A Kettle of Vultures: . . . left beak marks on my forehead
By Sabrina Lamb
()
About this ebook
Unbeknownst to Iris Chapman, the Atlanta-based image consultant, a kettle of low-flying vultures convenes overhead as she boards the flight home to Opa Locka on the day of her brother’s controversial wedding. Following their customary bear hugs, Iris’ eccentric family launches into the inquisition, the visual and vocal assessment of Iris’ physical appearance.
Iris is already attacked daily by her own inquisition, questioning her very existence. Self-acceptance is a long journey and it’s unclear whether or not she’ll get there as she attempts to seduce an uninterested man, moves cities, loses clients, and meets a man she’s not sure she can trust. Will Iris survive the onslaught by the vulturous characters in her life? Will her octogenarian grandmother, her superstitious mother who denunciates anything nappy, her hermit-like father, and irritating clients, push Iris over the edge of her own sanity? Will she learn to accept herself?
Sabrina Lamb
Sabrina Lamb is a keynote speaker, media personality, and writer. She is the author of Kettle of Vultures and the parenting guide Do I Look Like an ATM? Her writing has also appeared in Essence, Heart and Soul, and Black Elegance. She has co-hosted and been featured in numerous radio and television shows, such as CNN’s Nancy Grace and BET. Read more on her website SabrinaLamb.com and follow her on twitter @SabrinaLamb.
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A Kettle of Vultures - Sabrina Lamb
OPA LOCKA
[ 1 ]
Hauling off and whacking your grandmother is downright wrong, felonious, and can be regretful; but my left hand twitched another opinion in response to her whining interrogation, forty-five seconds into my homecoming.
I wonder what it’s like to do felony prison time. The wrinkle-faced lifers would crane to get a glimpse of the new hard-ass as I swaggered, bopping along the corridor of the musty cellblock in handcuffs and returning the glares with my mock intimidating stare. What you in for, light-skin?
they would ask, as I drag on a nauseating high tar cigarette. Hacking under the smoke, I would sneer, Not dat iz any of yo biznesses, but dat old lady had it comin’…and if you hussies don’t want what she got, you’ll get off me, unless you know where I can get real dick.
And there it was. My jailhouse reputation would be sealed. I would be dubbed dat batty bitch.
Anyone who thought they were tough by calling career criminals hussies
had to be batty.
I had already been assaulted today, first by the ninety-eight-degree heat and hundred percent humidity. And mosquitoes waited at the baggage terminal, holding placards with my name on them. By the time I entered the taxi, sweat was oozing down my pant legs. It felt as though a cow’s tongue was lying on my face.
So I was in no mood for Why you got to go around looking like Bob Marley fa?
Ms. Chickie ordered or asked, I forgot which, as I stretched my neck back out the front doorway to see if the pimpled-faced, Middle Eastern cab driver could facilitate a rescue and return me to the airport. Though it was a sun-splashed, cloudless noon, it would have been prudent to instruct him to wait until I waved a white handkerchief, indicating it was safe to leave me with my eccentric family. Instead he was off chasing another fare, dreaming of less humidity and an upcoming Noori concert.
The wrinkles in my forehead mirrored the wrestling match my thoughts were experiencing, wondering how this high-cheekboned, olive-skinned octogenarian, wearing her beloved pink pearls, knee-high stockings, and nothing else under a flowered housedress, simultaneously blasting three Miami gospel radio stations and a television blathering The Wendy Williams Show, could have somehow found disdain for, or had intermingled with, Bob Marley.
I didn’t have to be here. More attractive options were available, like undergoing a colonoscopy, listening to Indian sitar music, or perhaps remaining in Atlanta to join Tammy in returning, like breeding salmon, to Cisco’s—the headquarters of Atlanta’s decadent, elitist ritualistic nightlife—to spawn conflict, or attract love, however fleeting.
But destiny has placed me here.
In Opa Locka, Florida. A suburb of Cuba. And about two and a half blocks away from the sun. Located in the northwest section of Miami, the name of this middle-class, African-American enclave was derived from the Seminole Indian word opa-tisha-wocka-locka. Ms. Chickie was notorious for amusing herself by telling white developers who relentlessly knocked on her door begging to purchase the house, that it meant I’m snatching your land.
