Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Long time gone


VII

The strangely variable weather that marks early spring in San Francisco had set in, with some days as balmy as summer, and others sodden with a creeping mist that penetrated your bones.  The days came and went quietly after Bruno, and an increasing peace, more predictable than the weather, settled over me with the passage of time. 

Being single brought a level of comfort I had not anticipated.   Still, I got derailed by the unexpected, somehow clinging to the belief that life, when lived “normally,” was free of ups and downs, filled with pleasant relationships free of disagreeable surprises or contention.  I held onto the belief that most people were happy all the time, and that this was because they had their needs met, by their parents, or their friends, or their own beauty.  The rooftop dream, especially the part about peace, had helped considerably with this disillusionment, but I still often floundered.  I found I did not return to the Bible as often as I had at first thought I would. 

I had taken to spending more and more time alone when I was not at school or working, and was often in the rooftop garden now, recalling parts of the dream that had not sunk in at first, photographing the street below, sketching, or basking topless in the sun whenever it came out, if no one was watching.  I wondered what the part about the bodies lined up in rows had meant, and what this had to do with cymbals and love.

Barb and I had found each other again, and we had linked up for lunch a few times.  She and Yonas were expecting their first baby, and the glow that had already surrounded her was somehow magnified with the pregnancy. 

One day in February we met to share a plate of pasta al pesto, green beans, and osso buco at US Restaurant.  US was a little triangular-shaped family Italian place on the corner of Columbus, Green, and Stockton, where the Cipolini ladies, who all looked exactly alike, wore matching, crisply ironed powder blue dresses with white collars and cuffs, and memorized your order, no matter how long. 

One of them had just brought our bread and we were munching on it, dipping it into the oil and vinegar they showed us how to pour out onto a little plate from the two sided carafe.  Barb took a deep breath and sighed, reveling in the salty pleasure of the bite she had just taken before she swung into a story about Roger.  She said he had joined the Peoples Temple when he got out of jail and had moved out to their agricultural project in Guyana just a few weeks before.  Roger had looked her up a couple of weeks before he left and begged her to leave Yonas, to go with him to paradise, as he called it.  Poor Roger.  Barb leaving Yonas – that wouldn’t happen even if hell froze over.

“The Peoples Temple – isn’t that Jacki’s church?” I asked, my curiosity piqued.

“Yes, and after Roger called me, I went to the library and researched microfilm about them from the Examiner because – well, you know Roger – and I was worried about him.  One of the reporters uncovered some pretty bad stuff about three years ago – fake healings, welfare scams, pretending to resurrect people that weren’t really dead.  The Temple was even firebombed a few years ago by people unhappy with how they do business.  But then when I tried to call him back I couldn’t reach him.  I thought that was odd. 


“Finally he called me again right before he left the country, but he wouldn’t listen to anything I had to say.  He just said stuff about the capitalist machine and how the paper printed nothing but propaganda and lies.  And it’s true, I had found as much good news about Peoples Temple as there was bad, maybe more.  Did you know that Willie Brown and the new mayor really support them?  So I guess it’s just as likely that they’re OK.  I only hope that for once Roger has found something healthy that he can commit all that pent up energy to.”  She had spilled everything out so fast she had to take a deep breath when she was done.

I laughed, pointing up to the corner of my mouth and motioning to Barb to wipe where her food had dribbled out.  “Roger can hold his own.  He always struck me as pretty tough,” I said, biting into a green bean and sipping my iced tea.  Nevertheless, a small voice at the back of my mind caused the adrenalin to pump a little faster through the large veins of my heart.  Look for Jacki, it said.  Remember the dream?  But where would I begin to look, I thought?  I hadn’t seen her in so long, and the voice was very small anyway.  So I ignored it for the time being, and it passed, like headlights in the fog rounding a corner.

“Roger’s tough in some things, but when it comes to movements and father figures and that kind of thing, he doesn’t have the sense he was born with,” Barb pondered, frowning.  “He’s still looking for a father, you know.”

Roger and Jacki had that in common, I thought.  I hope it doesn’t lead them down the wrong path.

*  *  *
 Excerpt from Jacki’s Diary
August 18, 1976

Like Moscone promised Stokes, Jim is on the official list of nominees to the Housing Authority that’s going before the Board, but the Supervisors started pushing for background checks as soon as they saw he was going to be on there, since Barbagelata had the big flap over the voter fraud.  That put a kink in things briefly, since we know how Jim would do in a background check, but not for very long.  Moscone side-stepped all of it by setting up a nominating committee to make the final selection, and he appointed Stokes and Carleton Goodlett to the committee.  Goodlett’s the editor of the Sun Reporter and gave Jim a Citizen of Merit Award back in ’74, when we were giving away money to journalists to “recognize” them for their integrity so they’d leave us alone in the press.

Just to make sure, Willie Brown is introducing legislation to change the process for appointments to the housing authority, which would result in the power to appoint being taken away from the local Board of Supervisors and turned over to the mayor.  That should guarantee the supervisors don’t dig in their heels.
   
We’ve got Roger Fagin working on some of the building projects in Guyana, since Freitas and Tim got permission for him to leave the country in February.  It didn’t take long after our slate got elected for things to start happening.  The acreage is huge now, so thank God we’re getting close to a real lease with the Guyanese.  There’s a lot at stake.

Roger is so good looking, Jim has a hard time concentrating whenever he’s around.  I know Roger’s not into that, but eventually he may not have a choice, especially now that he’s stuck in the jungle.  Charlie has all the passports locked in the safe.  Roger’s a good worker, and smart, but he’s a little bit nuts, kind of like Jim.  That’s probably why Jim likes him.  But he’s too emotional to put in charge of much, and Jim knows it.  Some days I think Jim is too emotional to put in charge of much.  But then that’s why he has me.  With us getting close to 100 people moved in out there, he’d better hope he doesn’t lose me.

September 9, 1976

Jim’s testimonial dinner was last week.  Willie Brown emceed it, and introduced Jim as a combination of Martin Luther King, Angela Davis, Albert Einstein, and Chairman Mao.  You can’t buy publicity like that.  Willie’s going to come share the pulpit with Jim in a few weeks, and on top of that I think we’re getting the governor for our Martin Luther King Day service.

Rosalynn Carter came to open the new Democratic headquarters this week, too, campaigning for Jimmy for President, and if you had taken our people out of the hall, it would have been empty.  So Jim will deliver San Francisco for Carter, too, because Carter is weak in California.  Still, if anybody can turn that around, we can.  Now if we can just get Jim to behave himself when we have company.  He says the most outrageous things and likes to bite the hand that feeds him.  You never know for sure what he’s going to do next.  So what’s new?

But things are going so well right now, the best ever financially.  We have lots of Temple members working inside the welfare department since Moscone was sworn in, so they funnel us lots of clients for our foster care and senior citizens homes, which are big money makers.  The amount we take in from public funds, combined with property transfers, offerings, and the core membership that tithes 25%, it’s more than we ever thought we could bring in.  We are literally rolling in it, but almost as much goes out the door in expenses as comes in.  Still, when everyone pools everything they have, nobody starves, nobody lives on the street, and nobody goes without health care.  It’s just so much damn trouble to keep it banked where the government can’t get it.

Sometimes I want to pack up everything and run away and hide, and never be found again.  But I don’t have the guts.  All the brains, but none of the guts.  God help me.

October 20, 1976

The Board of Supervisors voted to appoint Jim to the Housing Authority this week, so he’ll start at the end of the year.  When they got wind of the momentum Brown’s legislation was gaining, they folded like a deck of cards.

Also good news, we finally negotiated the official lease with the Guyanese for the land we’re building the agricultural project on.  The lease is retroactive to 1974, when we first started moving earth out there.  It’s a good thing, too, with all the acreage we’ve been developing, because we sure couldn’t afford to lose all we’ve put in – 27,000 acres.

So now that that’s done, we can be more aggressive about getting people moved into Guyana.  It would be a good place to bring some of the boys from the emotionally disturbed home.  They’d be a lot easier to handle out there where we can have more leeway with discipline, even than we do now, and we wouldn’t have to worry about them running off like that group that headed out for Canada a few years ago.

