The New Moon's Arms
By Nalo Hopkinson
WARNER BOOKS
Copyright © 2007
Nalo Hopkinson
All right reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-446-57691-8
Chapter One
A crowd had gathered around Mrs. Winter. The commotion at the graveside
vibrated with suppressed hilarity. Me, I wasn't able to keep properly solemn.
When my shoulders had started shaking with silent laughter, I'd ducked behind
the plain pine coffin still on its stand outside the grave.
I bit my lips to keep the giggles in, and peeked around the coffin to watch the
goings-on.
Mrs. Winter had given up the attempt to discreetly pull her bloomers back up.
Through the milling legs of the mourners, I could see her trying desperately
instead to kick off the pale pink nylon that had slithered down from her
haunches and snagged around her ankles.
Her kick sent a tiny flash of gold skittering across the cemetery
lawn to land near me. I glanced down. I picked up the small tangle of
gold-coloured wire and put it in my jacket pocket for later. Right now, I had
some high drama to watch.
Pastor Paul, ever helpful, bent to the ground at Mrs. Winter's
feet and reached for his parishioner's panties. Lord help me Jesus, he was
really going to pick them up! But he drew his fingers back. He looked
mortified. Maybe he was thinking how the panties had recently been snugged up
to Mrs. Winter's naked flesh. I thought my belly was going to bust, I was trying
so hard not to laughaloud. I bet you Dadda would have laughed with me, if
he wasn't in that coffin right now.
Mrs. Winter got the tip of one of her pumps caught in the froth of
pink nylon. She cheeped in dismay and fell heavily to the ground. Lawdamercy! I
bent right over, shaking with laughter, trying to not pee myself from it.
Pastor Paul and Mrs. Winter's son Leroy were pulling on her arms
now, trying to get her off the ground. "Oh, Dadda,
oh," I whispered through my giggles. "Wherever you are, I hope you seeing
this." I held my belly and wept tears of mirth. Serve the old bat right for
insulting me like that. Not a day went by at work that she didn't find some sly
way to sink in the knife. She had to do the same thing at my father's funeral,
too?
Mrs. Winter was halfway up. She had one arm hooked around Leroy's
neck, and Pastor Paul was pushing her from behind. A few of the
mourners asked her if she was all right. "Oh, migod," was all she
said; "oh, migod." My laughter was edging up on hysteria. Too much;
death and mirth all at once. I rested my hands on my knees and took little
panting breaths to calm myself. I couldn't hide behind the coffin forever.
At least the tingling in my hand had stopped. A few minutes earlier, standing at
the open grave, I'd suddenly felt too warm, and my hand had gotten pins and
needles.
I took the scrap of wire out of my pocket. It had been crushed flat. I pulled on
the loops of wire until something of its original shape began to emerge. I had a
good look at it, and gasped.
I held the pin up against the sunlight. It caught a spark of
light, threw blades of sunshine at my eyes. It had gotten warped over the
years, forced into service to hold up Mrs. Winter's loose drawers. It used to
be a decorative pin for wearing on a blouse, its gold wire looped in the shape
of an ornate C, T, and L:
Chastity Theresa Lambkin. My girlhood
name. Mumma'd given me that pin for my eighth birthday. Years ago, after they'd
declared Mumma dead and we'd had the memorial service for her, little
Chastity-girl me had noticed it missing. And missing it had stayed; no time to
look for it in all the commotion of the hearing, of moving to my aunt and
uncle's, and the children at school whispering to each other whenever they saw
me.
Where in blazes Mrs. Winter had found my pin?
"Mum? What's going on?"
Ife was standing there, holding young Stanley's hand. Ife's black dress hung off
her shoulders, its hem crooked.
Stanley gave me a shy little wave.
Ife had gotten the best bits of me and her father combined: the glow
of his perfect dark brown skin; his lips, the way they peaked in the middle
when he smiled. My dimples, my well-shaped legs. She was plump, like all the
women in our family, but that never stopped a West Indian man yet. Not a real
man, anyway. If I could just get her to wear clothes that suited her!
