. His attitude shaped me, too. He was there for a reason.

I passed him the rolls.

“When you gonna start using your head, boy? You know what that even mean—
thinkin'
?” Didn't bother me. He could call me a damn fool if he wanted to. I'd been hearing shit like that my whole life.
You stupid skinny ugly and your hair nappy, too.
But so what? Take it in; only makes you stronger. And at the end of the day, you're gonna need your strength. At the end of the day, you in this fight by yourself.

 

A few days later, a Saturday, early evening, Darryl swung by and picked me up and took me to the Regal Theatre. It was Chicago's answer to the Apollo, and it was as fine a club as I'd ever seen. 'Course, it was the
only
club I'd ever seen.

“You gonna hear me croon,” Darryl said, and it was all he said.

He had me help him carry some stuff inside, then found a place for me to sit, way in back. I had a pretty good view of the stage, and when Darryl came out with his band I grinned and clapped along with everyone else. He had a nice voice, my brother, and I enjoyed listening to him, but he was just the opening act. It's the main event that has stayed with me to this day—and the main
event was none other than Moms Mabley, the legendary comedienne, in what might have been one of her last performances ever. She hobbled onto the stage, popped out her teeth, slapped a hair net on her head—and
damn
if she didn't turn into another person. It was magic. She had the whole place roaring with laughter, and I was roaring louder than them all.

“Have a good time?” Darryl asked me on the way home.

“Great,” I said.

He never told me why he'd come by the house to take me to the Regal. Never talked about the neighborhood gangs or the fight in the park. Never asked me whether anyone had bothered me since, which they hadn't. Maybe it was a family thing. We were taught not to crank and moan. We were taught to let things sit deep inside us and figure them out for ourselves. Fact is, nobody really cares about your little problems. And you know for damn sure that nobody wants to hear you whine.

 

After that, I started going to the Regal by myself. They got to know me there. I ran little jobs for them. Helped move stuff around. Went to the store for cigarettes if someone ran out, or coffee, or ice cream when it was hot. And in between I watched the shows.

The music and dancing were pretty good, but for me the main attraction was the comedians. Whenever they brought one out, I held my breath during the entire set. That's the way it felt, anyway. I'd watch the way they moved. The way they timed things. The little pauses here and there. The way this one cocked his head to the left just before he told the punch line.

One night, Pigmeat Markham was on. He was an old-timer, like Moms Mabley, and he'd come up through the Chitlin Circuit, same as her. But you could see the big, raucous man he used to be, the power he held when he did the bit that made him famous:
Here Come Da Judge.

For me, a kid, to see that, not breathing the whole time he was on—it was something special. This was comedy, this was living history, and it was powerful.

 

Sometimes Darryl would come for Sunday dinner with his best friend, Uncle Mitch, but mostly he wouldn't talk to me, and he hardly ever even looked at me. He and Mitch were inseparable, and they were two of a kind: men who quit their dreams. Darryl was gifted. Like I said, that boy could sing. For a time, after that first band broke up, he was hooked up with the Chi-Lites, but he couldn't get along. Then he tried to start another group, and the same thing happened all over again: Seemed like Darryl fought with
everyone.

After dinner, when he and Uncle Mitch was gone, the adults would talk about them.
That Darryl—boy is headstrong. He don't know how to listen, don't know how to get along.

Uncle Mitch had his own gifts, and his own troubles, too. He was maybe one of the best natural-born ballplayers in the whole South Side, but he let it slip away.
That boy don't focus,
they'd be saying in the kitchen.
He let the bad element deteriorate his goals. All that God-given talent, and he don't have the guts or the heart to make use of it.

Thinking back on it now, I know they were saying this for my benefit. And it worked.
Eventually.

 

“Darryl has a lot of his father in him,” my aunt Evelyn told me. “You're more like your mama.”

Maybe she was right, but I wouldn't have known—I never really knew my father. He only came to see me three, four times my whole life. His name was Bernard Jeffrey Harrison, but I took my mother's name, McCullough, since he was a stranger to me.

