When he got off the elevator a well-tailored white woman was heading in the direction of the elevator. When she saw Ball she turned around and half trotted in the opposite direction. Ball was a large man with broad shoulders. He had large hands and ripe facial features. To some he might have resembled a large ape.
Brashford opened the door. He was slight with a thin mustache. His face was a reddish-brown color, and he had freckles: from his Irish ancestors, he claimed. He was always carrying on about the Cherokee and Irish in his background, and to skeptics would point out the famous black people with names like McCovy, MacElroy, Kennedy, McClure, McRae, and Shaw. He was frowning as usual, his hands in the pockets of his smoking jacket. The apartment was large and contained expensive furniture but very little of it. There were paintings on the wall that had been given or lent to him by friends from his generation. There were a number of books by Russian authors on his shelves. Dostoyevsky. Turgenev, whom Dostoyevsky accused of lacking ethnicity, and the old man Gogol, who ridiculed the modernist dogma that characters be “well rounded.” There was so much O’Neill memorabilia that the apartment seemed to be a shrine to the dark Irishman. In one room hung a huge portrait of Paul Robeson in Napoleonic military jacket and tights. An album cover on the top of the sleek blond (thirty thousand dollar) stereo system showed Louis Armstrong squint-eyed and grinning in an ambassador’s formal clothes. There were a number of books by American transcendentalists lining the bookshelves, plus oversized technical books on lighting, equipment, and stage design.
Brashford snickered. “Man. Why don’t you get you some vines. You look like one of those punk people with them jeans and that leather jacket. I’m glad you stopped wearing that cowboy hat. Boy, they’re right. You can take the nigger out of the country, but you can’t take the country out of the nigger.” Brashford wouldn’t end a conversation with anybody without mentioning this adage at least twice. And he was so out of touch that he thought people still said “vines.” Brashford always recommended that Ian consult his personal tailor. “I’ll pay for it,” he had promised.
“I started not to let you up here. I’ve been working on my second play,” Brashford said.
That’s a laugh, Ian thought. He’d been telling people for years that he was at work on a second play, but even his strongest supporters realized that he would never finish the play, because he was afraid that the patrons who had lavished him with gifts, prizes, chairs, would abandon him if it weren’t as big a hit as his first play, The Man Who Was an Enigma. In other words, he was afraid of failure, so the fellas said.
After directing Ball to a seat, Brashford plopped down in the lap of his favorite sofa. Ball came right to the point.
“You’ve had the manuscript for about a month now, Jake. I wanted to get your reaction.”
“You want to get a reaction to your new play, huh? You and about thirty thousand others. See those corners? People think all I have time for is to read their manuscripts and scripts. I had to hire an extra secretary just to stand in line at the post office and at the copy places. See those corners?” He pointed to a corner of the room with his eyes.
“You and these other people calling me from all over the country asking me to read their manuscripts. You guys think that I’m some fucking agent. Get an agent.
“Anyway, what’s all of this Ham shit? Ham Hill.” Bradford chuckled, then returned to his usual poker face. “You country boys come up here and try to wax all intellectual.” So he had read the play. “Say, would you like to have a cup of coffee? Got this stuff from Tanganyika. Dynamite.” Before Ian could answer, Brashford poured him a small cup from a silver pot he had on the table.
“I called him Ham to make the point.” The coffee was as strong as it was down home. “Ham was cursed because he saw his father, Noah, naked. In Reckless Eyeballing, Ham Hill is cursed because he allegedly stared at a white woman too long.”
“Cursed so that he will be black and elongated!”
“What?”
“That he be black and elongated. That’s the curse, and when they said elongated they weren’t talking about his arms either. It was the Talmud that laid the curse on Ham and us. Anyway, these white people don’t care how smart you are or how impressive you are.” Brashford rose and walked toward a window. He was the type of guy who couldn’t keep still.
“Ball, they’re pushing your play because—” Every black guy had a cynical theory about why another black guy was “successful.”
“Because what?” Ian asked. Brashford was chuckling again. Ian looked at his smooth chin and cheeks. How did he remove all the hair from his face? It was completely bald. Brashford would attribute this to his Cherokee genes.
“Because you got that white woman’s monologue in the play. The one about her and the lynched nigger being in the same boat. How are they going to be in the same boat? How are some white woman and a lynched castrated nigger going to be in the same boat? The reason you did that was because you wanted to make up with women for Suzanna. The one about the whore who takes on all of those guys in the fields. That was a brilliant play. Brilliant. You remember those fellowships I got you for that play, the awards.” Brashford shook his head.
“I guess you’re going to throw that up in my face forever.”
Brashford swirled around. “Look, you little fuck — naw, skip it—”
“Go on. Tell me what’s on your mind, old man!”
Brashford stared at him momentarily. “You guys don’t know how hard it was back in the days when they had twilight zone-headed dudes wandering around New York hopped up on some kind of political bullshit and threatening guys like me who wrote the truth. Wrote it the way they saw it. It’s like what Chester Himes said: ‘All that matters now is to keep thinking the unthinkable and writing the unprintable and maybe I can break through this motherfucking race barrier that keeps us niggers suffocated.’ And some of us believed that. Hell, if I’m writing articles about freedom all the time, and they bored with that, then let them be bored, because in the old African tales we came here with — the ones we knew before they took our brains to the cleaners — the god of drama demands that you tell the truth, and so lying is violating some sacred oath in a manner of speaking. So Chester and me, and some of the other guys, have stuck to our guns, but you guys and your generation, you’ve fallen victim to the moral laxity of the times. You ain’t trickin’ nobody. So since these broads have put a hurtin’ on those four one-acters you’ve written since Suzanna, you plan to get yourself off the sex list by writing this pussy play. You’re trying to get off the sex list. Admit it.”
You should hear about how the fellas explain your success, old man, Ball started to say, but kept his peace. The reason that Chester Himes and Jake Brashford, and the others like them who risked their necks by trying to assert as large a range as their contemporaries, to break barriers, didn’t get as far as some of the others, is because they were abrasive, went around with a chip on their shoulders. They were confrontational. Confrontation was passé. This was the eighties.
“What’s wrong with you?” Brashford continued. “It’s these white women who are carrying on the attack against black men today, because they struck a deal with white men who run the country. You give us women the jobs, the opportunities, and we’ll take the heat off of you and put it on Mose, is the deal they struck. They have maneuvered these white boys who run the country, but they have to keep the persecution thing up in order to win new followers, and so they jump on po’ Mose. They get Tremonisha and Johnnie Kranshaw to be their proxies in this attack. Sort of like the rich used to hire poor people to fight their wars. As for these Jewish women who are putting a hurtin’ on black dudes in print — they know they can’t change Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, so they’re rehearsing on us, and backing these literary sleep-in maids who are coming down on the brothers in a foul and horrendous manner. Now I don’t approve of violence, but I can’t help secretly applauding what that crazy dude did to Tremonisha.” Ian looked at the wall above the Queen Anne sofa that Brashford sat on. There were framed portraits of Eugene O’Neill, and playbills from performances of O’Neill’s plays. Jason Robards and Colleen Dewhurst dressed as O’Neill characters. Stills of scenes from The Iceman Cometh.