Not my Ife. She covered up her charms with baggy, ankle-length dresses in
unhelpful colours, slouched around in rubber flipflops or those horrible wide-
toed cork sandals from abroad. Been so long since I'd seen her legs, she might
as well not have any.
Nothing could hide that smile, though. She turned it on me now,
and even though it was an uncertain smile today, it made my world a little bit
brighter.
But I firmly squashed the joy at seeing her sweet face, made mine
sour. I tucked the warped pin back into my pocket and turned to my daughter
Ifeoma, to whom I wasn't speaking. Well, not really speaking. I mean, I would
say 'morning and so, you know, but nothing more until she took back that awful
thing she'd called me.
"Mrs. Winter tripped," I told her as I hugged her. "And you know I wish you
wouldn't call me? Mum' like that." Using the hug for cover, I stroked
her back. No bra again. That child had no respect for the dead. And no fashion
sense either; that dress! My seventies throwback hippie girl child. At least she
wasn't wearing sandals and socks today, but proper high heels.
"You're my mother," Ife murmured into our hug. "It's not respectful for me to
call you? Calamity,' like ... like ..."
I pulled back and glared at Ifeoma. "Like what? You'd best mind yourself with
me. You know I'm vex with you already, after last night."
Ife pressed her lips together. She used to do that as a little girl
when she didn't want to eat her greens. "... like you're my sister," she said
quietly.
And just so, she squashed my heart like you crush a piece of paper
into a ball you're going to throw in the trash. I turned my face from her.
Stanley stood at the lip of the open grave, peering in. He pulled at his
collar. This might be the first time in his nine years that he was wearing a
suit.
"You're my mother," Ife said. "Why I can't just call you? Mummy'?"
Last night, she'd called me a "matriarch." Like I was some wrinkled, prune-faced
dowager wearing a hairnet and clothes thirty years out of fashion.
Mrs. Winter was standing all the way up now. She was favouring one ankle.
She still had one arm wrapped around Leroy's neck. The other was around
Pastor Paul's. Mrs. Saranta was fanning her face with a prayer book. One
of the ushers, a long, skinny young man with big eyes and hands like shovels,
had picked Mrs. Winter's tiger-print handbag up off the grass and was collecting
all the things that had spilled out of it.
We used to be as close as sisters, Ife and I. The night I took her out to
celebrate her twenty-first birthday with her first legal drink, the bartender
had asked us both if we were of drinking age. And we'd laughed, and flirted
with him the whole evening. I didn't tell him she was my daughter until after I
took him home that night and made him call out for God in my bed.
But now I wasn't just old; I was fully an orphan, too, instead of the half of
one I had been for so many decades. And finally, the tears came.
"He's gone, Ife. Dadda's gone."
Ife took me into her arms again. "Ssh, it's all right." If she'd been irritated
with me before, there was no sign of it now. For all I'd tried to teach her,
she'd never learned how to hold a grudge good and hard, like a shield.
I let myself sob into her neck for a while. My breath rushed and
halted.
Mrs. Winter said, quite firmly, "I want to go home." Good.
Interfering woman was probably too shamed to stay after half the town had seen
her smalls fall off. Why she had to come today? Bad enough I had to endure her
at work. Mrs. Winter thought it was her job to supervise me into an early
grave.
Pastor Paul offered to have one of the ushers help Leroy walk her
to her car. But no, she wanted the pastor. He gazed around until he spotted me.
He gave an apologetic shrug, held up five fingers, and mouthed,
Five
minutes? I nodded. The three of them hobbled off towards the parking lot.
Now our funeral party could recover some of its dignity.
What a pity you
all alone in this time of trial, child. Chuh. Never mind
her; I'd
rather fuck the horse she rode in on. But that was no proper way to be thinking
at my father's funeral.
"You feeling better now, Mum?"
"Right as rain. But I wish you'd worn something a little more tailored, you
know?"
Ife smiled at me, tentatively. "This is my best black dress," she said.
"It's the one I wear when I want to impress. Stanley, come away from there. You
might fallin."
"I won't fall," Stanley
replied.
"Come over here, I said."