Early one Saturday, I heard my mother on the phone, talking like she's tense about something, keeping it under her breath. When she hangs up, she comes lookin' for me, tells me, “Put your little suit on. You father's comin' to see you.”

“My father?”

“That was him on the phone. He's gonna take you for ice cream. Get dressed right quick.”

I had this little suit I only wore Sundays, to church, with my starchy shirt, and I put it on and went and sat in the living room, my hands quiet in my lap, my eyes glued to the front door. I didn't move a muscle.
My daddy was coming! My daddy loved me! My daddy was gonna take me out for treats!

Hours go by. Three o'clock, four, five, six. No Daddy. My mother comes in from time to time, looks at me, feelin' for me, getting angry and trying hard to hide it. Finally, she can't take it anymore. She tells me to change out of my little suit. “Your daddy's not comin', Beanie.” I start crying. I tell her she's wrong, I tell her he's coming for sure. “I'm
not
changin'!” I want my daddy to see me in my Sunday best.

She just shakes her head, all brokenhearted for me, says we're out of milk. She's going to the store, she tells me. “Be right back.”

I sit there, wipin' the tears, and when I look up I hear something at the door. I think it's my mama; that maybe she forgot something. But it's not. It's my daddy. I'm grinning so hard my jaw aches. I about float right off that couch. My daddy smiles down at me.

“Well, well, well. Can this really be Bernard Junior?”

Big man. Six-three, two hundred–some pounds. He didn't hug me or nothin', like maybe he didn't know how, so I jumped up and grabbed him around the waist till my arms were achin'. He was laughin', patting me on the head like I'm a little dog.

“I thought you wasn't coming!” I say.

“Me? Not comin'? You really think I'd let you down?”

“No, sir.”

“I know I'm late, son,” he says. “But there's a reason I'm late.” He holds up a set of keys and jiggles them and takes me over to the window. I look outside. Car out there, right in front. “See that car? That your car.”


My
car?”

“Sure is. I bought that car for you, son.”

I'm ten years old. Maybe he jumped the gun a little. But I'm not thinking about that. I'm so excited.
My daddy bought me a car!

“Only one thing, see,” my father says, and he crouches low, gets right in my face, big smile. “I spent all my money on the car. So I don't have money for gas. And without gas money, I can't take you nowhere.”

“I got some money, Daddy!”

“You do?”

“I've been saving and saving!”

I did chores around the neighborhood. I helped the old lady across the street with her garbage. I used to walk my neighbor's dog. I shoveled snow. Washed cars.

I'd been planning on getting a bike, but this was different. This was for my daddy. This was
important.
I went and got my piggy bank. There was forty-seven dollars inside. My daddy's beamin', and I feel so
proud
I'm like floating all over again. But just then my mama walks in with her carton of milk, and she can't believe her eyes.

“What's going on here?” she says.

I see my daddy take the money and shove it deep into the pocket of his pants. “Nothin',” he says. “The boy and I are talkin'.”

“Are you taking Bernie's money?”

He doesn't answer. Instead, he moves toward the door. She goes to stop him and he shoves her and she falls backward to the floor. Milk goes flying. I run over and punch him in the legs. “You
hit my mama!” He pushes me away and moves toward the door again and my mama's back on her feet, moving fast. He whips around and slams her with his arm, right up near the throat, and she hits the wall.

“Mama!”

I don't know which way to turn, but now he's gone and my mama's on the floor and I run to her side. “Mama, Mama! Mama, you all right?”

She takes me in her arms. Holds me there, the two of us on the floor. “Beanie,” she says, softlike, right in my ear. “I wish you hadn't seen such a thing, son. I wish you'd never seen such a thing.” After that, she didn't say nothin' more. She just cried softly and held me for a long, long time. Rocked me. We held and rocked each other.

“THINK BEFORE YOU SPEAK, SON. DON'T JUST SAY EVERY LITTLE THING THAT POPS INTO YOUR HEAD. YOU GOT TO LEARN TO GO DOWN IN THE DARK AND BE ALONE WITH YOUR THOUGHTS.”