Jim is right that we’re scrutinized constantly here in the States.  There’s a reporter waiting to find something on us under every rock, so it’s a constant battle.  Sometimes I wonder just where we do fit in, and where I fit in, really.  Maybe living in paradise, even if it is in the middle of nowhere, wouldn’t be so bad.

As it is, I can never tell how I’m going to feel from one day to the next.



*  *  *
Wisconsin Street and Madera

“There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving,
and that’s your own self.” – Aldous Huxley

I
In August of 1976, Barb’s baby was born, Amira Renee Berhanu, a beautiful six pound eleven ounce girl with a perfect little mouth, wisps of chocolate hair, and an iron grip that spoke to the strength of the family she was born into.  Barb had just finished her first year of law school, Yonas his second of engineering school, and they decided Barb would take a leave of absence so she could give the baby a good start.
Long days of peace followed for Barb, for the first time in her life.  She had always been a workaholic, which was how she had worked three jobs and graduated from Berkeley magna cum laude at the same time.  But since both sets of parents came through with financial support, this was her chance to just be Barb, and to be Amira’s mom. 
Soon she began to have vivid dreams, and her mind would wander back over these dreams as she went about her day.  She began to find it hard to focus on reading, and started journaling to unleash the images that haunted her from her subconscious travels the night before.  She dreamed of everything from ancient Ethiopia, to being Yonas’s mother giving birth to him, to being a famous worship singer on the road through the deep South.
Around Christmastime, she began to have disturbing dreams about Roger.  At first she wasn’t sure what to make of them, because they were strange and grim.  In one of them, he was standing in the jungle holding a rifle.  Rain was slashing down all around him, and he was yelling something that she could barely hear.  Then, suddenly, gunfire rang out, and he dropped to the ground, shot through the head, a pool of hot red blood melting into the jungle floor, his eyes lifeless.
In another one, he was standing in front of a cheering crowd, being paddled with a wooden plank countless times on his buttocks until he cried out in pain.  In still another, he was wrestling another man in front of the same crowd, and when he defeated that man, another came up to take the first man’s place, until Roger was exhausted and defeated.  These dreams caused her considerable worry, because she was sure she had read about something like that actually happening in Peoples Temple, on the microfilm of the newspaper articles she had read at the library. 
She had no idea of how to check up on Roger to see if he was OK since he had left for Guyana, but she knew that from what he had told her, there could not possibly be enough people out there to account for the crowd she had seen in her dreams.  And nothing she had dreamed came even close to describing the peaceful agrarian lifestyle he had described, or the loving community, when he was begging her to leave Yonas for him.  She thought it must be the newness of motherhood combined with the isolation of her new lifestyle that caused her imagination to play tricks on her.
Still, one evening after Yonas got home from a long day of school and work, she told him what had been happening in her dreams over the last several nights.  Instead of being upset or jealous, Yonas was deeply concerned, just as he had been when Roger had called begging her to leave for Guyana and leave him behind.  Yonas was absolutely secure in their relationship, and he had good reason to be.
He grabbed both of her hands where they sat side by side on the sofa and pulled her to him, Amira sleeping peacefully in her crib, and they prayed for all they were worth, with him leading.  When they were done, Barb’s face was relaxed, free of the worry Yonas had seen when he first came home.
“You know, Yonas,” she said, “Roger has always been so, you know, in his head, and just doesn’t see or hear what’s actually going on around him, spiritually or otherwise.  But I feel strongly now that he’s finally going to get it: that it isn’t about him or some guru or about any answer he can dream up in his own head.  He’ll see that it’s not Sun Myung Moon, or Haile Selassie, or Jim Jones, or any other guy.  He’ll see it’s God Himself.” 
She slept that night like she hadn’t in a long time.
II
Bob came home in spring of that year, my senior year at the Institute.  Seeing him again was like taking a deep drink of cool water, refilling my cells with the connection and soul recognition I had been missing.  We were still soul mates after all this time, fraternal twins separated at birth, and I could see that he drew the same kind of heart transfusion from me that I did from him.  Even though he was tanner, leaner, more beautifully groomed, and better spoken than when I had last seen him – and he still smelled so remarkably good in a whole new way – his eyes were the same, deep green and wide, flecked with blue, like tiny world globes or underwater spheres, drawing you in to swim in his free-wheeling mindstorms with him, cynical and naïve at the same time.  With him, I was not lonely, because love had a face.
He had returned from Paris with a partner, one who had been over there to study music at the Sorbonne.   Russ was a pianist and came with a grand piano, and possessed a grounded practicality that reeled Bob in from deep space when he got out there too far.  His rich mane of hair was thick and curly like Bob’s, except for being a shiny ash brown, framing mahogany eyes and a square, tan face with not a freckle in sight.  Where Bob was wiry, he was solid; where Bob moved like a coiled spring, reminiscent of Tigger, Russ prowled like a lion close to the ground, more rugby player than elf.
They were a perfect foil for each other and shadowed each other everywhere, similarly dressed in their matching button down preppie garb, designed to enhance the arrestingly firm muscles that rippled underneath on both of them.  They devoted considerable time to making themselves handsome, but not so much so as to make it their first priority - that was each other, and the Castro Street community they had come home to embrace as their own.  And while they were doggedly loyal to one another and, at least for now, were planning a lifetime together, they spent their fair share of time in the bars and the street scene of Castro, with no fear, no reason not to dive full bore into the gay sexual celebration unfolding at their feet.  This was no Polk Street, after all, no deadly night crawlers to trick you into an evening that ended with your life draining out through a knife slit in your throat.  Castro was community, family, a place one could live and love and play in relative safety.
Bob took a job at the telephone company, a legacy for him since his mother was management, and Russ, a transplant from another state, went into insurance sales for his day gig.  Russ’s higher calling, however, remained his music, and he continued to train daily to maintain his chops, occasionally landing a weekend gig at one local establishment or another.  He played hauntingly on the grand piano, the only noticeable furniture in their spacious living room, improvising ethereal, romantic, almost eerie compositions that evoked mist over an Irish bog, or a night flight in your jammies through a velvet star studded sky.
They lived around the corner from our high school pal Bob Rizzo and his lover, who had a little apartment on Elizabeth Street.  Rizzo, my other best boy from school and somewhat soul mate, though not quite the same as the main Bob, was now an ad designer at Bank of America, having completed a degree in design at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland.  Rizzo knew who he was much earlier than my Bob did. 
Rizzo and I had been football mascots in high school together, him the Ram and me the sheep, both of our heads obscured by gigantic papier mache masks that plunged us into an anonymity that typifies the high school experience.  Had there been male cheerleaders at our school back then, Rizzo would have been one, because it was all he craved, to wear one of those letterman sweaters, and to shout the boys in their massive shoulder pads and tight pants on to victory.
Rizzo used to drive my mother to her Masters classes in Humanities at San Francisco State on his way to Arts and Crafts every morning, since she didn’t know how to drive a car.  She would come back telling stories of how Rizzo would weave from lane to lane with the radio cranked up high, and heaven help her if Curtis Mayfield or Archie Bell and the Drells from Houston, Texas (tighten up, baby), came on, because he would gesticulate wildly with his free right hand, steer with only his left, and sing in a clear, heart stopping falsetto with his eyes closed till the last strains faded away.  Some days, she said, she wondered how they made it there alive.
But once in late spring that year, my Dad had to get up and take Mom to school every day for a whole week, fracturing his sleep schedule since he only lectured at State for night classes that year.  It seemed Rizzo had come down with a really bad flu – fever, rash, headache, swollen glands.  For a day or two he really thought he had something, but then it cleared right up and he was better than ever, and that was the end of that.  He never thought any more about it, until about three years later.