He did. I wouldn't let Ife change the subject, though. I knew her tricks better
than she knew them herself. "That dress is black crushed gauze, my darling. You
look like a big turkey buzzard flapping through the air."
Ife's smile hardened like ice. "So we're going to talk about my looks
again?"
I took her face in both my hands. "Your looks are fine. Why you
always so worried about looks? You only need to pretty yourself up a little
bit." I don't know where Ife got her meek nature from. Not from me. "I keep
telling you, Ife; you should have more self-confidence. Shorten the skirts
a bit, wear some prettier colours. And show a little bosom. We Lambkin women
have more than enough to display."
Ife glared. "Clifton likes me this way. You're so old-fashioned, Mummy."
God, "Mummy" was even worse than "Mum." And since when was I
"old-fashioned"? In high school, the other girls used to call my fashion sense
scandalous, and I'd loved scandalizing them.
I could see Pastor Paul hurrying back from the parking lot. I took
Stanley's hand. "Come and say goodbye to Dadda," I told him. The
three of us moved closer to the rest of the funeral party. A trim, dark man,
maybe sixtyish, made room for us. Peggy Bruce, who had arrived late, nodded a
greeting. Even when we were in school, Peggy had always been late. "We going to
start again soon," I said to the mourners. "Pastor Paul on his way back."
"Did Michael come?" Ife asked in a whisper.
"Who?" I whispered back.
Now Ife's eyes had the glint of obsidian. "Michael," she said, a little louder.
"My
father." John Antonipeered at us, hungry for gossip.
"Hush," I said under my breath.
A kiskedee bird zipped by overhead, laughing its high, piping chuckle at me
before flying into the branches of one of the frangipani trees in the cemetery.
Ife said, "I thought you were taking care of the invitations! How
could you just not tell him that his own father-in-law was dead?"
I lifted my chin. "Dadda was never Michael's father-in-law." Tears that had been
on the verge of brimming tipped back into the bowls of my eyes again. The eye
water was cold.
"Gran?" said Stanley. "I mean, Calamity?"
Lovely boy. I hunkered down to his eye level, balancing on the spikes of my
black stiletto pumps. Huh. "
Matriarch." Could a matriarch do that? "And
what can I do for you, my handsome boy?"
Stanley ran into my arms. He was all woodknuckle knees and awkwardness,
his hair trimmed short, with a W pattern buzzed into the back and sides. His
father Clifton had told me it had something to do with American wrestling on the
tv. Stanley and I could chat for hours, about school and comics and food. His
mind was like a new country; always something fascinating around the next bend.
I didn't see him as often as I liked. Seemed he always had homework to do on the
weekend, or soccer practice. Ife and Clifton kept him busy.
"Does Great-Grandpa look scary?" Stanley asked.
"You can't even see him," said Ifeoma, butting in. "The casket is closed. Isn't
it, Mum?"
I inhaled the child's pre-adolescent smell of spit and sweat. "Yes,
my love," I said to him. "It's closed."
Stanley sighed. He looked disappointed. "But I wanted to see," he said.
"Godfrey Mordecai at school said that Great- Grandpa would be a skellington,
and he would be scary, and I would be frightened. I wouldn't be frightened. I
want to see, Gran. I want to see a reallive skellington."
"'Skeleton,' dear." I felt a smile blooming on my lips. A live skeleton.
Stanley was a little unclear on the concept. "Stanley, you have a curious mind.
This is how I know you're my blood." I rose, smoothed my skirt down, and took
his hand. Pastor Paul was scurrying our way. I told Stanley, "Let's see if we
can get the lid on the casket raised for you." He grinned up at me, and we went
to meet the pastor halfway. I took care to mind my ankles in the wobbly
stilettos. They weren't made to walk on grass.
Ife caught up with us. "Mum? Don't do anything to frighten Stanley, please?
He might have nightmares. Mum?"
What a way she overprotected that child!
"Mistress Lambkin," said Pastor Paul. He was puffing from the exertion. "So
sorry for the interruption. Shall we, ahm, continue with the proceedings now?"
He was another one who would never call me "Calamity," no matter how much I
asked him to. But he'd picked the wrong day to cross me. I nodded at
him, all meekness. "Yes, thank you,
Egbert," I said in a clear, carrying
voice.
