There Are No Elders

There Are No Elders

There Are No Elders

There Are No Elders

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Overview

A compelling collection that explores the lives of Afro-Caribbean immigrants living in Canada, these eight short stories delve into the experiences of displaced persons living in contemporary society—all with a richness of language and rhythm that is authentically urban.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781550960921
Publisher: Exile Editions
Publication date: 09/01/2007
Series: Exile Classics series , #5
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 182
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.50(d)

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

If The Bough Breaks

Where they were, on the second floor of a building that squatted at the corner of Bay and Davenport, whose ground floor was taken up by a store that sold milk for five cents more than you could buy it in any supermarket, and beside which was a store that sold everything, these five women were chatting while two others sat in the hairdresser's chair. The hairdresser was a man. Christophe. A big, strong man with a black complexion, from Barbados. He had never learned French at school; had never visited the islands in the West Indies where French is spoken; but he understood what French meant in his business in this city, so he changed his name from Granville Da Costa the moment he graduated near the bottom of the class from the Marvel School of Hairdressing; went by bus to Montreal and stayed there for a long weekend, Labour Day weekend; and when he returned, by train, he had the name Christophe and a new accent. He called every customer, chérie, which came out as "cherry." He had two women working for him. They themselves had graduated from the Marvel School of Hairdressing, three months ago, near the top of their class.

On the front of the building, on the second floor where these five women were now sitting, emblazoned in lights, was CRISTOPHE'S SALO. The lights that formed the letter N, in "salon" never worked. But Christophe was known throughout the city as the best hairdresser, the only man, or woman, who knew how to "fix" black women's hair.

One woman had curlers and grease in her hair; another woman's hair was lathered in shampoo, so thick and rich, you could not tell her age, although she was the youngest in the salon. And the five waiting together were all over forty and well-dressed; and two of them had foreign cars parked below; after one hour, they had given up running down the stairs to put loonies into the meters.

The girl in the chair cried out, as the shampoo ran into her eyes, stinging her, "Are you trying to blind me Christophe? I'm too old to learn Braille, hear." She was a fourth-year student at the University. She was studying psychology. She was very good-looking. She came from a rich Barbadian family who owned a very small sugar cane plantation that grew sugar cane no longer. "I have theories to read."

"Cuddear, cherry!"

It was three o'clock, Thursday afternoon. They could hear the traffic below and the voices of people passing, for the windows facing the street were open for the breeze.

Christophe had forgotten to call the repairman to come and fix the two noisy air-conditioners, taped round their perimeter with electrical tape which his friend Cox, a plumber had left. So, the room was warm. And the five ladies were using the boxes of Kleenex, passing them from hand to hand, mopping their brows, their embroidered hankies already saturated. And the prospect of the ironing comb, not really a comb made of iron by a blacksmith as many used back in the West Indies, but its modern version, which performed the same function, making their hair "white," making their temples hot, threatening burns on their scalps, certainly singeing hair in the wrong places, all this made their waiting more uncomfortable than the patience they knew they must have each time they visited this salon, always too crowded, too slow, and too understaffed. They had been Christophe's customers for years.

In with a whiff of wind which cooled the salon came voices of a quarrel below on the street. The room was quiet for a moment. Then, a siren screamed through the buzz of voices, and the humidity seemed to clutch the women's bodies, and cause them to breathe more heavily. The noise increased and it seemed as if the ambulance or the police cruiser was going to climb right up the flight of stairs and join them. And in fact, it did stop in front of the entrance. The five women ran to the windows.

There was a hiss. The sirens stopped. And the hissing sound lasted a few more moments. The two assistants dropped their instruments into some kind of liquid. They joined the others at the windows. Christophe continued fixing the young woman's hair.

There were three large windows. The lower half of each was pulled up. So the women could lean their bodies out, and see. And they could look at one another leaning out the three windows. It was not an ambulance. There were three police cars. Stopped in the middle of the road, blocking all traffic. The owner of the store who sold high-priced milk came out to meet the policemen. They had left their car doors open. The women could hear the three radios crackling. The six policemen had their guns drawn. In the distance, coming towards them, was another cruiser, flashing in red speed and urgency.

"I bet you," one woman said, "it's some black man in there."

"And not eighteen yet," another said.

The policemen and the store owner were now inside the store.

"These people!" one of the assistants said. "I was walking through the Eaton Centre one night, and just as I take up my parcel with the things I bought in it, and paid for, all of a sudden I feel this hand on my shoulder, and when I turn round...."

"Blasted people, eh?"

Two of the policemen came back out. Between them was a young white girl. No more than sixteen. They took her to a car, and put her to sit in the back seat, while the other four officers exchanged words which the women could not hear; and then they too got into their cruisers, and drove off. The few men and women who had stopped to look, walked on. One man took a red box from his pocket, extracted a cigarette and lit it. He walked at a faster pace. A bus was coming. The wind was blowing again. The store owner came back outside with a broom, sweeping the sidewalk; and they could see because of the stains from chopping meat and pork and roasts on his white apron that covered his body from his neck to his thighs, that he sold other things than milk.