03
SHE WAS GOING TO EDUCATE ME IF IT KILLED HER

When I was in the eighth grade, I got home one day and walked in and saw my mother dressing. She had a sliding door on her room, and it was open, and she hadn't heard me coming. When she looked up, she saw me there, my mouth hangin' open, my eyes big as spotlights. I was looking at her chest. One of her breasts was gone. There was a huge scar in its place, like a square.

She slid the door shut. I walked over and slid it open again.

“Mama, what's wrong? What happened to you?”

“Close the door, Beanie.”

I couldn't move.

“Did you hear what I said, son? Close the door.”

I backed out, dazed, and did as I was told. I went into the kitchen, looking for my grandma. She was sitting there, her glasses on her nose.

“Grandma,” I said. “What's wrong with Mama? She…her breast…she
cut.

I was crying by now. I was trying to hold it back, but I couldn't help it. My whole body was shaking.

“Wipe your tears, boy. Be strong.”

“But what's wrong with her? She sick?”

“Go ask your mother, Bernard.”

I went back. Knocked on her door.

“Come in,” Mama said. She was finished dressing.

“Mama,” I said. “I have to ask you something.”

“What is it, Beanie?” She was acting like nothing happened.

“What's wrong with your chest?”

“None of your business,” she said. She said it gentle, but I knew she meant it. She gave me that look of hers—the one that went right through you—and fetched her bag. She worked for the Evangelical Hospital. She was a supervisor, in charge of personnel, and she was working lots of overtime back then. “Now go do your homework. And clean up your room. And I'll see you when I get home.” She kissed me on the forehead, gave me a little pat on
the backside, and moved toward the front door. “Mother!” she hollered toward the kitchen. “I'm gone.” And off she went.

I went back to the kitchen and looked at my grandmother. She could see the hurt on my face, but she wouldn't tell me nothin'. People in my family keep things to themselves.

 

Sometimes, late in the day, after my mother left for work, I'd sneak off and hook up with my friends. I knew every inch of my neighborhood, all the way from 74th and State to 59th and Loomis. I knew every yard and every alley and every boarded-up house. I even knew all the dogs, and I knew which dogs could jump what fence. You
had
to know this shit, because there was always guys looking for trouble, guys who got their kicks crackin' heads.

There was this one old building at 67th and Morgan where my friends and I liked to hang. People lived upstairs, but the basement was abandoned. Landlord'd be puttin' locks on the door, and we just jimmied them till he gave up—me and my friend Morris Fraser.
Big Nigger,
we called him. He was on his way to six-four and 275 pounds, with not an ounce of fat on him. He and Almon Vanado and Billy Staples and Morris Allen were my best friends growin' up. Billy didn't make it—that's a whole 'nother story—but Big Nigger and A.V. are my best friends to this day. Two of a kind. Lions with hearts of gold. Self-made men.

We dragged a couple of couches into that there basement. Old, broken-down chairs. One time, we found a TV that still got a couple of channels. Used to bring girls down, too. We played spin the bottle, truth or dare—stuff like that. But we kept it clean. No drugs, neither. I only tried drugs once in my life. I ain't lyin'. Somebody gave me a hit of marijuana that must've been laced with angel dust. I thought my heart was going to pop the fuck out of my chest. Never touched that shit again.

Plus I'd seen what wrong living could do to people. Crack-addled losers nodding off in alleyways. Dead junkies getting
wheeled into waiting ambulances. Brothers knifing each other over nothing.

Man, all those wasted lives! Was a winehead on our street, Zachary. Couple of drinks, he'd get up and sing—voice so sweet it'd bring tears to your eyes. Couple more drinks, he couldn't even stand. He'd be sitting there, mumbling, drooling, talkin' to the ghost beside him: “Give it back, nigger! Let's see that bottle! Don't drink all of it, got-damn you!”