My Bob, Russ’s Bob, would not catch that flu until the early eighties, but by then he would have a sinking sensation of what it could mean.  We would never see the last of that flu, which would come to rear its ugly head in first one way, and then another, along the long and winding road that led us through the next twenty years; and would also open his heart wide and make him the healer Barb had told him he would be, a soul healer who would be a blessing to many.
IV
With Bob home and everyone living somewhere in the city, we became like family again, Bob and Russ and Graham, and Barb and Yonas and I, and my neighbor Mandy.  The third floor at Hyde and Union became our chief gathering place when we were all together, and also became the underground gallery for the class of ’77 at the Institute.  Mandy and I had our work everywhere, even in the hallway, during the countdown to graduation, all of our photographs and drawings and lithographic prints pinned to the walls and spread out on the tabletops and chairs.  All kinds of people would come over and bring their work, the whole pile from the past four years, and lay it out, picking over it to winnow it down to its purest core, and letting what was left be the springboard for where each person would head over the next few weeks, taking feedback from whoever was there to give it.
Some nights just we, the family unit, would pair off or disappear in threes or fours.  Sometimes the topic of conversation would be Roger or Jacki, since they shared a common experience for the first time, albeit a weird one, having known almost all of us all this time, and still possibly never having met.  And sometimes Bob and Russ and Graham would just hang out together, Graham feeling out what it might be like to pursue what he had always wondered about, where it came to his sexuality.
I had already been admitted to San Francisco State for the teaching credential program, and Mandy was going back to New York, this time to pursue her MFA.  So as the year rolled on, we rode it to its ultimate destination, knowing where we were headed and why, and most of us even knowing with whom.  But missing from us was Jacki, and none of us had really gone out of our way to stay in touch with her.  On her own, she had simply dropped out of sight, and her secrets with her.  Rarely, I would dream parts of the dream again and wake up sweating, driven to find her, but the warmth of my bed always lulled me back down, and by morning I would have forgotten.
So in May of that year, 1977, Mandy and I finally took the long walk up the quad, to the edge of the deck overlooking the city from North Beach to the Bay, with the late spring wind blasting frigid against us, and claimed our degrees.  There was Elliot the printmaker and his Olde English sheep dog Emily, who looked exactly alike down to the bangs, walking the walk together wearing big bow ties; and Steve Greenberg, who was headed for his father’s drapery business after all even with a scholarship to stay on for his MFA, wearing his hand painted electric green high-top Converse and embroidered tails (he had always had a talent for textiles).  There was Sam who loved to spring up and strip off his clothes when the nude model didn’t show, and Chester the camera jock in his sprayed on jeans and leather, and his black Frye boots; and a long-legged big eyed girl who always wore a smock dress and Mary Janes, done up just like the china dolls she drew in all of her signature pieces.  We were missing only two out of the fifty six who started that last year with us, one who had disappeared forever from her Broadway apartment above a strip club late one night, and one who had jumped into the alley from the roof of his five-story Chinatown apartment building. 
Almost no parents were there, really very little audience at all except our professors and the rest of the students who were not graduating yet, since most of us were renegades who had struck out on our own in spite of admonitions to major in business administration or pre-med or engineering, having paid our own way or been emancipated and scholarshipped.  But Mandy’s parents flew out, and Bob and Russ and Graham, Barb and Yonas and Amira were there.  And all of us were missing Jacki, me most of all because I had her to thank that I had made the decision to embark on this phase of my life in the first place.   
V
Toward the end of summer, Bob was hungry for dinner at US Restaurant, and called up me and Barb to meet him there about 9:00 after the dinner rush one night.  We grabbed the table in the back center window, back by the little rabbit hutch bathroom and the fire door, wedged up under the triangle space at the heart of the restaurant  We could say most anything there and go unnoticed, unless there was a line for the bathroom.
It had been a long time since the three of us had been together like that, and sitting together called up memories of Sather Tower and Roger and Jacki, and Barb praying in Amharic.
“Can Barb say grace in Lithuanian tonight?  I’m in the mood for a change,” Bob quipped drily.
“Don’t be a smarty-pants, white boy – is that a lightning bolt I see behind you?”  Barb sassed back, wagging her finger at him, as one of the blue-uniformed sisters came up to take our order.  We decided on two plates instead of three, since they were so big, and got the boiled beef with Spanish sauce, pesto, and mixed vegetables, and the fried calamari, pasta with marinara, and tomato salad to split.
After a few long comfortable minutes of idle chatter which found its way around to the Berkeley days and Roger and Jacki, Bob took a drag on the straw in his Roy Rogers and produced two magazines from inside the backpack on the empty chair beside him.  “Speaking of that, I brought something to show you two today.  One for you, and one for you, but I want one back.  Wait’ll you see this.”
He laid the identical copies of the August 1 New West magazine on the table in front of us and pointed to the cover.  “Turn to that – ‘Inside Peoples Temple.’  It’s a mind blower.”
We each picked up our copy and found the article.  “Do you want us to look at it now?” I asked.
“Yes, now,” said Barb.  I want to know what’s going on with Roger and Jacki.  Did I mention those dreams I’ve been having about Roger?”  I took notice, recalling my own dreams and wondering if they had anything in common.
“Just read, both of you,” said Bob, and took a piece of bread.  “I want to know what you think.”
So we read, and once we started we couldn’t stop.  The food came, and still we couldn’t stop, eating with one hand and gripping the magazine with the other.  There it all was, including the worst of it: people beaten in front of the congregation, and for things like not paying attention in church; a woman having to fight with the Temple for custody of her own child; faking the healing of the sick, pretending that chicken gizzards were cancer that had been “cast out” by Jim Jones; siphoning off public funds for the foster children and seniors in their care, and then forcing them to live with inadequate food and clothing; manipulating people into committing all their assets and their homes to the Temple, especially the black members, convincing them that without the protection of the Temple, the fascist capitalists would round them up and put them in gas ovens like the Nazis had done to the Jews.
Barb went white, tears welling up.  Her voice was low and quick, a catch in her throat.  “It says here that they lock the door after service starts so people can’t drop by and see what they were doing.”  She stopped, looking down, both anger and fear turning down the corners of her mouth.  “The Mayor and the Assemblyman are in with them.  He’s even on the Housing Authority,” she said darkly, pausing to breathe. 
“It says they’re sending 130 incorrigible youths to Guyana, and Jones is already down there.  What do you suppose they’re going to do to those children, Bob?”  Suddenly she was very composed.  “I’m sorry.  I haven’t been sleeping right.  The dreams I’ve been having - ”   She took a deep breath, calm.  “It says they’re selling off their property in the States.  Where is Jacki in all of this?  Have you tried to call her?”
“Actually, I have tried to call her, but her number has changed and there isn’t a forwarding one.  And she’s not in information.  And I’m not calling that Temple, that’s for sure,” Bob said, picking at his plate.  I kept thinking of the dream and the small voice urging me to look for Jacki.   I wondered if she had still been in the States when I had heard it, when I had decided to ignore it.  And I wondered where she was now.
Barb and I looked at each other, a chill coming over both of us.  Her eyes turned from blue to grey, the shapes imprinted in her irises undulating like water under thin ice.  A flood of guilt at my own selfishness for valuing the simplicity of my own life over my friend’s need washed over me. 
Barb grabbed my hand and reached across the table.  Bob rolled his eyes, but he grabbed on too.  “I knew this would happen.  Looks like I picked the right corner,” he muttered.  I kicked him in the left shin and ground my heel into his shoe.
First she was quiet, and then breathed softly.  Eyes still closed, she said aloud, intoning just as she did when she spoke in Amharic, but this time in plain English, “Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes.  For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.”
The waitress passed nearby briefly, but kept going. 
“Therefore put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand.  Stand firm, then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist, with the breastplate of righteousness in place, and with your feet fitted with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace.  In addition to all this, take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one.  Take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.  And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests.  With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the saints.”[1]  She paused. 
She raised her eyes, blue again, as if she had just woken up.  “That was English,” Bob said flatly.
“Yonas isn’t here,” Barb answered sweetly.  “He wouldn’t speak to us in Amharic if no one understood it.”
“Is that from the Bible?  Are those verses you know?” I asked, watching her eyes closely for shifts in color.
“They’re from Ephesians.  But I’m not sure what chapter.  I’ve read them before, but I’m not a good memorizer.  That was Him.”
We were all quiet for a moment, and went back to our plates. 
“He gave me verses in my dreams not too long ago, too,” I said.  “My grandmother said them.  Be anxious for nothing.  And the peace of God that passeth all understanding will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.  Then a passage about love, and without it you have nothing.  I didn’t look that one up, but now I wish I had.  In that dream, Barb, I saw bodies all lined up on the ground.” 
That was the first time I had said that out loud, even to myself.  Barb just looked at me, stunned.
“Roger gets shot in my dream,” she said flatly.
We stared at one another.
 “Do you think we ought to try to do more than pray?” I questioned. 
“What would we do?” Barb asked.  “I wouldn’t know how to begin to get in touch with either Jacki or Roger out there.  I just wish I had fought harder to talk Roger out of leaving the country to begin with.  All I was thinking about was keeping my distance now that I’m married.  But now I don’t think Yonas would have minded after all.”  I had a sinking feeling that even if we could get in touch with them, they were in too deep by now for us to do anything to bring them back down to earth anyway.  I thought back to how Bob and I had been there by Barb’s side the whole time she was struggling with Roger, unable to change her mind – she finally did that on her own – but standing by until she was safely on solid ground.  Somehow, with Jacki, whatever it was we did or didn’t do just hadn’t been enough.  Maybe nothing would have been.
I took a couple of pieces of calamari with my fingers from Bob’s plate, and handed him back my magazine. 
“Here, Barb can keep hers, since she ought to show it to Yonas, so you can have mine back.”  Looking at his face, I remembered the place now where the large, dark sore he had in my dream had been, and decided to say nothing, this time for his sake instead of for mine.  I looked over at Barb next to me, and she looked back, and we knew, although I don’t know how we knew.
“Dominus vobiscum,” I said, and Bob laughed.
“What, do you speak Latin now?” he joked.  “Et cum spiritu tuo.  I used to be an altar boy.  Remember?”
I smiled.  “Yes, I remember.  Your mom was very proud.”
“She was,” he said.  “But my Dad didn’t live to see it.  He would have liked that I was an altar boy.”
We gathered out front for a few minutes before Barb and Bob got on the 30 Columbus to go home, and before I headed for the long haul up the hill to Hyde.  Barb took Bob’s hand, and made it clear to him that he was going to let us pray for him, whether he liked it or not. 
When she was done, she touched his face where the sore had been in my dream, neither of us having said anything about it, and her eyes glowed bright and clear even in the shadow of the darkened restaurant, its lights off, now closed for the night.
“You are going to make us all very proud, my friend.  I love you very much,” she said to him, and all three of us leaned in for a group hug.
“Awwwh,” he said.  “That’s what I love about you guys.  You always take me places I can’t go with anybody else.”
It was a long walk home, but when I got there, I opened my Bible, sitting there in plain view on the coffee table, where it had stayed after emerging into the light from its hiding place in the closet, and looked up “armor” in the concordance, in Ephesians.  Sure enough, there it was, all of it down to the last word, plucked out from Barb’s heart where it had been hidden, waiting to be handed back to us when we needed it most.  
And I wondered, how had all those moments when we could have done something or said something to bring Roger and Jacki back down to earth, how had those moments slipped through our fingers?  And I wondered whether Barb was wondering the same thing, and whether Jacki was okay and had her wits about her, wherever she was. 
*  *  *
Excerpt from Jacki’s Diary
June 10, 1977
We have a problem.  I’ve been sitting here at this desk writing letters for the membership to copy and sign so we could keep sending sackfuls of them to the magazine that’s about to torpedo us in the press, and now the fact that we’re doing it has become the subject of an article in the Examiner.  Jim is beside himself.  Lieutenant Governor Dymally and Cyril Magnin both came through with letters of support for us, and Maher, the financier, and Frank the Delancey Street guy called the magazine too, trying to stop it.  Right now we have about 50 calls and close to 100 letters going out to them every day, trying to nip it in the bud.  But Bill Barnes, the Examiner reporter, has now made news out of us trying to stop the story.
It’s New West Magazine that’s been out there snooping around, but we have gotten out front and stayed there with testimonials.  Fortunately they don’t have that big a circulation.  But we can’t afford for them to get hold of the likes of Grace Schoenfeld or any of the other defectors that are rattling around out there.  And we sure don’t want them to make any mistake that we are not a force to be reckoned with, either, if they decide to take us on in print.
Jim, of course, always starts to devolve when this kind of thing happens, so babysitting him together with managing this PR campaign is keeping my plate full.  In fact, I’m going to catch a couple of hours of sleep now before I have to get back at it.
June 20, 1977
Now the Examiner has accused us of breaking into New West and trying to rifle through what they’ve got on us.  The irony is, I don’t think we even actually did that.  But so what anyway.  The way things are headed, this can’t wind up anywhere good. 
Jim says that if that story runs, we’re going to start moving people out of the country fast.  If we do that, that’s going to mean passports, shipments, plane tickets, drugs for the difficult ones, you name it.  I hate to think about it.  But it is what it is.  I might as well get ready, because I think that’s what will happen.