In Opa Locka, polite social interaction, foreign in many cities, still remains. Everyone waves when they pass your house, whether they know you or not. Though my little friends and I preferred giving passersby our middle finger when they waved, no one seemed to mind. My family has resided here for fifty years, segregated from but yet a part of Miami, successfully staving off rising crime. But to Ms. Chickie’s despair, citizens of Opa Locka have not been able to escape the encroachment of a city dominated by Cuban culture and gentrification. She complained often, Everybody speaks Spanish! If the English language is good enough for Jesus Christ, it’s good enough for the Cubans!
Carmen Esperanza Beiro, my best friend from high school, cackled when I would tell her about Ms. Chickie’s irreverence, over a late-night plate of chicken empanadas and medianoche at her family’s restaurant.
Change in Opa Locka occurs in tiny ebbs; perhaps the family on the corner has added a patio or paved their driveway. Or some-body’s sister joined the military or had a sex change. Or as my taxi turned the corner passing the pastel-colored homes, onto my block, there was Ms. Janette, still hunched over with her ass up in the air, like a Red Kangaroo, picking up non-existent debris, under the guise of beautifying the neighborhood. In reality, her ass was poised in the air, so that she could catch an out-of-control penis from one of the sanitation workers who happened by on their truck at the same time each day. Ms. Janette graciously batted her fake eyelashes at their catcalls, and would constantly invite them in for breakfast. Big men, like yew, must be hungry for some cheese and eggs, pancakes, sausage and grits…come on in and let me, Ms. Janette, feed your bellies.
Ms. Chickie instructed Lee Artist to never let my father outside in the yard, without being chaperoned when Ms. Janette was performing her morning bend haunch. That’s how she stole Sally’s drunkard husband. And he hasn’t been back home since.
Whenever our family was preparing to travel somewhere together, perhaps to a christening or a family friend’s barbecue grill, Ms. Janette would holler from across the street, Yew hew! And how is Mr. Chapman on this fine morning?
Tightening her jaws, Lee Artist would tell my father, If your eyeballs even look like they want to move in that direction, you can forget about ever getting a blow job again for the rest of your life.
When news of my arrival swept the neighborhood, it ranked right up there with the news that my brother, Victor Chapman, had renounced his vow to bachelor life. I’ve flown home to dutifully participate in the marital rites, which will somehow add either a period or a semi-colon on his new life, depending upon Victor’s level of commitment, which often wavered like leaves in a hurricane. Figuring out what it all means—resolution—isn’t a necessity. What is more pressing is the uneasy feeling I have about the percolating havoc that may lay ahead.
However, being a moment-to-moment optimist, I wiped puddles of perspiration from my forehead, hung my burgundy suit bag in the vestibule closet, and attempted to restart the conversation.
Ms. Chickie, how are you?
As my lips brushed against her cheek, her arms flew around me like an octopus hugging the belly of a seaward tugboat. Under threat of a cracked rib, I squeaked out an appeal to breathe freely again. Ignored, I resorted to pimp-slapping her on the back, as if burping a Sumo wrestler. Though I feigned suffocation, Ms. Chickie’s legendary hugs were comforting, expected, and signaled that my visit home was now official.
You gained weight, huh? Spread out like a Sunday buffet. I knows ya hungry. Ever since you were a little baby, you’d eat the wood off of the side of a barn.
Ah, the interrogation continues. A blinding prosecutor’s spotlight flooded my face as I sought refuge in Ms. Chickie’s hazel blind eye.
It didn’t work.
I didn’t know what you wanted, you eat so funny. Back yonder in the kitchen, I cooked ya grilled chitlins, oxtails, collard greens with the chitlins or collard greens with ham. . . because I knows you likes to eat healthy.
Um, Grandmother, remember that I’m a vegetarian?
Youse still in that Bin Laden cult. . . . and Iris, you didn’t have anything better to wear than that?
My creaseless Gap khakis and limp white shirt developed an inferiority complex.
Not knowing what to respond to, I gained strength, and retorted, Nope. I stole these off shipwrecked Chinese immigrants down at the Port of Miami!
If it was up to me, I’d send all them Chinamen back. Back to Korea where they belong!
she replied, pouring two glasses of fresh lemonade. It was not my responsibility to correct Ms. Chickie. I left that insurmountable task to a higher power.
