Apart
at the Seams
M
J Francis
A shot of Moonshine
Maria, my poppet,
I
knew about your papa’s death. Every life falls apart someday. Ain’t nothing
gonna bring him back from that. Keep this doll I made of him to remind you.
My papa was a doll maker. Maybe I told you
this. I learned my craft from him. When he was a child, boys found them in his
school bag and teased him. My papa told me them children was always playing
tricks. Dunking his head in toilets, stuffing firecrackers down papa’s shirt.
You know what them boys called my papa? Sissy. They come talking that trash for
them dolls he make. One time my papa came back from showering and his clothes
was gone from the locker room. Wasn’t nobody around so he walked naked till he
found a teacher. Every child laughed at him. Like he was a joke. But my papa
wasn’t no joke and there came a time when them boys couldn’t laugh no more.
Your papa didn’t like me none. I never told
you what he did one time, but I tell you now. Remember that day he sent for me
to play dominoes in City Park? You was happy he wanted to make a truce. But
there wasn’t no truce, poppet. There wasn’t no game. There was three men
waiting. Them beat me blue and red. Broke my bones. Wasn’t no car hit me. I
lied. For that I’m sorry.
Did you know this about your papa? Do you
see him different now?
You need to remember the good times, poppet.
Before all these bad. Recall that day we met on Bourbon Street, them days when
I played in the Hot Sauce Jazz Club band. You was dancing, wearing that blue
dress and them white deck shoes. You sang and danced and saw me playing there,
and I know you saw yourself reflected in my eyes, caged there like a bird and
happy. And when that song was done I said come see me play at Mardi Gras.
Remember that day. Our first kiss. Your lips burning red (ain’t no one never
burned me like you). And remember your promise by the Mississippi, when we was
listening to the Natchez steam calliope whistling like drunk Blues musicians.
How you promised you gonna love me always. How we made vows. Till death us do
part, you said. The spirit Papa Legba heard us and blessed us. Bound us.
So don’t you worry none, poppet. Loneliness
won’t never claim you. Come back home and don’t you mourn your papa long.
I made us a doll. Two dolls joined as one. A
man, a woman. Her hair brown like yours and his hair black like mine. Them
dolls hands is stitched together, holding each other always.
Now imagine I get scissors and snip. The
thread that binds them hands falls loose. What good is one without the other?
Together they form a shape – the letter M – your and my initial, poppet. Ain’t
no coincidence. We was meant to be. So imagine I separate them. Snip. The
stitches cut. Them dolls let go their hands.
And if I keep on cutting – cutting the doll
with the brown hair – cutting along the thread holding its sides, its arms, its
legs, its head together. Imagine this.
Say you won’t never leave me. Till death us do part, poppet. Remember.
Always,
Mathias Lafayette
About the Author
Find out everything you need to know about M J Francis on
his website www.mjfrancis.com
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