Jim’s heading out there to make sure the place is ready to take up to 1,000 if we have to.  He wants to leave after the first of the month.  We just have to pray the article doesn’t come out before that, because then it will hit the fan.  Jim’s sermons are already really showing the effects, and we have more catharsis than I remember having in a while, and boxing matches, bloody ones.  Everyone gets patted down, even the soles of their shoes checked, when they come into the Temple these days.  Not real conducive to visitors.  We have to stay forewarned in case Moscone or Freitas or some of our other friends decide to pay us a visit.  It’s good we lock the door after we start now, with Jim going off like a time bomb in front of the congregation without warning.  Locking the door was my idea.
August 1, 1977
Well, the article ran this morning.  You should see it.  I’m just glad Jim’s been in Guyana since the first part of July, because at least I could hang up after he raged at me for a while.
But this makes it official.  Just like I thought, we’re pulling out.  Jim is going to resign his position on the Housing Authority - which is too bad because he’s chair now, too - and take the whole SF congregation, 1,000 people, to Guyana.  It takes my breath away. 
But the article was damnable.  The things people did to us – ten different defectors spilling their whining guts.  And the Mertles.  They’ll be lucky if they live after what they’ve said.  Today maybe Jim doesn’t look so crazy.  They really are out to get us.
I’m outta here.  I’ve got work to do. 


[1] “The NIV Study Bible,” Zondervan, Ephesians 6:11-18

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Not unto your own understanding


Hyde and Union redux

“Sticks and stones may break my bones, 
but words will make me go in a corner and cry by myself for hours.” 
- Eric Idle

I

Ironically, it was only about two weeks after we closed the deli for good that Mandy, the girl with the dream apartment right at the corner of Hyde and Union, told me there was a studio available in the building for $95 a month, the same building where Bruno lived in the house directly next door.

The apartment had a six-month lease with an option to renew, and my unemployment benefits would continue to come in, even if I didn’t find another job right away, for at least that long.  So I was approved, and all I had to do was decide whether to sign and accept living in one of the most coveted apartments in the city, with Bruno next door as part of the package, or whether leaving Puppet Man behind would be too much of a hardship.  In the end, it was an easy decision.

So Mandy and her friend Chester from school helped me move my paltry, but growing, furnishings up the long, slow incline that was Hyde, around the switchbacks of the curvy staircase to the third floor.  Chester, who owned a 1962 dented white Ford pickup with a bondo fender and a bed big enough that it accommodated all of my stuff in two trips, accomplished most of the move himself in two and a half hours with his shirt off.  What he couldn’t do alone, neighborhood girls flocked around to help him with, Mandy and me included, as we admired the sweat dripping down his lean, softly muscled arms and into his beguilingly gentle artist's hands.  I figured that was going to be the closest I was going to get to a man for a while anyway.
 
Graham showed up part way through the move to help unpack and to meddle.  As soon as Bruno’s dinette with the two lemon yellow swivel chairs was settled in the bay window, he plopped himself down and let out a contented sigh.

“Awwhh, man, this is the life, now,” he growled, putting his feet up on one chair and leaning into the other with his hands clasped behind his head.  “I could get to like this spot.  Have you unpacked the coffee pot yet?”

“Don’t get to like it too much,” I retorted.  “Just because I’m on the corner doesn’t make this home for you.  Call first.  Capiche?” It still surprised me whenever I heard myself blurt out some Italian-esque utterance, like “stugatz,” or “stunad,” or “capiche.”  Nevertheless, I willingly embraced the fact that somewhere in my soul I would probably be an honorary Italian for the rest of my life.  Madone.