You ain’t got no sex appeal,
Ms. Chickie shared. And whatever boy you messin’ wit don’t know what he doin’. I can tell by the way you walk.
Her fascination with my sex life occupied much of her time, and she would often mail celebrity sex videotapes to make sure that I was updated on the latest sexual techniques. "Dear Grand-daughter, I could tell how that girl moved on Dancing With the Stars that she didn’t know what she was doing. Watch this here video. This is what not to do. I repeat. This is what not to do. God Bless, Chickie."
After my flight to freedom at graduate school, Ms. Chickie had moved in with my parents at the insistence of her daughter—my social butterfly mother—and to the dread of my hermetic father. It wasn’t that she was a cause for concern due to infirmity, indigence, or non compos mentis. She was lucid, strong, and as cunning as a crocodile avoiding the shoe rack at Jimmy Choo’s, but Ms. Chickie was fond of injecting miscommunications or outright lies into already fragile relationships, just to see what hell erupted. She feared that the world that she once knew is disappearing faster than green grass running through a goose. And the older she gets, the more adept she becomes at emotionally disrupting the lives at 321 Napier Avenue, and using everyone as a pawn in her mischievous chess game.
The relationship between Ms. Chickie and Lee Artist, my mother, is a curious one; a combination of master and disciple, puppeteer and marionette, and as emotionally distant as Michael Strahan’s two front teeth. Ms. Chickie had encouraged her daughter to do what she, herself, had been prohibited from accomplishing—to create a new American dynasty.
Early in life, Lee Artist set about studying the Kennedy clan, utilizing Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy as a template and ignoring Negro royalty such as the King family, who were in her backyard, because she believed that all of that marching was undignified and that Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. dreamt too much. Lee Artist craved a life of adventure propelled by the traditions of the royalty she and Ms. Chickie would cast, but she was stymied by her own conjured superstitions, believing the Kennedy curse was created by Rose Kennedy.
Rose Kennedy must have preserved pickles during her monthly menses. That’s why she gave birth to all of them boys,
Lee Artist would often say.
So theirs was an unusual bond, devoid of the familiar mother-daughter mutterings and affection, but melded in a fierce determination to forge a Chapman dynasty. In my mind, historical figures lived in dynasties and for thousands of years were never served Spam and oxtails. Later, as my father became increasingly sullen, seeking comfort under the hood of his Oldsmobile and blues collection, Lee Artist would trail behind him muttering the late John F. Kennedy to characterize her relationship with her mother after watching (again) a tribute to Rose Kennedy on the Biography Channel: Geography has made us neighbors. History has made us friends. Economics has made us partners, and necessity has made us allies.
When the sound of keys jingled in the lock, Ms. Chickie yanked my neck in a death grip, forcing my face proximate to her strawberry-pink lips and sour milk breath, and with urgency, loudly whispered with tinged mustard breath, They took my money! The thieving bastards—
Then she shoved me away at such a throttle, my brain rattled inside my cranium.
While I attempted to realign my vertebrae, Ms. Chickie completely transformed, donning the halo of an angel posing for Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel. By that time, Lee Artist entered carrying a myriad of boutique shopping bags and Cocoa, her Tasmanian Devil Pekingese. When Lee Artist saw me, she peeled off her white gloves, and assailed me with staccato Dorothy Dandridge air kisses while Cocoa growled around my feet.
Hostile furry flatulent bitch.
When I was in elementary school, my mother had gone to wherever you go to adopt a satanic beast and brought Cocoa home announcing, Iris, look, you have a precious puppy.
However, Cocoa made it clear from the beginning that she hated my guts. When my parents were around, she would yap and wag her tail, curling up in their laps. But each morning, while my parents argued behind their closed bedroom door, I would attempt to get a bowl of Cheerios from the kitchen, but the little heifer would snarl, blocking the entrance and chase me so that I jumped on top of the granite kitchen counter. The only way I could enter the kitchen would be to distract Cocoa by turning on the vacuum cleaner.
