The Best American Essays 2015 (22 page)

 

III.

 

Do we have Indian blood?
I ask.

Why do you want to know?
Mother answers.

I want to know because I've spent two weeks as a Potawatami tribe member at the Palos Park summer camp in the Forest Preserves of Cook County, Illinois, being led down foot- and bridle paths, sharing space with deer, birds, amphibians, and small mammals, wearing moccasins and woven feathered headbands at nighttime campfires.

According to an official history of Palos Park Village, Indians “roamed the hills” there in the eighteenth century, along with French explorers, traders, and soldiers, but the first white man to “settle” Palos was James Paddock, in 1834. Now, some 120 years later, Denise and Margo Jefferson have become two of the first Negro girls to attend the Palos Park camp alongside the descendants of white settlers.

And one of those descendants had asked if I had Indian blood. When I said I didn't know whether I did or not, she scanned my face and said,
You must. Ask your mother when she comes to pick you up.

On the last day of camp the little descendant stood beside me as Mother emerged from her car. Cotton piqué rose-and-white-striped dress. Light brown skin. A Claudette Colbert cap of dark hair. Beneath her black sunglasses a hooked nose asserted itself. The little descendant turned to me, nodded, and whispered,
I told you you have Indian blood. Ask your mother on the way home.

Why should this be information I'm denied? It would be exciting to be something other than just Negro. I wait till we get home, till Denise and I have made our way through talk of cabin mates and counselors, hikes and canoe trips, through the success, achieved once more, by our normality. Then I ask my question and Mother sighs.

Yee-sss
(drawn out to telegraph reluctance),
we do have some Indian blood. But I get so tired of Negroes always talking about their Indian blood. And so tired of white people always asking about it.
Here was an unexpected similarity between Negroes and whites: the slightly desperate need to believe we had Indian blood, or at least recreational kinship rights.

And the next summer a full-blooded Indian comes to camp. Denise and I take her up, enjoying her sweet manner and her dark, shining waist-length braids. Mysteriously, on the last day, no one arrives to take her home. We volunteer our mother.

Lanova gets into the back seat with us and tells Mother where she lives. The three of us grow quiet as Mother drives, drives, and drives. Finally we arrive at a shabby group of apartment buildings. No trees, no trimmed shrubbery. We don't hug, but we say goodbye till next summer. Lanova gets out of the car, turns, and walks toward one of the big ugly housing project buildings. She has on a rust-colored shirt and the same jeans she's worn every day at camp. Mother starts the car and speeds away. None of us says anything about Lanova.
Do you know what tribe she really belonged to?
I ask Denise that night when we're alone in our room. She doesn't answer.

The next summer no recognizable Indian appears at Palos Park. Another Negro does, though. Ronnie arrives a few days after the rest of the campers. He's in my age group, he's a little bit chubby, and he wears glasses, though not as thick as mine. He's definitely browner than I am, by several shades. He's dark brown. I notice how carefully his blue jean cuffs are rolled—folded up and ironed—and how just-from-the-package his navy and white T-shirt looks with its crisp, three-button collar. I know he has bad hair because it's been shaved so close to his scalp.

At the end of the week my counselor takes me aside. Can I help Ronnie fit in better, she wants to know, can I talk to him? Everyone is still calling him the New Kid. I'm mortified. I hate it when I'm supposed to be enjoying myself and Race singles me out for special chores. I will, I tell her, making myself sound agreeable. And I do. I can see the two of us even now, Ronnie and me, making trite, labored conversation. Neither of us smiling.

After that he leaves my memory. We had no more encounters. But here's something I still want to know: Why wasn't Phillip asked to talk to Ronnie? Because Phillip was a Negro, too, Phillip was the other Negro at camp and he was a boy; he should have been asked to talk to Ronnie. Phillip was my friend; our parents were close friends. Phillip had Negro hair, but it was curly-frizzy hair no one would mind touching. Phillip had pale olive skin and crisp, neatly tailored features.

Phillip should have been asked to talk to Ronnie!
I exclaim when I tell the story to a white friend fifty-eight years later.

The counselors didn't read Phillip as Negro
, my white friend answers. She's seen a picture of us standing with our mothers in Washington Park.
Phillip settled into the landscape of whiteness.