The apartment was nothing like the narrow, dank cave I had just vacated.  The details from the building’s last real remodel somewhere back in the forties remained – the claw foot tub, the hexagon tile in the tiny bathroom with its two steps up, the porcelain fixtures, the stained glass kitchen windows, the built-in shelves.  Graham and I surveyed the décor and decided something was missing - curtains.  Having been down that road together before and hence understanding where a life with no curtains could lead, he and I hopped a cable car for downtown to pick up some bed sheets at Joseph Magnin.  We settled on a deep royal blue - three top sheets - knowing the color would set off both the yellow of the chairs, and the hot pink, dusty blue and black tapestry my parents had brought back for me from one of my Dad’s business trips to Peru, now that we were speaking again.  The smokier blue of the swatch of dumpster carpet laid the perfect foundation for all of it.

After I had hand-hemmed a pocket along the length of six panels I had cut to size, and strung the fake curtains on the curved rods already in place above each bay, we stepped back to view our handiwork and had to take in a breath.  The edgy palette of intense yellow, deep and smoky blues, and hot pink, set off by the soft black miasma of my most recent drawings - heavy charcoal on rice paper over pale sea green, opal pink and aquamarine oil pastel, amorphous translucent shapes emerging from the depth of the blackness – was mesmerizing, an artwork unto itself.  I pulled a velvety purple Chilean alpaca blanket, also from my parents, out of the bamboo trunk that was serving as a coffee table, and draped it over the oatmeal colored sofa bed, the picture complete.  I was home at last, and for the first time, my home thoroughly carried my stamp, a mélange of gifts attracted to me by who I was, and creations emanating from my own voice.  It appeared somehow – expensive.  Yet it was almost entirely free, at least to me.  And my parents were a part of it.  Foundation.  New life.  Reborn not a throwaway child, at least for now.  

As I looked first at one exquisite corner and then another, I vowed to myself that I would never hop around from place to place without a real destination again, and that wherever I went, I would never lose myself.  But that was a vow that, as the years went by, I would find nearly impossible to keep, no matter how hard I fought for it.

II

Settled into my new nest, Mandy next door, and school well underway, life could not have seemed brighter.  The photographs I had taken over the summer break were shown in the Diego Rivera Gallery at the Institute alongside the work of two MFA students, a painter and a printmaker, an honor to be sure. 

One November morning, Henry the union rep sent me on a job interview to a family-owned neighborhood market in West Portal.  Mt. Davidson Market, at the foot of the hill near St. Francis Wood, was owned by an Italian couple, the Palladinos. He was a dentist, barrel chested, tall and balding, and wore a green and blue plaid tam-o-shanter he had acquired on a family trip to Scotland.  And she, tiny and sweet faced with smooth hair and a tranquil demeanor, was head of the foreign language department at Balboa High School, an Italian and Spanish teacher.  Italians.  Miracoloso.

Had I been able to choose extra parents for myself, the Palladinos would have been them.  I felt a kindred spirit in Mrs. Palladino, and admiration for her that she had risen to the top of her profession to become department chair.  Even better, she knew my cousin, who was a German teacher at Burlingame High School, and loved him.  I was hired on the spot.

Mt. Davidson was a real Italian market with an authentic delicatessen, a fish and poultry, a fresh butcher shop, and a full gourmet grocery.  Pietro and Angelo went out every morning on the truck to pick up fresh produce, and Amedeo went to the wharf to pick up every kind of fish and seafood that was fresh – snapper, sea bass, sole, Dungeness crab, oysters, you name it.  The chickens came in 45 pound boxes to the loading dock and were broken down from whole, with a few left intact for roasting.

Everything was authentic and top of the line.  Salames of all shapes and sizes hung from the ceiling with ropes of garlic strung in between; and vats of dill pickles, giardiniera, and calamata olives, all colors, filled one end of the case.  Our most notable customers were Gina Moscone and Angela Barbagelata, the wives of the two candidates in what was shaping up to be the most hotly contested mayoral race in recent San Francisco memory.
 
While their husbands popped in from time to time for a jar of mayonnaise or a bottle of milk, it was Gina and Angela who every day smelled and selected the meats and the fish for freshness, and chose the imported cheeses and condiments for their traditional dinners.  At Christmastime, they ordered their crabs live, and we kept them in a water bath, talking to them and stroking them and giving them names.  Then when the ladies came on Christmas Eve, they ordered our ill-fated guests executed before their very eyes, torn limb from limb still fresh and blue to get the purest, saltiest flavor in the holiday cioppino. 

But the best part about being in the market at Christmas in 1975 was that George Moscone had won the runoff election for mayor by a handful of votes, and the celebrating didn’t stop clear through the first of the new year.  Even though we all loved the Barbagelatas, there was something about George Moscone that spoke to the heart of an average joe, the way he treated you specially, as if he had known you all your life.

I always liked to be on the register when Moscone came in, because he remembered who I was whenever he saw me, and started calling me Tranquilla out of the blue one day for no apparent reason.  Molto miracoloso. He reminded me of home and my best times with Bruno, including the night we had met him at The Tide when he had first decided to run - part of my new Italian family, only not dysfunctional, as if from the other side of a parallel universe.  

As if that weren't enough, after he was sworn in as mayor in January, he hired Bruno to be his personal assistant, keeping him close by his side almost every waking minute.  I knew that Moscone was taking good care of Bruno, and would never let him do anything that would ruin his future.  And so I had a special love in my heart for him, that he was watching over Bruno for me.

George Moscone always put in a good word with the boss for whoever had served him well.  Me, he liked because I was a fast worker and had a sweet, quiet temperament.  So the Palladinos and Pietro and Angelo and Amedeo all started calling me Tranquilla too, telling me they understood why that was my nickname because my smile reminded them of the Mona Lisa.  And some days I even felt like my heart had hardly even been broken at all.

III

Early one cold Sunday morning in January, I was snuggled up on the little oatmeal colored sofa bed, the purple alpaca blanket still wrapped around me where I had slept the night before, watching the am news magazine on Valerie’s station, which was one of the three stations I got on my coat hanger TV.  Often I didn’t even bother to unfold the bed and just slept on the sofa, partly because I hated to disturb the artfully arranged perfection of the décor by making dents in the smoky blue dumpster carpet, partly because I didn’t like emphasizing my aloneness in the world by sleeping on the double mattress by myself.

While I drifted and considered the news of the day, I had my arms wrapped around a big pink plush dog with long velvety ears that my neighbor Ruby Sunset had given me as a good-bye gift when I moved away from Hyde and Bush, toasty warm next to the gas wall heater with its little row of blue flames dancing behind the grate right next to me, even though it was dripping with fog and frosty cold outside.

Just as the baby-faced boy commentator was getting ready to interview an organic vegetable grower in his rooftop garden on Nob Hill, I was startled almost fully awake by the jangle of the telephone, and jumped up with the blanket tangled around me, tripping and nearly falling on my way to answer it.  On the other end of the line, to my surprise, was Detective Beltran.  Art.  It took me a minute to recognize who I was talking to, being both groggy and a little out of time and space in my still new surroundings, in addition to it being Sunday morning.

“Good morning Detective!  I’m so sorry I didn’t recognize who you were - I’m still waking up, I guess.”

“Don’t apologize, ma’am.  And please, call me Art.”

“Alright, Art,” I answered, knowing I would never have felt comfortable calling him Art in any other condition than half asleep.  “How can I help you this morning?” At a loss for idle chatter after closing the meat counter at 11:00 the night before, followed by a 35 minute street car ride, a long frigid wait at the turntable, and a 20 minute cable car ride home, I had reverted to my programmed customer service mode.

Art cut right to the chase.  “Before we chat, Shelley, has Bruno Roth ever been inside your new apartment that you know of?  Or has it ever appeared to you that anyone entered your apartment when you were away?”

Perplexed, I answered, “No, he hasn’t been inside, Art.  Not too many people have.  How did you know I’d moved?  But I guess that’s a silly question.”

