The Thanatos Syndrome
like old Natchez-under-the-hill, repossessed by vines and possumsâwhere no white folks had dreamed of living for a hundred years.
Even when we were poor, Ellen fixed ours up with authentic iron hooks and pots for the fireplace. Then Ellen and my realtor mother, Marva, teamed up and between them became a realestate genius, my mother being naturally acquisitive, thinking money, Ellen having natural good taste. They bought the whole row for a song and during the time I was away borrowed money, added two stories painted in different pastels like the villas of Portofino, stuck on New Orleans balconies, put a tiny dock in front of each and a Jacuzzi behind, calculating the place would be as prized now as it was misprized then, for being too small, too close together, too near the waterâand named it The Quarters. All this during the two years I was detained by the feds at the minimal security facility at Fort Pelham, Alabama. They, Ellen and my mother, were like those fragile Southern ladies who, when their men, brave and somewhat addled, went off to that war, suddenly turned into straw bosses, hucksters, fishwives, tallywomen, slickers.
Here is my mother, before she took to her bed in her own nursing home, pitching to a client, more likely than not a West Texas oilman or a Massachusetts account executive removed to New Orleans, frightened by the blacks, bugging out to the country, looking for a weekend place on the water and what he conceived to be authentic historical Louisiana quaintness. Mother: âNotice the walls, authentic slave brick, eighteen inches thick, handmade by the slavesâmany were magnificent artisans, you knowâfrom local clay from claypits right up the bayouâ itâs all gone now, the clay and the art, a lost art, notice that odd rosy glow. You hardly need air conditioning with these wallsâ they didnât live so badly, did they? You see that bootscrape by the steps? Do you know what that is? an authentic brick form handwrought by the slaves. We think The Quarters combines the utility of a New York townhouse with the charm of a French Quarter cottage, donât you?â As a matter of fact, they did.
This is the real thing, she told themâand it wasâand it makes Chateau Isles, Belle-this, and Beau-that look phony, donât you agree? Yes, they did. The Quarters sold out at three hundred thousand per unit.
While I, a disgraced shrink, was doing time in Alabama, my wife and mother were getting rich selling slave quarters.
I am anxious to see Ellen. Iâve seen her once since she got back from Trinidad late last night, but she was so tired we hardly exchanged ten words. She slept like a child, on her stomach, mouth mashed open on the pillow, arm hanging off the bed. I put her arm up. Itâs still splendid, her arm, as perfectly round and firm as a country girlâs.
Thereâs noise aboveâthe kitchen is upstairs. I go up the tight spiral of a staircase, heart beating, but not with effort. Ellenâs not there. Thereâs only the help and the kids.
Hudeenâs at the stove. Sheâs eighty and infirm and gets to the kitchen by an outside elevator. She likes to come to work for a few hours. Ellen has installed her in a tiny square bounded by stove, fridge, sink, table, and stereo-V mounted in a bracket so that she need never take more than two steps in any direction, mostly sits, need never take her eye from the daytime drama that unfolds for four hours, precisely the four hours sheâs here.
âWhereâs Miss Ellen?â I ask her.
âMiz Ellen she still piled up in the bed!â says Hudeen in a soft shout, doing me the courtesy of touching the volume control of the stereo-V but not turning it down. âYou talk about tired,â she says, still keeping an eye on the screen. âBut she be down directly.â
Chandra, a young, very black woman, is playing Monopoly at the breakfast table with Margaret. Neither looks up.
Tommy is standing in the middle of the room, hands at his side, standing in place but footling a soccer ball, toeing, slicing, ankling, caroming the ball from foot to foot, idly and without effort.
I give Margaret and Tommy a hug. My children donât know what to say to me. Margaret is still hot and sweaty from the school bus. She gives me her cheek and a swift sidelong look. She has straight black Ella Cinders hair and is secretive and knowing, twice as smart as a boy will ever be. In
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