My mother would see things like that, she'd always find the lesson in it. “What a shame,” she would say. “We know where that man's going to end up, don't we, Beanie?”

Spitting venom
, I called it. These stories she told. It was her way of educating me. Any little thing, she'd run with it. The couple across the street, fightin': “That's no way to treat someone you love.” The girl down the block, dressed like a whore: “We know she gonna make a big success of her life for sure!” Men going at each other with broken beer bottles: “Let your emotions get the best of you, Bean, and you might find yourself doing something you'll regret for the rest of your days.”

Everything was fodder. She was going to educate me if it killed her.

“Don't want you going to the park after dark no more,” she'd say. “Bad element takin' over the park.”

“Everybody else goin',” I'd say.

POP! She'd whack me up the side of the head. There were no excuses in that house. No blame, neither. You took responsibility. Three people livin' there, busy shapin' me: Mary McCullough, Lorraine McCullough, Thurman McCullough.

“You think that makes it right? That everybody else goin'?”

“No, ma'am.”

“It
don't
make it right. And if you took a moment to think about it, you'd see how it don't.”

“Yes, ma'am,” I mumbled.

“Think before you speak, son. Don't just say every little thing that pops into your head. You got to learn to go down in the dark and be alone with your thoughts.”

“Uh-huh.”

“What? You feeling sorry for yourself now?”

“No,” I'd say, but I was.

“Well, stop it. Self-pity is self–brought on.”

I didn't always like this
shapin' Beanie
business. I'd pout and look away and smack my lips like there was something sour in my mouth.

“Don't you smack at me, boy!” she'd say, and I'd hang my head. “And you
look
at me when I talk to you.” I'd look up, takin' my sweet-ass time. And even when I was angry, I'd think,
My mother is a beautiful woman.

“Are you listenin', son?”

“Yes, ma'am.”

“What you been listenin' to?”

“You.”

“Well, that's good,” she said. “For
now.
But pretty soon I'm gonna want you to start listenin', to you.”

“Huh?”

“You'll figure it out.”

I did figure it out. But it was a long time comin'.

 

When I think back on it, I think about all the good things I had, not the hardships. I had the luxury of being a little boy, and that's really something. Lots of kids today don't have that luxury. Grow up too fast. Don't have time to have their kid thoughts and dream their kid dreams and use their imagination. Everything is
hurry hurry hurry.

But in our house they knew what they was doing. There was rules and regulations, and you best followed them if you didn't want your ass whupped. You in charge of the garbage, well, you
better damn sure
be
in charge of it. You had homework to finish, get it finished, child.

At our house, dinners was important, too. We had dinner as a family whenever possible. Everyone together, heads bowed, saying grace. Adults served first.

After, maybe you could do a little visitin' nearby, but you had to be back by eight o'clock, when the streetlights came on, and in the bath by nine. And don't use up all the hot water, either!

Ten o'clock, lights out. With maybe an extra hour on weekends.

Sundays there was church, and no ball playing or music afterward. Sundays was a day of giving, a day to think of others. Sundays you went out and was a good Christian neighbor, whether you felt like it or not. You delivered food to those that needed it. Ran errands when errands needed running. Checked to see how the old lady down the street was getting along.

There was order in our house. Direction. Discipline. But a kid was still a kid, and they respected that. When a kid was around, you didn't discuss no adult business. A kid didn't have to know that the bills weren't getting paid, or that someone was having trouble at work. Life was going to creep up on that kid soon enough, with all its hardships, and there was no need to hurry it along.

That's what I remember when I think about my childhood. That I grew up at the right pace. That my family allowed me to be a little boy and then a teenager, and made sure I became a proper man.

 

In 1973, when I was fifteen years old, my mama said we were going visiting. It was a Saturday. I didn't feel like going. “Who we visitin'?” I asked.

“Never you mind,” she said. “Just hurry up and get dressed.”

We left the house, and she was breathing hard by the time we got to the corner. She was real sickly by then, and thin as a rake.