“There are no silly questions, ma’am.  And it’s good to hear no one has bothered you in your new apartment.  I’m afraid I have some – well, unusual news for you, Shelley.  We’ve alerted officers in Daly City to the situation, so for right now I don’t want you to be alarmed.  But I do need to let you know that Bruno Roth has purchased a home on Stoneyford Drive where it meets Montrose Avenue in Daly City.   Mr. Roth can see your parents’ driveway from his new front window.”

In spite of Art’s best efforts, I was, in fact, decidedly alarmed.  In fact, I felt as if I were hovering above a scene of myself on the phone with Detective Beltran, now Art to me, watching everything unfold like an old black and white movie, a Hitchcock movie.  Of all the houses in all of the San Francisco Bay Area, whatever reasoning led Bruno to buy that particular house was already capturing my imagination in the most chilling way possible.  The image of the steel grey handgun lying in the case beside its silencer came rushing back to me with stunning clarity.

“But why?” I asked, hoping for him to give me some obvious rationale that was entirely innocent, and that I was missing completely.

“We don’t know why, Shelley, ma’am, but like I said, you mustn’t be alarmed.  He’s aware now that we’re watching him.  Even if he had some intent in mind, I doubt he would try anything.  But rest assured he doesn’t know that you and I have ever spoken, and we’ll see to it that he doesn’t ever know.  We just wanted you to be aware so that you wouldn’t be alarmed if you saw Mr. Roth frequenting your parents’ neighborhood.  I’m sorry to have to notify you of this on your morning off, ma’am, but Mr. Roth just signed the papers yesterday morning, and we wanted to be sure we found you at home.”

I let out a long breath and allowed my reality to start moving and shifting again, walking around people and places I knew with new eyes, like I did every time the lens got changed up on me.  Why was it, I thought, that I never saw things as they really were, never saw things coming – Bob being gay; Graham falling out of love with me, or never loving me to begin with; Ray and his funny business, Bruno and his gun – and now this?  Or was this just the way it was, that nothing was ever what it seemed?  Was I trying to be ignorant? But then I could remember all the times a small voice had nagged at me that something was not quite right, and I had conveniently, consciously ignored it.  Dumb, hopeful Tranquilla.

Art and I exchanged a few pleasantries and he reassured me again, and then that was all.  That was the last I ever heard from Detective Beltran, 29, single, handsome, and very eligible, as I would have found out if I had been paying attention to yet another small voice at the back of my mind, the voice that told me the Detective thought I was nice and wondered about me, and that he’d like it if I dropped by the station.  It sounded a lot like the same voice that had warned me about Lighthouse, the voice that I ignored until it was too late.  So sure enough, I ignored it again.  And I never even bothered to wonder what he looked like.
 
My blanket still around me, I turned away from the phone and walked to the center of the floor, just looking straight out the open curtains of the center bay at the foggy morning, mist dripping from the rain gutter that rimmed the gingerbread edge of the roof above my apartment, feeling sorry for myself.
 
I stood there that way for what seemed like an hour, but for what was really probably more like minutes, letting the pain of the healing wound that had been ripped back open settle into a dull ache.   Tired deep inside, I sat down in a lemon yellow chair by the window, till far distant memories of simpler times began to crawl out of me and hover close by.  My grandma Daisy, laying out her bone china for Thanksgiving dinner, filling the gold edged tureen with gravy, was singing, “His Grace is Sufficient for Me.”
 
I remembered wondering at thirteen, as she sang the sad old song about trouble and sorrow, why Grandma Daisy needed grace, as she laid out her beautiful plates with family gathered all around.  But thinking back now of how she had raised three young children as a widow with tuberculosis, including my Dad, I began to get the idea, and felt maybe a little less sorry for myself.

I sat there looking out a while longer, holding the blanket around me and rocking, until finally words from somewhere deep in my memory began to rhythmically weave in and out of my consciousness, darting like swallows around my head, beating their wings against my temples.  “Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee.  Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee.  Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee.”


I wasn’t entirely sure what that meant, in reality.  I only knew that something in it gave me a peace I hadn’t felt in a long, long time, and I remembered that no matter how much I screwed things up, someone much bigger than me always loved me anyway, if I’d just let Him.  And that peace would last me for at least a few minutes, before the tyranny of the immediate threw me into a tailspin one more time.

IV

I saw Bruno on the morning magazine show just a half hour later, standing behind Mayor Moscone and slightly behind him on his right, as the city’s new leader spoke to reporters about his plans for appointments to key positions, including several minority appointments, women and gays, a first for San Francisco.  Bruno looked good in his tailored suit, even through my snowy reception in vintage black and white.

Later that day I saw him again in line at Lighthouse.  He was holding a bottle of Chianti and a French loaf, and I had a bag of apples, two cans of soup and some Perrier.  He was in front of me, and turned around to look at me but didn’t speak.

“Ey, Bruno, come stai?” I asked, smiling a little wanly, hoping he’d be more glad to see me than I suspected he would be.  Sadly, I had suspected right.  All the old warmth and bubble was gone, and his ice blue eyes stared straight through me.

“I’m really good.  I got a job with Moscone – you know how I feel about him.”  His eyes warmed up to me for just a second, but it quickly passed.

“I know, I saw you on TV this morning.  Congratulations.”  There was a moment of awkward silence, and then a short, thick waisted blonde with a bent nose walked up holding a bag of Brussels sprouts, and linked her arm through Bruno’s.  Bruno didn’t like Brussels sprouts.  They gave him gas.

“I see you got the wine.  Is there anything else I should run get while you’re in line?” she asked breathlessly.  She turned to look at me.  “Hi, do I know you?  You look familiar.”

“I’m sorry, Janet,” Bruno interjected.  “This is Shelley.  She used to work behind the deli counter here at Lighthouse before Ray closed it.”

“Of course, that’s it.  You’ve waited on me before.  It was always great to be able to come get a hot meal from you on my way home from the office,” she said, faintly condescending.  I tried as I stood there to call up some recollection of the nondescript girl in front of me, but could not find a single memory of ever having “waited” on her, or even seen her, in the deli before.

“Janet’s an attorney in private practice,” Bruno said, his eyes turned slightly away from me.  “I met her at City Hall right after I started working there.”

“Well, that’s super,” I said looking right where his eyes would be if he were looking at me.  “Look, Bruno, it’s your turn.”  Jimmy was at the register, and he winked at me as we exchanged glances.  I would have winked back, but I had always had trouble closing just one eye at a time, so I smiled faintly and nodded at him instead.  I had a feeling Janet was one of those girls who could whistle a cab down by putting two fingers between her teeth.

She stood on her tiptoes flirtatiously and kissed Bruno on the cheek, her substantial nose crushing against his face, glancing at me out of the corner of her eye.  “I’ll go get some Perrier, honey bunny.  Shelley has a good idea there.  She always did know how to put together a great meal.  Nice talking to you, Shelley,” she tossed over her shoulder as she scuttled off to get the water.

Bruno turned back briefly.  “Why did you move next door to me?” he muttered darkly.

“I’ve wanted that apartment for two years and I wasn’t about to give it up just because it was next door to you,” I hissed back between clenched teeth.  I almost brought up the house down the street from my parents, but thought better of it, realizing that if he knew I knew, it could set off a chain of events that I didn’t have the experience or the desire to try to control.

I stood in silence as Jimmy rang Bruno up, Janet running back all flushed with two bottles of Perrier and setting them on the counter for him to add to the bag.  “I got two in case we get really thirsty,” she said, turning to me and winking.
 
A malevolent mood moved in on me fast.  I hope you aspirate it, I thought uncharitably, and then have an unattractive coughing fit which causes you to vomit.  But then I remembered that I had vomited on my first date with Bruno and he didn’t seem to mind at all.  I was left, then, with only the hope that the twang of her nasally voice, seemingly the result of a deviated septum or some other such ailment, would grate on his nerves until he could no longer stand the sound of it; albeit with the realization that it had been my decision to split, and that I ought to be wishing them well.

The two of them left the store as soon as they were checked out, leaving me to walk toward my apartment up to the corner of Hyde as if I were following them.  My cheeks were flaming with misery and anger, both at them and at myself.  As I walked, I vowed I would steel myself to seeing the two of them regularly, committed to not letting them spoil this beautiful time in my life, with my dream apartment, a good job, a career ahead of me – everything I could possibly want, right in the palm of my hand.  In fact, not only did I have everything a girl could want, I had been set free from anything that had the potential to stand in the way to becoming the best Shelley I could be.  The greatest blessing I had now was my freedom.  All I had to do was keep it.

