Minister Faust From (html) (classic books for 10 year olds txt) đ
- Author: From (html)
Book online «Minister Faust From (html) (classic books for 10 year olds txt) đ». Author From (html)
âTell me,â I said, âabout your relationship with Kareem.â
At that, the two former lovers finally looked at each other, their faces crawling with the crabs of conflicting emotions.
When neither broke from their eye war, I finally asked, âWhich one of you initiated the relationship?â
Kareem raised a black eyebrow with all the menace of a Jolly Roger, but Syndi didnât flinch.
âI did, Eva,â she whispered, her voice puckering with melancholy. âI first saw Kareem in the press, like, five years ago. I thought he was hot. And dangerous. And hearing him speakâŠit was like watching a panther run after a gazelle. Iâd catch stories on PBSâs Langston-Douglas Black Journal about him and his L*A*B patrolling Stun-Glasââ
âYou watch PBS?â I asked. âYou watch Langston-Douglas Black Journal?â
âYeah,â she said, flitting her head in an unspoken no duh. âSo then they got their HUD contract, and Kareem was this up-and-comer, sexy, angry, successful, going places. So, like, this was four years ago and I was still an up-and-coming singer/ heroine myself, and I was the opening act for Salt-N-Pepaâs Letâs Talk About Sex tour at the Hermes Theater in Stun-Glas, and the L*A*B was doing security that nightââ
âFour years agoâŠso Kareem, you wouldâve been thirty, and Syndi, you wouldâveâŠbeen only fifteen?â
Kareemâs and Syndiâs eyes faxed multipage documents to each other in text too small for me to read.
âUhâŠyeah,â she said. âAnyway, I arranged to meet him backstage after the concert. And I thought we, like, had this chemistry, but he was all, like, âArenât you a lesbian?â and I was, like, âDonât try to put me in your little box, baby. So are you down or what?â and he was, like, âNo, Iâm a black nationalist, Iâm chaste, and even if I werenât I donât do white girls, and plus youâre just a kid,â and I was, like, âWhatever! Youâre a man! You really think you can resist me?â And so I started tracking him down, and he was, like, âStop following me,â and I was, like, âNuh-uh, you stop following meââ â
âDamn, Syndi,â groaned Kareem. âWould you please give it a rest with all this âlike, like, likeâ shit? Weâre here, all right? Doctor-patient privilege? And after everything Iâve been throughâŠâ
She looked at him, suddenly even softer.
âI think thatâs the first time youâve called me by name sinceâŠâ She sighed. âAll right, Kareem.â
I said, âYouâre not nineteen, are you, Syndi? Youâre older.â
She nodded at my statement.
âAnd not a lesbian, either. So what else isnât real? The bubblehead act, obviously. So you really did write all those books, then.â
âSheâs a marketing genius, Doc,â said Kareem. âAnd one of the smartest women I ever met. Thatâs whyâŠwhy I started liking her.â
Syndi glowed like an aromatherapeutic candle.
âSo who was driving the bus?â
Kareem scrunched his face disgustedly. âWhat?â
âSheâs asking who wore the pants in our relationship, Kareem. Iâd sayâŠit was pretty fifty-fifty in the driverâs seat, Eva,â she said, nodding to encourage him to agree with her.
He laughed bitterly at her nonverbal request. âIâda been happy if itâd just slowed down long enough for me to get on the bus! I spent the whole time running after it with my coat caught in the kot-tam door!â Syndi wince-smiled abashedly. âShe came on so strong, Doc. Wouldnât leave me alone, kept following me, until I couldnât get her out of my head. I knew I shouldnâtâve, butâŠkot-tam it, I was lonely. Iâve always been lonely. Wasnât like Iâd ever had women chasing me. Iâm not made of stone. She wore me down. So finally I agreed to meet herâincognito.â
He sighed, deeply.
âI told her to drive out and meet me in San Sebastiano at the only Ethiopian restaurant in town, a little place called the Emerald Lion. She wasnât all tarted up that night. She was elegant. Wore a long black skirt. Her hairâŠit smelled like saltwater and hot sand. And we justâŠtalked. For hours. About music, food, books, comedy, artâŠ
âIâd been angry so long, serious so longâŠand suddenly there I was laughing, reminiscing about cartoons, toys, games, things I hadnât thought about since I was a kid. And feelingâŠtotally free. In my life, I always had to set a conscious example, come correct, what we used to call in the L*A*B, be blackified.
âBut withâŠSyndi,â he said, visibly forcing himself to say her name again, âI didnât have to do that. Or need to do it. It was like, suddenly, all I had to do was just one thing: be happy. When I was with her, suddenly it was like there was no world, no politics, no mission, no duty. It was just us.â
âAnd you so fell in love with her.â
His mouth opened angrily, as if he were about to spit denial. But then he softened, looking at Syndi, then at me, and finally granted a single nod in defiance of himself.
A sigh almost broke into a sob in Syndiâs throat. But she was smiling enough to crinkle her eyes.
âBut then the L*A*B found out,â I pushed. âWhatâd they do?â
Kareem glared out the window.
Syndi leapt in: âThey told him to stop seeing me! What the hell business is it of theirs?â
âWhyâs this gotta be the big bad fetishâblack man, white womanâlike itâs the end of the kot-tam world?â said Kareem. âYou see these newspapers? These punksâd happily be printing headlines like âNigger B&Eâs into Whiteyâs haremâ even if the planet were plunging into the sun!â
âBut didnât you used to feel the exact same way, Kareem? Isnât that what you said in one of your articles?â He said nothing. âAnd you were denounced by whites for your hypocrisy, not your transracial eroticism. Those denunciations were almost all by blacks.â He wouldnât answer. âSo the L*A*B kicked you out. How did that make you feel?â
âI talked with Dr. Rogers,â he said, âasked him what to do. The L*A*B was already under fireâwe were about to lose our HUD contract, and now I was in the middle of a relationship I shouldnâtâve been having at all, for several reasonsâŠHe said
Comments (0)