“You all right?” I asked. She was leaning against me for support.

“Never better,” she said.

She took me to 105th and Eberhardt, still not telling me what she was up to. When we got there, she walked me down the block, slowly, and stopped in front of a real nice house. “Now ain't that a lovely house?” she said.

It sure was. It had two stories, a front yard, a backyard, and a wooden fence, fresh-painted. It looked like something from
Leave It to Beaver.

“Real nice,” I said.

“Well,” she said. “It's ours.” She said it matter-of-fact, no emotion, nothing.

“Say what?”

“This is our new home, Bean. We move in next week.”

I couldn't believe it. She hadn't said a word about this to any of us. It had been Mama's little secret. Even as she was fading away, Mama had been working overtime to take care of her family. And even now she didn't want to make a fuss.

We moved in a week later. We felt
rich.
We felt like landed gentry.

We got a real house here, motherfucker. We like regular people. We
somebody.

'Course, it took a while to get used to the
quiet.
I missed the ruckus on the street, the loud voices and the fighting and the gunfire. This was like the suburbs. I could hear the got-damn
crickets,
and the stars were so bright they kept me up at night.

 

I was at CVS at the time, Chicago Vocational High School, over on 87th and Jeffrey. That's another thing my mother had arranged. She didn't want me going to Parker, and I couldn't get into CVS without taking a test. So I took the test and passed. That's what they told me, anyway. But to this day I know I couldn't have
passed. I didn't even finish the test. I gave up in the middle. So it's clear my mama pulled some strings to get me in.

After school and on weekends I usually hung with Billy Staples. He lived one block over, and he was so good looking that the girls were always following us around. We'd play sports, mostly, with the girls watching Billy from the sidelines, and maybe go to the lake for a soda after. From time to time Billy would pull out a joint, but he knew I didn't like it. We used to fight about that shit, but we fought with love. Billy was like a brother to me, a
real
brother.

We had another friend back then, James Spann, couple of years older, liked living on the edge. He was slick and smooth, kind of pimpy, and he kept me around because I was solid: six feet and almost 180. You didn't want to be messing with Bernie Mac, believe me.

Spann knew people. He'd take us to parties and stuff. We'd swing by Billy's place and pick him up and off we'd go. And the minute we walked in the door, the women were all over Billy. It's like Spann planned it that way. I'd be standing there with my drink and Spann would come over and tell me that he had to run an errand, and we'd leave Billy to his women and go off for a short ride. I was pretty naïve back then, a gullible kid, but I knew Spann was dealing drugs; I knew he was only dragging me along because I was big and scary looking, and because I could look mean if I had to.

Still, I started getting uncomfortable with these little side trips.

“I ain't getting out of the car,” I'd say. “This is bullshit.”

“That's cool,” he said. “I know you'll come if I holler.”

“Don't be so sure,” I said.

He was slick, that Spann. It was always “a little stop on the way to Billy's”—only the little stop was three miles in the wrong direction.

One night we pulled up outside this badass building. I told Spann he shouldn't go in. “I have a bad feeling about this place,” I said.

“You one of those people can see into the future now?” he said. He was grinning his big grin.

“No,” I said. “I just don't like it.”

Spann ignored me. He reached under the seat and handed me a gun.

“What the fuck you givin' me that for?” I asked.

“Just hold it,” he said. “And if there's any trouble, use it.”

“I ain't using that got-damn gun, Spann,” I said. But he was already out of the car and heading for the building. I picked up the gun. Felt its weight in my hand.

A moment later, WHOOSH! Spann's coming out of the building, running for his got-damn life. He jumps behind the wheel and starts the car and pulls out, and two guys burst onto the sidewalk, shooting.
POP POP, POP POP POP.

Spann's yelling at me to shoot back, and I didn't want to. But I turned in my seat and fired twice into the air. I didn't hit no one, of course. I wasn't aiming. If I'd hit anyone, I probably wouldn't be here today.

“Motherfuckers!” Spann was saying. “Can't trust nobody nowadays!”

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