"What do you think they got her for?"

"Shoplifting."

"They begin young."

"Well, it was a good thing," the assistant continued, "that I had kept my receipt that Friday night. It was the Friday before the Caribana parade, and I was thinking of stopping at the kiosk-thing to buy a Lotto, 'cause I had had a dream the night before. But before I could walk more than two feet from the counter where I had bought the pantihose, this blasted man's hand on my shoulder. I look round. And staring me in my face is this blasted man. Security guard. Accusing me. Of something. Say I shoplifting. Well, I not ashamed to tell you, I let-go some bad words in his arse, that caused all the people in the Eaton Centre to stare at me. These blasted people, eh?"

"How old you think that girl is?"

"I could only see her head."

"I wonder if she have a mother?"

"From the back, which is all I could see, I would put her at sixteen."

"So young? And to have a record?"

"She's sixteen, as you say. She can breed."

"Christ, waiting here on Chris, my mind all the way up in Pickering, wondering if my child went home straight from school. We moved up in Pickering to get away from crime and violence down here, but child, I tell you, up there isn't any better than down in Jane-Finch corridor, if you ask me."

"In the weekend Star, did you read the thing about teenage pregnancies?"

"Wonder what time Chris intends to get to my hair? Four o'clock, and school must be out a long time."

"What happened?"

"You mean the article?"

"No. The security guard and the pantihose."

"I looked him straight in his face. The whole store watching me now. I faced him and I said, in my best manner, 'Let me tell you something nigger-man.'"

"You called him that?"

"Was he black?"

"What was his complexion?"

"If you want to," I tell him, "you could put your hand in my bag. But let me tell you something. When you put your hand in my bag, I am going to take off my shoe, and drive it right into your two blasted testicles."

"No!"

"His complexion was what?"

"Not black."

"And you called him a nigger-man?"

"He was a white man."

"No!"

"And what happened?"

"He didn't say another word to me."

"No! But the teenaged pregnancies is what I want to know about."

"I didn't read the newspapers that weekend."

"Anybody have that article? Joyce, you think you still have it? You clips things from the Star."

"Was in the Globe."

"I don't take the Globe. The Star is my speed."

"Mr. Chris, how much longer before you getting-round to fixing my hair? I have a child at home waiting on me."

"And a husband."

"Had!"

"You divorced, cherry? I didn't know you and the old-man had break-up, cherry?"

"In name only, Mr. Chris, a husband in name only."

"That girl, that we just see being arrested by the police, I am sure that they're going to take her down in that station and make that girl's life miserable, and they may even do...."

"Do what to her? Do what to her? What you mean by miserable?"

"Child, every other day in the newspapers there's stories about the police and women they have in their cruisers."

"But that child, though."

"She's sixteen. She can breed."

"You mean rape."

"Who said anything about rape?"

"Sexual assault. Sexual assault is the name for it nowadays. Everything nowadays is sexual assault."

"Growing up in the West Indies...."

"You're a damn liar!"

"How can you accuse me before you hear what ...?"

"What you're about to say? I already know it, before you even say it. You were about to say that growing up in the West Indies, we didn't have anything such as what we witnessing nowadays in this place."

"Well, how the hell could you know what I ...?"

"Because I know you. And I know the West Indies. And I...."

"You know too blasted much. You must be working obeah, that you can read my mind."

The five women were sitting again. The wind came through the windows in a slight gust, and for a moment, it was as if Christophe had fixed the air-conditioners.

"Every year. Child, when you see Christmas come and the 28th is here, I longing for home. But I won't go home before Christmas. Christmas isn't Christmas unless you have a tree and snow."

"Child, all over the West Indies nowadays, is trees, and real Christmas trees too! Not the artificial ones we had in our days!"

"Snow, too!"

"Snow, too? What the hell I hearing?"

"You didn't know? Didn't hear? For years now, the tourist board people in Barbados been importing snow from Canada. For years now."

"You don't mean the Tourisses from Canada? You not referring to white people?"

"I am no prejudice. I talking about the snow. I understand it comes from Toronto, whiching...."

"And Montreal!"

"Whiching is the best snow in North America."

"Who's next, my cherries?"

Christophe removed the plastic bib from the neck of the woman who was now almost two hours in his chair. The smoke from his cigarette rose gently. He put the cigarette to his lips; pursed his lips as if he was about to kiss the woman dismounting clumsily from the high chair; put the cigarette in the glass ashtray, and said, "Who's next, my cherries?"

The five women looked at one another. They had had lunch together at the Four Seasons Hotel nearby. They had had two martinis each. And when they arrived, giggling, after discussing their children and their families and their husbands, as they did each time they had lunch, once in two weeks, they were fortified through food and drink, to wait the long wait in the old hard plastic-bottomed chairs. The plastic made their dresses stick to their bottoms and they could feel the lumps where the upholstery had collapsed against their soft well-cared-for skin.

