Authors: Zadie Smith
âThat's
enough
,' insisted Jerome. âYou can see the state she's in, man. Have a little pity. She doesn't need this. Please, Zoor, let's go find the car.'
But Zora wasn't finished yet. âI know that the men I know are
grown-ups
. They're
intellectuals
â not children. They don't act like hound-dog teenagers every time some cute piece of ass comes shimmying up to them.'
âZora,' said Jerome, his voice cracking, for the thought of his father and Victoria had begun to overwhelm him. There was a very real possibility that he was going to be sick here in the street. âPlease! Let's just get in the car! I can't do this! I need to be
home
.'
âYou know what? I've tried being patient with you,' said Carl, lowering his voice. âYou need to hear some truth. All of you people, you
intellectuals
 . . . OK, how about Monty Kipps? Victoria's pop? You know him? OK. He been
screwing
Chantelle Williams â she lives in my street, she told me about it. His kids don't know a thing about it. That girl you just made cry? She don't know a thing about it. And everybody thinks he a saint. And now he wants Chantelle out of the class, for why? Cover
his
ass. And it's
me
that gotta know that â I don't
want
to know
any
of this shit. I'm just trying to get a stage higher with my life.' Carl laughed bitterly. âBut that's a
joke
around here, man. People like me are just toys to people like you . . . I'm just some experiment for you to play with. You people aren't even black any more, man â I don't know
what
you are. You think you're too good for your own people. You got your college
degrees, but you don't even live right. You people are all the same,' said Carl, looking down, addressing his words to his own shoes, âI need to be with
my people
, man â I can't do this no more.'
âWell,' said Zora, who had stopped listening to Carl's speech halfway through, âthat's basically what I'd expect from somebody like Kipps. Like father like daughter. So is
that
your level? Is that your model? I hope you have a nice life, Carl.'
It had started to rain properly, but at least Zora had won the argument, for Carl now gave up. With his head hanging, he walked slowly back up the steps. Zora wasn't sure at first if she was hearing correctly, but when he spoke again, she was gratified to find she was right. Carl was crying.
âYou
so
sure of yourself, you so superior,' she heard him splutter as he rang the doorbell. âAll you people. I don't know why I even got myself caught up with any of you, it can't come to no good anyway.'
Zora, splashing along in her bare feet, heard the thud of Carl slamming the door.
â
Idiot
,' she muttered, and hooked her arm around her brother as they walked away.
Only when Jerome leaned his head on her shoulder did she realize that he too was crying.
The next day was the first day of spring. There had been blossom before today, and the snow had already departed, but it was
this
new morning that broadcast a blue sky to every soul on the East Coast,
this
day that brought with it a sun that spoke not simply of light but of heat. The first Zora knew of it was in slices â her mother twisting open the Venetian blinds.
âBaby, you got to wake up. Sorry, honey. Honey?'
Zora opened her other eye and found her mother sitting on her bed.
âThe college just called me. Something's happened â they want to see you. Jack French's office. They sounded pretty het up. Zora?'
âIt's a
Saturday
 . . .'
âThey wouldn't tell me anything. They said it was urgent. Are you in trouble?'
Zora sat up in bed. Her hangover had vanished. âWhere's Howard?' she asked. She could not remember ever feeling as focused as she did this morning. The first day she wore glasses had been a little like this: lines sharper, colours clearer. The whole world like an old painting restored. Finally, she understood.
âHoward? The Greenman. He walked in 'cos the weather's nice. Zoor, do you want me to come with you?'
Zora declined this offer. For the first time in months, she got dressed without attention to anything else except the basic practical covering of her body. She didn't do her hair. No make-up. No contact lenses. No heels. How much time she saved! How much more she would get done in this new life! She got into the Belsey family car and drove with hostile speed into town, cutting up other cars and swearing at innocent traffic signals. She parked illegally in a faculty space. It being a weekend, the department doors were locked. Liddy Cantalino buzzed her in.
âJack French?' demanded Zora.
âAnd good morning to you too, young lady,' Liddy snapped back. âThey're all in his office.'
âAll? Who?'
âZora, dear, why don't you go on in there and see for yourself?'
For the very first time in a faculty building, Zora walked in without knocking. She was confronted with a bizarre composition of people: Jack French, Monty Kipps, Claire Malcolm and Erskine Jegede. All had taken up different poses of anxiety. Nobody was sitting, not even Jack.
âAh, Zora â come in,' said Jack. Zora joined the standing party. She had no idea what it was all about, but she was not in any way nervous. She was still flying on fury, capable of anything.