When I got home, I took down a bottle of Wild Turkey from the top shelf above the refrigerator where I had been saving it.  It had lived with me in three apartments now, untouched, since my friend Charlie Haney from PG&E had given it to me around my 21st birthday.  I threw back three shots, using the little plastic shot glass that came stuck over the cap, one after the other before I noticed the first one had hit me.  Then, as I took the first step up to my narrow little bathroom, I found myself first on my knees, then lying with my cheek flat against the bathroom floor, draped from the bottom step to the top, where I lay until I woke up in the cold light of dawn twelve hours later.  

V

Hung over as I was, I went to class and then worked a whole shift at Mt. Davidson anyway, and finally arrived home exhausted past 11:00 that night.  Wrung out, I took the steps up to the rooftop garden, now deserted under the midnight moon except for me and the rows of potted herbs and flowers that people kept up there for cooking or transplanting or whatever.  I looked over at the three chaises laid out side by side, settling on the one nearest the ledge, the one where I had lately started sunning topless whenever there was a rare bright and springlike day. 

As I perched on the edge of the chaise, I looked out over the ledge at the apartments that studded the corner where I lived, all anchored by the little shops where we met and mingled our daily lives together:  the grocery under my building, still not as much of a community institution as Lighthouse, in my estimation; Swenson’s Ice Cream parlor that had made me gain five pounds since I moved across the street;  the little Rexall catty-corner to me with its vintage, orange plastic fifties sign still intact, and the little “x” marked through the leg of the “R”; and Marcel & Henri’s, where Henri, the nine-fingered butcher, made a paté so sublime that Pope Paul VI insisted on it exclusively for the Vatican.

But at that moment, my bird’s eye view of the life that stretched out behind me, short as it was and long as it felt, did not have me convinced that I had been made to walk this planet, or to fit in anywhere where there was human relationship.  Of those who had once meant something, all were either lost to me, or I had purposefully held them at arm’s length; now, I felt as if I didn’t have a living soul to turn to.  A deep numbness gripped me, my throat closing, my consciousness lifting above me, observing me as if I were - other.  My life was a comedy of errors, and I was on a trajectory to nowhere.

Almost automatically, robotically, I stood, stepped around to the ledge over the alley, and swung my leg up to perch there. Before I knew it I was precariously listing back and forth, like the bird on a wire, the drunk in the midnight choir that Judy Collins sang of, above the dimly lit pavement below.  The toes of my boots went in and out of focus as I swayed, and somewhere inside me I believed that if only I spread my arms, only let the wind catch my hair or my wrap just right, I could fly above it all, the laws of gravity suspending themselves just for me, the ultimate bailout.

But something or someone else, another other than the other that was me, snapped my mind back to reality.  Gravity would have gotten me in the end, it said, like everything else there was, everything else over which I thought I had no control.  I buckled backward, my foot slamming into the rooftop gravel, a red hot charlie horse stabbing through my calf.   I probably wouldn’t have died anyway, I answered the other. 

I sat back on the chaise, hot tears and sweat fogging my glasses and wondering what the hell I had been thinking, if I had been thinking.  And how had I come to a place that I was whacked up enough to climb up on a ledge three stories above an alley and try to fly?

I rolled back into the chaise and lay there, looking up at the moving mist as it crossed the face of the moon in waves, committed not to get up until I had figured it all out.  Feeling sorry for myself over the hairpin turns my life had taken the last few years, gut sore from what felt like a growing chaotic tide that had been pounding at me, I finally gave up struggling and just let myself drift in the arms of whatever, or whoever, had snapped me back to reality, and fell gently to sleep.

VI

Over the next hour or so I fell in and out of sleep, the bone-chilling cold of the rooftop keeping me tied to consciousness by one limb, while the rest of me drifted wherever, sometimes in body, sometimes out.

Then for what seemed like a few split seconds, or an hour, if time can be counted in dreams, I flew above the city unfettered, no Superman or Peter Pan to pull me behind him.  The top of Angel Island poked up through a bank of silvery clouds that rolled out like a comforter under the deep blue star sprinkled velvet of the night sky, with the towers of the Golden Gate not far off.  I zoomed in tight on my street corner and saw myself below, slack-jawed and scruffy, curled up in a tight, shivering ball where I had left my body there on the chaise in the icy mist, my drool-covered face awash in moonlight.  A ball of light, I shot in and rejoined myself, physical again for a moment.

Suddenly I was face to face with my Grandma Daisy, her large, warm brown eyes drilling into mine with an intensity I only knew otherwise by looking in the mirror.  Her face was aquiline, almost razorlike, the cheekbones formed from the Cherokee blood that flowed to her from the Oklahoma soil she was born on.  But the eyes, her Daisy eyes, were soft and kind in contrast, and from behind them, her mouth not moving, she spoke to me.

“Be anxious for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.   And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.”

I floated up off of the chaise to her face, no longer curled in a ball, a warm light glowing as far as the eye could see and penetrating my bones with a deep comforting peace.  Then there was nothing left of my body, just my eyes, and hers, or someone’s, very soft and dark, and a presence of love.

“And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.”

Again she said it, “And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.”

Once more I shot out like a ball of light over the neighborhood, passing over Bruno’s rooftop, then over Lighthouse, darting down into the alley where the two Chinese men I had seen before were standing with Ray beside an open crateful of assault rifles.  Then, all at once, I was hovering over a lush green canopy of trees, and under it hundreds of people lying on their faces in neat rows, swollen and covered with flies, their clothes bursting, some with their arms around each other, some of them children, empty of their souls.  A bodiless presence of Grandma Daisy, or someone, went out ahead of me, the eyes turned back to me, and spoke as we hovered.

“If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels but have not love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal.  If I have the gift of prophecy and fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.  If I give all I possess to the poor and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain nothing. ”

Then I sat up like a shot, seemingly awake.  The memory was still as plain as day, brilliant and clear and real, and I hung onto it, determined not to lose it.  But just as I was getting my bearings, Bob and Jacki were standing on the ledge above me, holding hands, looking down into my face like painted angels above an altar. 

“Dominus vobiscum,” he said brightly.  “Et cum spiritu tuo,” I replied.  A large, dark sore opened up on his right cheek, and a tear overflowed his eye and ran into it.  He turned to look at Jacki, and she kissed her fingertips, then touched the sore.  “Now we see but a poor reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face,”  she said.  I reached out for them, but then they vanished, and I was awake.

I reality, I was still lying down, and it was dawn.  Graham was standing over me, touching my hair.

“Shelley!  Shelley!  Are you OK?  Wake up!” he shouted.  I pulled myself up and swung my legs around, and he sat down next to me.

“Et cum spiritu tuo?  What the heck is that?” he asked, looking both worried and dumbfounded.

“I’m not even sure where I’d begin,” I said, stretching and rubbing my eyes.  “But how did you get up here?”

“I let myself in for coffee and you weren’t there.  It isn’t like you to stay out all night, and I just got worried.  I didn’t want to panic until I was sure you weren’t anywhere, and something just told me to look up here.  Not sure why, I’ve never been up here before, but something just told me to look.”  He smiled at me warmly. 

“And I found you,” he said.  We hugged.

“Well, I’m glad you found me,” I said quietly, only vaguely conscious that his awareness of my whereabouts might be a little more than I wanted from him.  “But I’m freezing.  Let’s go inside where it’s warm.  You can make the coffee this time.”

I wasn’t ready to let go of what I’d seen, so we walked downstairs in silence.  While Graham was making coffee, I dug my Bible out of the box it was in on the top shelf of my closet.  Turning on the light, I turned it over slowly, feeling its leatherette cover, and the heft of it.  It was not nearly worn enough, I thought.  It  had never been christened by having a verse underlined, its spine still uncracked and the gilt on the edge of the pages still intact, just like it was when Barb had given it to me for my birthday a couple of years before.

I turned to the concordance and looked up “peace” and traced down the fine-printed list, looking for what I hoped would be there.  “I will grant peace in the land,” “A heart at peace gives life to the body,” “By the Spirit is life and peace,” “The peace of God, which transcends all understanding . . .”