"You have a child coming from school soon. You go."

"Charmaine can look after herself, man."

"You're not concern about that little girl walking the street and going home to an empty house with all this worthlessness you read about in Toronto?"

"Well, child, I would never allow my Suzianne to enter an empty house. Nor go to the mall with her friends. Some o' these friends, I tell you."

"Charmaine's the same age as that child the police had downstairs a few minutes ago."

"Talking about bringing up children. Do you believe we bring up our children better than them?"

"Well, you getting me mad as hell now! The evidence speaks for itself." One amongst them, who had been quiet, now spoke up. "How you could compare them with we, with us? The facts speak for themselves! If it is only once, in my twenty-something years living in Toronto, I have lived to see the day when a police go in a store and don't bring out a black boy or a black girl, but a damn white girl. And all o' you spending your time taking up for that girl? I haven't heard nobody amongst you, in the two or three hours we been sitting down waiting for Mr. Chris to fix our hair, nobody, not one of you haven't uttered a word in support of the police! Not one of you!"

"Wait! She fooping a police?"

"She's a married woman, child."

"Her husband would break her arse if he only heard!"

"Are you sleeping with one o' Metro's finest, on the sly, girl?"

"The girl is a little whore!"

"She was unfaired by the police."

"Not the police. The man who own the store is who called the police. Blame him. He could be the son-of-a-bitch."

"Who's next? Cherries? Who's next?"

"We're talking business, man."

"Just a minute, Chris, man."

"The fact that it was a white girl and not one of ours, well, that answers the question. We raise ours better than them."

"We had just moved to Pickering, in the house we're living in now, and it was a day like this, in late July; no, it must have been in August, 'cause we had just come back from watching the Caribana parade on University Avenue, and...."

"You see? You see? Christ, they couldn't let us parade on University, 'cause University Avenue is too good for black people, so they moved us down beside the Lake, where nobody can't see us, whilst they leave right-wingers like the Shriners to walk all over this city on tricycles as if they are blasted kids! You see? You see?"

"Nevermindthat!"

"Why never mind that?"

"Nevermindthat! We had just moved into Pickering and my daughter was nine, my son was six and my other daughter was eight, and we had just got home from sweating-up ourselves in the Caribana parade, and it was so hot and we had nothing cool in the house to drink, so me and my husband...."

"The cop you was seeing on the sly?"

"And fooping with? I did-hear that."

"Fuck you."

"Me, child? I can't do it by myself!"

"Was nothing in the house cool to drink, as I was saying, so we send the eight-year-old to the convenience store, just across the street, in the mall to buy a large bottle o' pop, 'cause we had just got a bottle o' Mount Gay from a girl friend who had gone home on holiday and me and Percy opening this forty-ounce and waiting for the child to come back from the plaza, and when we hear the shout, these blasted sireens going like hell in front our house, and four police in three cars jump out and my child in the back seat of one o' them police cars, handcuff. Well, Bejesus Christ, you shouldda seen how my husband react!"

"No!"

"Good dear!"

"Oh, God! This happened to you?"

"And you never mentioned a word of this before?"

"Some of the things you have to keep to yourself, eh?"

"No. Not a' eight-year-old child, handcuff, in the back of a police cruiser! No!"

Christophe struck three matches before he could light his mentholated cigarette. The smoke shot through his nostrils without sound, in two long piercing white streams. The cars outside the windows were moving fast. Horns were blown in exasperation. And the women could hear a few complaining voices. When the cars passed they could hear the footsteps of people on the street, and the scratching of the broom as the store owner swept the sidewalk; and then they heard the scratching of a match on a box, and the inhaling of the first lung-full of cigarette. It was one of the two assistant women hairdressers, smoking a Salem.

"Go on. Pass her a fresh Kleenex to dry her eyes."

"My eight-year-old. We send her to Sunday school every Sunday. From the time she was two, every Sunday as the Lord said, she was in that Sunday school class. We send her to piano lessons from the time she was five and last year, taking the advice of a friend of ours, she's been taking ballet lessons, and...."

"That's the way we bring up our children!"

"And her ballet teachers at the Ballet School just down there on a side-street near Church, her ballet teachers tell us that the child have a future in pirouettes. And, don't laugh, that August afternoon at five, four police have my child handcuff, in the back of a police cruiser and all the neighbours looking out and pointing. When we moved up there, four months pass before the one on our left said a word in regards to good morning or good evening; and the afternoon my husband brought home the new car, you should have seen them staring from behind their curtains. We shouldn't have those things. We shouldn't live the way they live. We shouldn't."

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "There Are No Elders"
by .
Copyright © 1993 Austin Clarke.
Excerpted by permission of Exile Editions Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

If the Bough Breaks,
Ship, Sail! Ship Fast!,
In an Elevator,
Beggars,
Not So Old, but Oh So Professional,
Just a Little Problem,
They're Not Coming Back,
The Cradle Will Fall,

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