Stanley giggled. A man standing close to us hid his smile behind a cough.
Egbert glanced around. Oh, yes; plenty of people had heard me. If he hated his
bloody name so much, why he didn't just change it? I had changed mine.
Ifeoma snickered, flicked me an amused glance. Now,
that was
my girl; the one I'd raised. It was the same grin she'd given me that day in
the grocery store, all those years ago.
I had just started working at the library. My first paycheque wouldn't come
for another month. I'd been feeding myself and little Ife on macaroni and
cheese, and we'd run out of cheese. How old would she have been then? About
seven, I think. We were in the cold foods aisle. I was trying to
choose between eggs and a block of cheese. I could get only one of them. I was
trying not to look at the packets of chicken, of stewing beef, of goat meat. I
couldn't tell how long it had been since we'd had meat. Ifeoma
loved roasted chicken legs. Suddenly my crazy girl child took it into her head
to start singing "Little Sally Water" at the top of her considerable lungs,
complete with the moves. I was about to scold her when I realised
that people were looking at her, not me.
"Rise, Sally, RISE!" Ifeoma had yelled, leaping up from the ground, "and dry
your weeping eyes ..."
Quickly, while she was turning to the east, the west, and to the
one she loved the best, I'd slipped two packets of chicken legs and one of
stewing goat into the big pockets of my dirndl skirt. With all the gathered
material in that skirt, nobody would notice the lumps. Only then did I order
Ife to stop making so much commotion. And damned if the child didn't straighten
up immediately, smooth her dress down, and come and pat one of my pockets! And
such a conspiring grin on her face! The little devil had been providing
distraction so I could feed us both. I missed that Ife. The sober, responsible
one standing beside me at the cemetery now was no fun at all.
Egbert took a solemn few steps back to the graveside. "Everyone, please
gather round," he said.
Ife, Stanley, and I moved to stand beside him. I bent and whispered to Stanley,
"Don't worry, I didn't forget. We just have to finish this part first."
He gave an eager nod. Ifeoma said nothing, but she made a sour face. I
composed myself for the rest of the funeral.
"Dearly beloved," said Pastor Paul, "James Allan Lambkin has come
to the end of his life on this earth, and the beginning of his life with
you. We therefore commit his body to the ground."
When I was nine, Dadda had shown me how to fish. But for months he wouldn't
let me bait the hook myself. He did it for me, because he was afraid I
would jook my fingers.
"Earth to earth," said Pastor Paul.
When I was twelve and woke up one morning to bloodstained sheets
and my first period, Dadda ran to the store and brought back a big shopping bag
with pads in all different shapes and sizes. He stood outside the closed
bathroom door and called out instructions to me for how to put them on.
Ifeoma sniffed and wiped her eyes. Stanley's bottom lip was trembling. Damn, now
I was tearing up, too.
"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust."
When I was thirteen and had passed my entrance exams to get into
high school, Dadda took me to the big island to celebrate.
We went to a fancy restaurant. He bought me ice cream and cake, and drank a
toast to me with his glass of sorrel drink.
"In the sure and certain hope of the Resurrection to
eternal life."
When I was fifteen, I told Dadda that I was four months pregnant. He raged
through the house for two hours, calling me nasty names and demanding to
know who'd done it. I wouldn't tell him. He stopped talking to me. He
wouldn't eat when I cooked. On the third day he ransacked my room and
threw away all my makeup and nice clothes. On the fourth day I packed
a small bag and moved out. Went to the big island and knocked on
the door of Dadda's sister Aunt Pearl and her husband Edward. Auntie
Pearl let me know that I had shamed the whole family, but she and Uncle Edward
gave me a roof and fed me, and they didn't lecture me too often. I got a
part-time job as a page in the library. Until my belly got too big for it,
worked all the hours they would give me, saved my money. It was Auntie who was
with me the day I had Ifeoma. Auntie, and Michael.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from The New Moon's Arms
by Nalo Hopkinson
Copyright © 2007 by Nalo Hopkinson.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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