I stopped.  That sounded like it might be something.  “The peace of God, which transcends all understanding.”  Philippians 4:7.

I clumsily rifled through the latter part of the book, knowing at least that Philippians was somewhere in the New Testament.  After about five minutes, I was starting to sweat, and I was crimping delicate pages to boot.

“Where are you?” Graham called out from the kitchen.

“This place isn’t that big, I’m right here,” I called from inside the closet, which was actually one of the bigger rooms in the place.  “I’ll be right out.”  Since when did he notice my comings and goings so much, I thought, slightly annoyed.

Finally I said “uncle” and looked in the table of contents.  There it was, hidden between Ephesians and Colossians.  I knew from somewhere in childhood that there was an acronym for that, but I couldn’t remember what it was.

Philippians 4:7, NIV.  “And the peace of God which transcends all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.”  That was it.  And right in front of it, in verse six, was Grandma Daisy’s admonishment to be anxious for nothing.

I took my purse off the hook where I kept it inside the closet and took out the yellow highlighter I used to mark passages in my textbooks at school.  Starting at verse six and going through verse seven, I highlighted the whole thing, and just to be sure I wouldn’t forget where it was, I pulled the little maroon satin ribbon around from its original position in Psalms and tucked it into the page.  Grandma, I thought.  Was that really you?  Or was it the God of peace, the peace that passeth all understanding, who took me on a night flight over the city in my dreams?

Clutching the Bible under my right arm, I put the box back up on the closet shelf, closed the door behind me, and walked out into the sunny center of my room, out of the closet into the place where I lived every day, and put the Bible down on the bamboo trunk that served as a coffee table.  I set the highlighter down next to it, determined to go back and read and reread what had so obviously been a gift to me.

But I wouldn’t remember the part about love until much, much later, when voices both big and small came back to remind me. 
       
*  *  *

Excerpt from Jacki’s Diary

November 15, 1975

Moscone won the November election, but not by enough to avoid a runoff.  So it looks like we’re buckling down to get him over the hump with Barbagelata.  This will be a whole new ballgame now that they’re head to head, because it’s the conservatives against the liberals, and even though you can’t tell it by looking, the rich right in San Francisco has a stranglehold on politics.  Capitalists. 

So we’re going to have to keep up the effort clear through the runoff.  If you count all of the member voter registrations the Temple has on the books, they number a little more than 5,000, including bodies that are registered under more than one name in more than one house.  We must have hundreds spread out registered in members’ houses they don’t live in, including the volunteers from Ukiah, and just as many registered in Ukiah that live down here.  Good thing we have Wanda in the registrar’s office up there.  Old man Sly is going to have to keep that bus on the road for sure.

It was a lot of work to mark all of those voting cards so people would know how to vote when they got to the polls, but it paid off in getting Moscone out front in November.  With the two of them head to head now, I think our 5,000 votes and us hitting the precincts day and night again will bring it home for Jim in the final round.  It takes a little monitoring to make sure our people vote right, but for the most part we have them pretty well trained.  Plus they know they’ll get their butts kicked, literally, if they get caught voting wrong or if they resist the program.  There’s nothing like peer pressure to keep people on track.  And we have Moscone’s man Bruno helping with the Italians.  Man, he has the most amazing eyes.  Too bad he’s Catholic – he’d never consider jumping ship to join the Temple, no matter how much he likes what we’re doing. 

Besides, he used to date Shelley, and I don’t work that way.

Pretty soon we’re going to sit down with Moscone and plan the precinct program.  We’re ready to take on the toughest neighborhoods again, and since we’re the ones who registered everyone in those places to begin with, we know how to get them to turn out.  It’ll take every vote we can scrape up to get it done, but we’ll pull it off.  We always do.

Once we have Moscone, Freitas, and Hongisto in office and in our debt, we’re in.  When Freitas is DA, it’ll only be a matter of time before we get Tim on board in his office, and with that and an appointment for Jim, the sky’s the limit.  Just a few more weeks, but it’s starting to feel like a lifetime, because everything else is on hold, at least for me and Stokes.

December 16, 1975

We did it – we brought home the election for all three, Moscone, Freitas, and Hongisto.  Stokes just got off the phone with Moscone, and he acknowledged flat out that we won it for him, that he would not be preparing to be sworn in if we hadn’t delivered our bloc of voters.  Considering he only won by 4,000 votes, I know he’s right.

Moscone promised an appointment for Jim, which is the news we’ve been waiting for, even though we’ll have to wait till summer for the nomination to go to the Board.  Stokes taped the phone call and transcribed it just in case Moscone forgets.  Not that we don’t trust Moscone completely, of course we do, but you can’t be too careful with human nature being what it is.

The appointment will be to the Housing Authority, which is good for us, since we depend on the transfer of property to the Temple, and could use a little relief from regulation for a change.  We have too many people living in those tiny rooms in the Temple building, more than the Housing Authority allows, so a lot of the people living in there had to register at fake addresses during the election.  I bet some of the members who had nine or ten strange voter packets show up in their mail were surprised as heck.  But they know better than to bring it up, it goes without saying.

Now we can get back to business, with the election over, and focus on expanding our social services, recruiting, and building the agricultural community in Guyana.  We’re going to try for our tax-exempt status again in February, so hopefully we’ll get it this time. 

The momentum we have within the group kind of blows your mind.  If someone even talks about quitting, the whole group just leans in on them and holds them right where they are.  They will literally shout them down.  That gives me a real positive head rush, and at the same time scares the hell out of me. Actually, some days I’m not sure how I feel.  I guess it depends on which direction we’re headed that day: to bring services to the community, or to stand in line for our paper cups of punch.

I still believe overall we are headed in the right direction, and that most of the crap we do is for a good cause, even if it doesn’t look good on its face.  So I just keep on truckin’, for now.  Without me, I think this place would fold, what with Jim acting crazy as a bedbug if I don’t keep him on track.

February 26, 1976

We could have guessed it – Barbagelata cried voter fraud almost as soon as he found out he lost the election.  So he demanded a big investigation, claiming that people were registered more than once under different names, and registered at fictitious addresses.  But it didn’t hold up, because we were ready.  The minute Freitas took over the DA’s office, he hired our attorney Tim to work for him, so when it came time to do the investigation, Tim was heading up the special elections crime unit.

Of course, Tim had to find a few violations – there are always violations in any big election, and he saw to it that they were prosecuted.  But not a one of them came back around to Peoples Temple.  Like I said, once we had the election in the bag, we would be in.  And I was right.

Gotta go – service tonight, and Moscone’s coming with Willie Brown.  We need both of those guys on board and happy – whatever Moscone can’t take care of here at home, Willie fixes in Sacramento, him and Dymally.  So we’ve got to make them all feel loved and happy whenever they come to visit.

March 19, 1976

They denied our tax exempt status again.  This is a major blow, and Jim is hoppin’ mad, as expected.  Guess we’re ramping up for Guyana, and I’m still on the road salting money away in every corner of the world you can think of.  That’s all I have to say about that.

July 12, 1976

My only worry today is Grace, Tim’s wife, who has continued to give him a ration of grief because he signed that paper years ago saying their four-year-old John Robert was really fathered by Jim.  She drove up to Redwood Valley last week, got all of her stuff out, and left.  Defected.  But she knew better than to try to take the baby.  He’s still back in Temple housing in the city.

She’s always complained endlessly about that kid.  But then she’s always been a complainer. She says she doesn’t like to complain, but she does, and she always has.  She doesn’t even have to open her mouth to complain.  It’s all over her face. 

We’d just come back from being on the road to New York City for about three weeks when she ran off.  She’d been complaining about being “tired.” Added to that, is that Tim had just made her sign the deed to a piece of property of theirs, and then had it notarized after the fact and gave it to the Temple, since she was going to be in New York.  She was peeved about that too.  So I’m not surprised she ran off when she did. 

She says she just went away for a while to think things over, but I’ve always known she was a weak one, and that she was fixated on that kid instead of on where her priorities ought to be.  Tim has been trying to beg her to come back, but I doubt there’s any hope for them.  It would be better for Tim, and for John Robert, if he never saw her again.