Iris, what has gotten into you, girl? Cocoa ain’t thankin’ about you! Turn that thing off! It’s way too early to be tidy. The Kennedys would never vacuum this early,
my mother would bark, standing with her hand on her hip in the middle of the dining room. Respecting my mother as her pack leader, Cocoa suddenly bounced about, wagging her tail, gaining a pat on the head from my mother. See, Cocoa is just as sweet as she wants to be,
Lee Artist would observe, before returning to the bedroom to argue with my father. Lee Artist thought that it was perfectly normal behavior that I was sitting on the kitchen counter with my knees drawn around my chest as if I was setting up for an Olympic high dive.
Ms. Chickie pulled a piece of grilled chitlin from the pocket of her housedress and fed it to the eager Cocoa. Lee Artist exclaimed, Mama, I have repeatedly asked you not to feed Cocoa the same food that we eat!
Ms. Chickie ignored her daughter and ambled down the hallway to her bedroom singing to a gospel radio commercial for gas relief: Precious Lord, take my hand, lead me on, help me stand; I am tired, I am weak, I am worn. Thru the storm, thru the night, lead me on to the light. Take my hand, precious Lord, lead me home.
Oh my goodness, look at you! Were you in an accident?
Lee Artist asked incredulously, her eyeballs bouncing like fruit on a casino slot machine.
Ms. Chickie shook her head as she gingerly eased down the hallway. Lord knows, I told her. I told her, praise Jesus.
"And what happened to your hair?"
"Nothing happened to my hair! I just don’t relax it anymore."
Lee Artist stared at my natural locks, inspecting, as if she was seeing pig vomit for the first time. Well, Iris,
she began, plopping into a plush, pale yellow Ethan Allen armchair, opening her tissue-wrapped packages, Birds have made a nest on top of your head. Now you’ll never attract good fortune. Call Helena; I’ll treat you to a full touch-up—er—makeover. My dear, you’ll never be like First Lady Michelle Obama with napp—I mean, kin—
Let me help you, Mother; it’s natural. They are twists,
I in-formed her. There was no point in correcting her again; telling her that I had no interest in being First Lady—hadn’t since junior high school. And that being First Lady was Lee Artist’s fantasy, not mine.
You never see First Lady Michelle Obama running around the White House with nappy hair. Just think how that would impact foreign policy, and I betcha the President wouldn’t get reelected because of it.
Ignoring my clarification, Lee Artist examined the extra button packet attached to her cream and gold Norma Kamali silk tunic. Iris, I’ve told you a thousand times, image is everything.
Then suddenly aware of competing voices, Lee Artist yelped, Why are all these goddamned radios on?
as she flitted, like a bee pollinating a sunflower, to the radio, console stereo, kitchen clock radio, and television, silencing promises of deliverance, hell, and damnation and the promotion of a multi-level marketing spiritual cleansing opportunity.
I was listenin’ ta dat!
Ms. Chickie croaked in a muffled tone from behind her slightly ajar bedroom door, where she watched The Young and the Restless—better known as her stories.
Lee Artist’s fair, translucent complexion still held those infamous high cheekbones and the mole below her right nostril. When she was a young girl, her light skin, high cheekbones, and long hair were coveted, and even more so in college, where she was highly recruited to pledge membership in the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority. In Opa Locka, she was the closest thing to a movie star that anyone knew. In a world that idolized anything resembling Caucasian features, Lee Artist was considered royalty, especially by Ms. Chickie, who had a high regard for white people. Lee Artist still had the figure of a centerfold and moved with an air of superiority that did not always match her surroundings or the economic struggle she and my father endured early in their lives. Ms. Chickie recalled, We were so poor that we couldn’t jump over a nickel to save a dime.
Though the army promised worldwide travel, they omitted the part about low wages, cramped overseas apartments, and the German natives’ stares at Negroes, a sight that was, at that time, rare.
Lee Artist’s idiosyncrasies were groomed under the tutelage of Ms. Chickie. She was taught that because of her looks, she was guaranteed to have the right friends, go to the right college, marry the right man, and damn it, be happy about it. So when lanky Willie Chapman threw his fourth touchdown to clinch the win for Florida A&M University’s Rattlers in the Southern Bowl, she knew that this restrained, incompatible, pedantic seeker of ancient truths would complete her formula for the right life.
The fence made a whining sound, annoyed it had been awakened from its afternoon slumber. Through the pale green window treatments, I spied my father entering the front yard. A big smile erupted across my face, making it appear as though I had a hanger in my mouth. I waited, poised, for Willie to enter. As the door opened, the relentless heat barged in, gaining temporary advantage over the central air-conditioning.