âWhat's going on?'
âI'm extremely sorry for dragging you out this morning,' said Jack, âbut it is an urgent matter and I did not feel it could wait until the end of spring break . . .' Here Monty snorted derisively. âOr indeed even until Monday.'
âWhat's going on?' repeated Zora.
âWell,' said Jack, âit seems that last night, after everybody had left for the evening â at about 10 p.m. we think, although we're looking at the possibility that one of our own cleaners was still here at a later point and did, in some capacity, aid whoever it was who â '
âOh, for God's sake, Jack!' cried Claire Malcolm. âI'm sorry â but
Jesus Christ
â let's not spend all day here â I, for one, would like to get back to my holiday â Zora, do you know where Carl Thomas is?'
âCarl? No â why? What's happened?'
Erskine, tired of having to pretend he was more panicked than he was, took a seat. âA painting,' he explained, âwas stolen from the Black Studies Department last night. A very valuable painting belonging to Professor Kipps.'
âI find out only
now
,' said Monty, his voice twice as loud as everybody else's, âthat one of the
street-children
of Dr Malcolm's collection has been working three doors away from me for a month, a young man who evidently â'
âJack, I am
not
,' said Claire, as Erskine covered his eyes with his hand, âgoing to stand around being insulted by this man. I'm just not going to do it.'
â
A young man
,' bellowed Monty, âwho works here without references, without qualifications, without anybody knowing
anything whatsoever about him
â never in my long academic life have I EVER experienced anything as incompetent, as slap-dash, as â'
âHow do you know that this young man is responsible? What evidence do you have?' barked Claire, but seemed terrified of hearing the answer.
âNow, please,
please
,' said Jack, gesturing towards Zora. âWe have a student here. Please. Surely it behoves us to . . .' But Jack wisely thought better of this digression and returned to his main
theme. âZora â Dr Malcolm and Dr Jegede have explained to us that you are close to this young man. Did you happen to see him yesterday evening?'
âYes. He was at a party I was at.'
âAh,
good
. And did you happen to notice what time he left?'
âWe had a . . . we kind of argued and we both . . . we both left quite early â separately. We left separately.'
âAt what
time
?' asked Monty in the voice of God. âAt what time did the boy leave?'
âEarly. I'm not sure.' Zora blinked twice. âMaybe nine thirty?'
âAnd was this party far from here?' asked Erskine.
âNo, ten minutes.'
Now Jack sat down. âThank you, Zora. And you have no idea where he is now?'
âNo, sir, I don't.'
âThank you. Liddy will let you out.'
Monty banged Jack French's desk with his fist. âNow one minute please!' he boomed. âIs that all you intend to ask her? Excuse me, Miss Belsey â before you cease to grace us with your presence could you tell me what kind of young man â in your estimation â is this Carl Thomas? Did he strike you, for example, as a thief?'
âOh, my
God
!' complained Claire. âThis is really repulsive. I don't want any part of this.'
Monty glared at her. âA court might find you party to this matter whether you liked it or not, Dr Malcolm.'
âAre you
threatening
me?'
Monty put his back to Claire. âZora, could you answer my question, please? Would it be an unfair description to describe this young man as from the “wrong side of the tracks”? Are we likely to find a criminal record?'
Zora ignored Claire Malcolm's attempt to catch her eye.
âIf you mean, is he a kid from the streets, well,
obviously
he is â he'd tell you that himself. He's mentioned being in . . . like, trouble before, sure. But I don't really know the details.'
âWe will find out the details, soon enough, I'm sure,' said Monty.
âYou know,' said Zora evenly, âif you really want to find him you
should probably ask your daughter. I hear they're spending a lot of quality time together. Can I go now?' she asked Jack, as Monty steadied himself with a hand to the desk.
âLiddy will let you out,' repeated Jack faintly.
An (almost) empty house. A bright spring day. Birdsong. Squirrels. All the curtains and blinds open except in Jerome's room, where a beast with a hangover remains under his comforter. Afresh, afresh, afresh! Kiki did not consciously begin a spring clean. She merely thought: Jerome is here, and in the storeroom beneath our lovely home boxes and boxes of Jerome's things lie, awaiting the decision to be kept or destroyed. And so she would go through all of these things, the letters, the childhood report cards, the photo albums, the diaries, the home-made birthday cards, and she would say to him:
Jerome, here is your past. It is not for me, your mother, to destroy your past. Only you can decide what must go and what must stay. But please, for the love of God, throw away something so I can free up some space in the storeroom for Levi's crap
.