Yes. Of course.
We map it out. The counselors might have thought Phillip was half white: his mother was clearly a Negro, but his father was often taken for a white man. Even if they'd only seen his mother, they would have decided that it was more appropriate, that Ronnie would be more comfortable talking to someone who looked more like him.

I feel a surge of grief when I think of Ronnie. And inside that grief is guilt, because I looked down on him, and shame, because “looked down on him” is accurate but not sufficient.

I dreaded him.

 

IV.

 

We thought of ourselves as the Third Race, poised between the masses of Negroes and all classes of Caucasians. Like the Third Eye, the Third Race possessed a wisdom, intuition, and enlightened knowledge the other two races lacked. Its members had education, ambition, sophistication, and standardized verbal dexterity.

—If, as was said, too many of us ached, longed, strove to be be be be White White White White WHITE;

—If (as was said) many of us boasted overmuch of the blood
des blancs
which for centuries had found blatant or surreptitious ways to flow, course, and trickle tepidly through our veins;

—If we placed too high a value on the looks, manners, and morals of the Anglo-Saxon . . .

. . . white people did too. They wanted to believe they were the best any civilization could produce. They wanted to be white just as much as we did. They worked just as hard at it. They failed just as often. But they could pass so no one objected.

 

V.

 

In Negroland, nothing highlighted our privilege more than the threat to it. Inside the race we were the self-designated aristocrats, educated, affluent, accomplished; to Caucasians we were oddities, underdogs, and interlopers. White people who, like us, had manners, money, and education . . . But wait . . . “like us” is presumptuous for the 1950s. Liberal whites who saw that we, too, had manners, money, and education lamented our caste disadvantage. Other whites preferred not to see us in the private schools and public spaces of their choice. They had ready a bevy of slights: from skeptics, the surprised glance and spare greeting; from waverers, the pleasantry, eyes averted; from disdainers, the direct cut. Caucasians with materially less than we had license from Caucasians with more than they to subvert or attack our privilege.

Caucasian privilege lounged and sauntered, draped itself casually about, turned vigilant and commanding, then cunning and devious. We marveled at its tonal range, its variety, its largesse in letting its most humble share the pleasures of caste with its mighty. We knew what was expected of us. Negro privilege had to be circumspect: impeccable but not arrogant; confident yet obliging; dignified, not intrusive.

 

Early summer, 1956.

Two Negro parents and two Negro daughters stand at a hotel desk in Atlantic City. This is the last stop on their road trip after Montreal, Quebec City, and New York: the plan is to lounge on the beach and stroll the boardwalk. It's midday, and guests saunter through the lobby in resort wear. The Caucasian clerk in his brown uniform studies the reservation book, looking puzzled as he traces the list with his finger.

You said Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson. . .

Dr. and Mrs. Jefferson
, says my father.

The clerk turns the page, studies the list again, running his eyes and his index finger slowly up and down. Just before he turns it back again, he stops.

Oh, here you are, doc. The hotel is so crowded this week. We had to change your room.

Trailing my sister and me, our parents follow the uniformed bellboy into the elevator. It stops a few floors up, they get out, he leads them to the end of a long hall then around a corner, unlocks the door, and puts their suitcases just inside a small room, leading into another small room. We're looking out on a parking lot.

When the bellboy leaves, my father goes into the larger small room without saying anything. My sister and I had stopped talking when the clerk's finger reached the bottom of the first page.

Unpack your towels and swimsuits
, our mother orders.
Read or play quietly till we go to the beach.
She follows my father into the other room and shuts the door.

We unpack quickly so she won't be annoyed when she comes back. Just what is going on? All the other hotels had our reservations. Our mother has said that a lot of white people don't like to call Negroes “doctor.”

At the beach the girls settle on their new beach towels and fondle the sand. Dr. and Mrs. Jefferson sit on their own blanket talking in low voices. My mother never swims, but my father loves to. Today, though, he takes us to the water's edge and watches us go in and come out.

It's getting cooler, it's late afternoon: time to fold the towels neatly, put them in the beach bag, and return to the hotel.
Take your baths
, Mother says, but only after she has taken a hotel facecloth and soap bar to the lines on the bottom of the tub that don't wash away.