Keep that door closed, Willie!
Lee Artist hurled.
He must be ‘touched’ in the head,
Ms. Chickie interjected from her bedroom.
She could make a preacher cuss! How am I supposed to get in the house without opening the door? I tell you one thing— well, wouldja lookahere…
His dark brown eyes compressed into slits, awakening the spider lines on his forehead. Iris! Hey, little girl! Come give your daddy a hug!
Hey, Daddy! Howya doin’?
. . . so hungry my belly thanks my throat done been cut out, pretty little girl,
he answered, smiling.
Willie Louis Chapman left Quincy, Florida, and lied about his age to get hired to build connecting highways to the Everglades. After which he entered the Army, serving in Korea and Vietnam, receiving the Purple Heart medal. Through the GI bill, he received a degree in religious studies, determined to enter the seminary, until he accepted that traditional religions did not satisfy his questions about man’s relationship to God. Or explain why a light-skinned, city gal would want to be his wife. At least, that is what she told him, over and over, until he had dissolved into a puddle of defeat. Standing at a sturdy six foot four, with hardened, stern features, Willie married Lee Artist and spent the next twenty-five years gritting his teeth as he slept to mask his resentment and his ambivalence toward the woman whom everyone thought he should have. Now a recently retired accountant, Willie indulged himself in his responsibilities as treasurer for the Order of the Opa Locka Free Masons, believing essentially:
"You are to act as becomes a moral and wise man; particularly, not to let your family, friends, and neighbors know your concerns, and wisely consult your own honor."
Being held in his comforting, lean arms resurrected memories of riding his shoulders and picking mangoes in our backyard, fishing at Port of Miami, and of him catching me making out with random boys and not telling my mother.
Lee Artist’s demand that I not leave our front porch on Saturday evening played right up my teenage alley. Using the front porch as our stroll, my older cousin Nikki wore extra-short hot pants and halter tops and greased our brown legs. Then in the evenings, while the adults were engrossed in a lively game of Pinocle, we posed in our chairs, angling our bodies, to seduce passing boys to stop and visit with us on the porch. Timing when I knew my favorite would pass by, Nikki and I would pretend that it was a spontaneous occurrence; that Dwight and T.J. were now on our darkened front porch, and after my parents had gone to bed, that their tongues had somehow accidently plunged down our throats. Our makeout sessions never made it anywhere other than the front porch or included the inconvenience of knowing Dwight’s and T.J.’s last names.
I’m glad you could make it down, dahlin’,
Willie said, giving me an extra squeeze.
No problemo. Just wish I could stay longer,
I lied, remembering the laundry list of projects waiting for attention back in Atlanta. . . . kinda surprised that Victor is getting married, Daddy. Aren’t you?
Well, you never know when it’s your time,
he replied, as if he was referring to a sudden tragic death, over his shoulder as I followed him down the hallway, past the dusty mummified replica of Ms. Chickie’s husband, Woodrow, which I thought was an unusual knickknack, since my grandfather wasn’t dead.
Never knowing Woodrow, Ms. Chickie told me when I had asked the whereabouts of my grandfather, and why I had never met him, nor saw any photos, Woodrow done drove his truck up North delivering oranges. He’ll be back when he good and ready. Never ask a man who is set on leaving, when he coming back. The only thing that’ll do is keep him gone longer.
To an eight-year-old, that seemed like a plausible, folksy explanation for his long absence. After all, truckers were known to make long hauls for weeks, sometimes months, at a time, delivering their goods and screwing bus stop prostitutes across America. And since I had horny boys and the beach on my mind, I couldn’t be bothered with investigating a possible missing grandfather.
Tall and precocious for my age, but in the eleventh grade, I was hired one summer as a nursing assistant at the South Florida Evaluation and Treatment Center and assigned to the pyromania ward. Located along the bustling Twenty-Seventh Avenue, which connected Carol City with Pembroke Pines, to the casual observer, you would assume that the South Florida Evaluation and Treatment Center was a junior college campus. Instead the expansive foliage and green lawns with white, small cottages hid patients that were segregated according to their psychiatric solution as the brunette, unibrow New Hire Trainer