My Name
I.
With hands worn from endless
cultivating of plump vegetables
and berries in the garden out back—
handsthat clearly convey signs
of countless years of fidelity
and obedience to my husband—
withthese hands Ivehemently
embrace Arthur's lifeless figure
lying motionless on the overpowering
hospital bed like the shed skin of a
spring locust attached delicately to
the branch of a towering oak tree
waiting to be captured by the currents
of the east wind. My body convulses
quietly. Tears of sadness and relief
escape the ducts that had been courageously
sealed while the eyes painfully
watched him suffer.
II.
"Your eyes are much bigger than
your stomach!" Grandma unceasingly
reported after keenly observing the remains of
still-warm, cinnamon-topped, sweet
potato pie crust lying indiscriminately
off the side of my saucer—melted vanilla
ice cream trickling rhythmically onto the
kitchen table. J remember a gentle pat on my
behind as I lazily excused myself.
The task of clearing the table was at hand.
Dishes cleaned. Floor swept. Scraps set outside.
The weekly struggle for the 'funny papers'
commenced right on schedule. We fought
like stray cats scrambling over who receives the
first share of trash. I, often the first to retire from
such play, sleepily rubbed my eyes-a cue to
Grandma that the bed was calling.
Stripped down to nothing but my beige, once white,
T-shirt and Tuesday panties, although we always
visited Grandma on Fridays, I grabbed Snoopy
and created a deep burrow inside the hand-woven quilt
once folded tidily at the end of grandma's bed.
III.
I recollect the many times
when he and I would welcome
our grandchildren into our pleasant,
yet quaint home. Josie was always
the first to enter the kitchen,
arms stretched wide to embrace Arthur
and me after not seeing us for no more
than a week. Duane, the second oldest
child of Number Three, would carelessly peck
us on the cheek and pass me, devoting all
of his attention to the ballplayers on
television. Yes, he was a growing
young man eager to become a basketball
player and to eat up all the fried chicken
on my old nineteen-seventy-eight stove!
Ahhh, yes. Now, there was always Esha; eyes
gleaming and a smile as bright as the
crescent moon in the evening. She insisted on climbing
trees, playing with the rowdy dogs out back, and
sitting rather unladylike at the table. Unlike
her sister, Arthur and I agreed, she was
an awkward girl often possessing the characteristics
of a young boy. Needless to say, she was more
apt to wrestle and rough house with
Duane than Josie, a young woman taught the
importance of etiquette by yours truly.
IV.
The smooth terrain of the paved city highway
transforms quickly as I feel the jagged, rough
gravel crush explosively underneath the tires.
Relocated to a home settled deep into suburbia
like an old pair of torn blue jeans donated to
the goodwill, my grandmother, all five feet and six
inches of her, lies placidly, protected by
one of her very few possessions: an old tattered,
white, cotton blanket from 1419 East Lane Street.
For eighty-six years God has blessed her to live.
But the latter of those years have been seized by
Alzheimer's disease. Middle-aged, grown men in her
mind are still ten and eleven year olds. My father,
Number Three, is forty-six but would be unfamiliar
to Mama Nobi, remembering him only as a child.
A twenty-inch television, three or four sets of clothes,
Snoopy, and a dusty, half-century old, white King James
version of the Bible are her only belongings.
I gaze around her square, claustrophobic
cubicle and I am overwhelmed with memories of
howher life used to be. Privacy is not a necessity
at Rosehaven. Gardening, a task Grandma thoroughly
enjoyed, is simply out of the question.
The tenants recline restfully in their rooms
periodically escaping it to a larger, still-
enclosedcubicle in which Bob Barker's voice
can be distinctly heard. Vegetables.
v.
Senile is how they would venture to characterize my state.
Forgetful and incompetent are other words I hear them say.
I lie here looking inquisitively at this young girl sitting
at the edge of my bed. "Who is she?" I wonder.
Her smile is very familiar. The voice
although a bit more refined and confident reminds me
of a granddaughter I once had. What happened to her?
What was her name?
And this woman calls me "Grandma," yet I do not remember
her. She looks upon me with eyes full of wonder and
her touch is so sincere.
As she speaks to me, I think. I think of Arthur. I think of
how he sacrificed his life to ensure my good health.
I remember. I remember well.
My love for him was great.
I prayed that God would care for him. But lately
I have forgotten. I have forgotten a great deal.
Once I remember I have forgotten, I forget I have forgotten.
It is all very confusing and the days go by so quickly.
I have no memories of them.
My name is Zenobia High.
© Aesha Debnam