Where are we going for dinner?
I ask.
What should we wear?

We're eating here
, Mother answers.

We want to eat in the hotel dining room.

We're ordering room service and eating here
, Mother says in her implacable voice.
And we're leaving tomorrow.

Denise speaks up for us both.

We just got here. We didn't get to stay long at the beach. Why can't we eat in the hotel dining room?

We resent the bad mood that has come over our parents. We want the beach and we want the boardwalk we've been promised since the trip began.

Mother pauses, then addresses us and herself.
This is a prejudiced place. What kind of service would we get in that restaurant? Look at these shabby rooms. Pretending they couldn't find the reservation. We're leaving tomorrow. And your father will tell them why.

My father has not smiled since the four of us walked into the lobby and stood at the desk waiting as the clerk turned us into Mr. and Mrs. Negro Nobody with their Negro children from somewhere in Niggerland.

The next morning Denise and I are told to sit on the lobby couch while our parents check out; we don't hear what our father says, if he says anything.

We drive back to Chicago, an American family returning home from the kind of vacation successful American families have. We'd stayed at the Statler Hilton in New York and eaten in their restaurant. We'd pummeled and pounced on the bolsters of the Château Frontenac in Quebec. When Daddy asked strangers in Montreal for directions, their answers were always accurate and polite. Only Atlantic City went wrong. In the car our parents reproach themselves for not doing more research, consulting friends on the East Coast before taking the risk.

Such treatment encouraged privileged Negroes to see our privilege as hard-won and politically righteous, a boon to the race, a source of compensatory pride, an example of what might be achieved. Back in the privacy of an all-Negro world, Negro privilege could lounge and saunter, too, show off its accoutrements and lay down the law. Regularly denounce Caucasians, whose behavior toward us, and all dark-skinned people, proved they did not morally deserve
their
privilege. We had the moral advantage; they had the assault weapons of “great civilization” and “triumphant history.” Ceaselessly we chronicled our people's achievements. Ceaselessly we denounced our people's failures.

Too many of us just aren't trying. No ambition. No interest in education. You don't have to turn your neighborhood into a slum just because you're poor.
Negroes like that made it hard for the rest of us. They held us back. We got punished for their bad behavior.

 

1956, a month after our trip.

Professionals and small businessmen live on one end of our block. A cabdriver and his wife, a nurse, live at the midpoint next door to us. I play often with their daughter Shirley. At the other end of the block is Betty Ann, somebody's daughter, we don't know whose. She has lots of short braids on her head, fastened with red, yellow, and green plastic barrettes. She wears red nail polish and keeps it on till it's nothing but tiny chips. I beg to be allowed to wear red nail polish outside, and not just when I dress up in Mother's old clothes.
No
, comes the answer,
red nail polish on children is cheap.

In the summer Betty Ann saunters up and down the block letting the backs of her shoes flap against her heels. When she finds something ridiculous she folds her arms and goes
oooo-oooo-OOO, Uh-un-UNNHH.
When she laughs she bends over at the waist and shuffles her feet. Denise and I start to do this at home.
Where did you pick that up?
our mother asks.
Don't collapse all over yourself when you laugh.

One afternoon we see Betty Ann playing double Dutch with two girls we've never met. They laugh a lot and say
Girrlll . . .
Then they start to turn the ropes.

Betty Ann's the jumper. She leans in, arms bent, fists balled, gauging her point of entry. Turn slap turn slap turn slap and there she goes! Her knees pump, her feet quick-slap the ground, parrying the ropes till, fleet of foot and neat, she jumps out. Rapt and envious, we watch them take turns. Betty Ann doesn't come down to play jacks with us or borrow Denise's bike. She and her friends laugh and eat candy and jump double Dutch. After a week of this we stroll down the block hoping they'll ask us to join. After a few days they do. Denise isn't good but she's not bad: she swings correctly and manages a few solid intervals before the ropes catch her. My swinging isn't fast or steady enough, and the ropes reject my anxious feet in seconds. By the time I clamor for a third try, Betty Ann and her friends say no.

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