She put on her oldest track pants and tied a bandanna round her head. She went into the storeroom, taking nothing but a radio for company. It was a chaos of Belsey memories down here. Just to get in the door Kiki had to clamber over four massive plastic tubs that she knew to be full of nothing but photographs. It would be easy to panic when confronted with such a mass of the past, but Kiki was a professional. Many years ago she had loosely divided this space into sections that corresponded with each of her three children. Zora's section, at the back, was the largest, simply because it was Zora who had put more words on paper than anyone else, who had joined more teams and societies, garnered more certificates, won more cups. But nor was Jerome's space inconsiderable. In there were all the things Jerome had collected and loved over the years, from fossils to copies of
Time
to autograph books to an assortment of Buddhas to decorated china eggs. Kiki sat legs crossed among all this and got to work. She separated physical things from
paper things, childhood things from college things. Generally she kept her head down, but on the occasions she raised it she was treated to the most intimate of panoramic views: the scattered possessions of the three people she had created. Several small items made her cry: a tiny woollen bootie, a broken orthodontic retainer, a woggle from a cub-scout tie. She had not become Malcolm X's private secretary. She never did direct a movie or run for the Senate. She could not fly a plane. But here was all this.
Two hours later, Kiki lifted a box of sorted Jerome papers and carried it into the hallway. All these journals and notes and stories he had written before he was sixteen! She admired the weight of it in her arms. In her head she was making another speech to the Black American Mother's Guild:
Well, you just have to offer them encouragement and the correct role models, and you have to pass on the idea of entitlement. Both my sons feel entitled, and that's why they achieve
. Kiki accepted her applause from the assembly and went back into the clutter to retrieve two bags of Jerome's pre-growth-spurt clothes. She carried these sacks of the past on her back, one over each shoulder. Last year, she had not thought she would still be in this house, in this marriage, come spring. But here she was, here she was. A tear in the garbage bag freed three pairs of pants and a sweater. Kiki crouched to pick these up and, as she did so, the second bag split too. She had packed them too heavy. The greatest lie ever told about love is that it sets you free.
Lunchtime came round. Kiki was too involved in her work to stop. And while the radio jocks pushed the country to extremity and the voices of white housewives encouraged her to take advantage of the spring sales, Kiki made a pile of all the photographic negatives she could find. They were everywhere. At first she held each one up to the light and tried to decode the inverted brown shadows of ancient beach holidays and European landscapes. But there were too many. The truth was, nobody would ever reprint them or look at them again. That didn't mean you threw them away. This was why you freed up floor space â to make room for oblivion.
âHey, Mom,' said Jerome sleepily, poking his head round the doorframe. âWhat's going on?'
âYou. You're going out, buddy. That's your stuff in the hallway â I'm trying to free up some space, so I can put some of the crap from Levi's room in here.'
Jerome rubbed his eyes. âI see,' he said. âOut with the old, in with the new.'
Kiki laughed. âSomething like that. How are you?'
âHung over.'
Kiki tutted chidingly. âYou shouldn't have taken the car, you know.'
âYeah, I know . . .'
Kiki stuck her arm into a deep box and pulled out a little painted half-mask, the kind you would wear to a masquerade ball. She smiled at it fondly and turned it over. Some of the glitter around the eyes came off in her hands. âVenice,' she said.
Jerome nodded quickly. âThat time we went?'
âHmm? Oh, no, before then. Before any of you were born.'
âSome kind of romantic holiday,' said Jerome. He tightened his tense grasp on the edge of the door.
âThe
most
romantic.' Kiki smiled and shook her head free of some secret thought. She put the porcelain mask carefully to one side. Jerome took a step into the storeroom.
âMom . . .'
Kiki smiled again, her face upturned to listen to her son. Jerome looked away.
âYou . . . you need some help, Mom?'
Kiki kissed him gratefully.
â
Thanks
, honey. That'd be so great. Come and help me move some stuff out of Levi's. It's a nightmare in there. I can't face it alone.'
Jerome put his hands out for Kiki and lifted her up. Together they crossed the hall and pushed Levi's door open, working against the piles of clothes on its other side. Inside Levi's room the smell of boy, of socks and sperm, was strong.
âNice wallpaper,' said Jerome. The room was newly plastered with posters of black girls, mostly big black girls, mostly big black girls' butts. Interspersed with these here and there were a few
vainglorious portraits of rappers, mostly dead, and a massive photograph of Pacino in
Scarface
. But big black girls in bikinis was the central decorating scheme.