Jeffery Allen - Rails Under My Back

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"Will put Allen in the company of writers such as James Joyce, August Wilson, and Ralph Ellison." — The Philadelphia Inquirer.
When it was first published fifteen years ago, Jeffery Renard Allen's debut novel, Rails Under My Back, earned its author comparisons to some of the giants of twentieth-century modernism. The publication of Allen's equally ambitious second novel, Song of the Shank, cemented those lofty claims. Now, the book that established his reputation is being restored to print in its first Graywolf Press edition. Together, the two novels stand as significant achievements of twenty-first-century literature.
Rails Under My Back is an epic that tracks the interwoven lives of two brothers, Lucius and John Jones, who are married to two sisters, Gracie and Sheila McShan. For them, their parents, and their children, life is always full of departures; someone is always fleeing town and leaving the remaining family to suffer the often dramatic, sometimes tragic consequences. The multiple effects of the comings and goings are devastating: These are the almost mythic expression of the African American experience in the half century that followed the Second World War.
The story ranges, as the characters do, from the city, which is somewhat like both New York and Chicago, to Memphis, to the West, and to many "inner" and "outer" locales. Rails Under My Back is a multifaceted, brilliantly colored, intensely musical novel that pulses with urgency and originality.

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And then there was the time he just up and grabbed a waitress at Davy’s Garden. Some homely white girl who was working another table. Grabbed her by the arm and pulled her face next to his as if he had a secret to tell. He put his tongue in her mouth. He let her go. She cleaned her lipstick from his mouth with a cloth napkin. She tore up the check. He sat back in his chair, belly poked out with satisfaction.

Did you have to do that?

He looked Porsha full in the face. Clean draws can’t hide a nasty booty.

They would talk for hours in the darkness, their lips almost touching. So she learned that he got to his station in life by magic.

It ain’t where you come from, he said. It’s where you’re going.

She considered the truth of this.

Gotta take chances if you wanta get somewhere in this world.

What you know bout chances? Young boy like you.

Aw ight. Watch that boy stuff.

They breathed in the darkness, his slow hand on her body.

I know bout chances. A bitch is a bitch, but you got a vicious body, the curves that make a nigga wanna gamble. See, at Red Hook there this old bitch — cuse me, lady

Woman.

Right. Woman. Anyway, there this ole ass woman live on the top flo of Buildin Three. Everybody say she a witch. Say she give you power if you go up in her. Some say she learn it when she lived way down South. Some say she got it from eatin cat food. Others say she throw parties fo the devil. All I know is, she got power. Power. And she got it to give. Why you think Freeze climbin so high up the ladder? He ain’t no better than me. Only thing is, he knocked her boots.

Freeze? Who’s that?

You ain’t never heard of Freeze?

She shook her head. Should I have?

Well — drop it. It ain’t important.

But—

Drop it. I’m fin to tell you about power. See, that’s the way it goes, either knock they boots or knock em upside the head.

Why you talkin like a lowlife?

I’m jus tellin you how the niggas see it.

I ain’t talkin bout them. I’m talkin bout you.

Sorry, baby.

Finish tellin me.

Well, people be scared of Miss Emily. Miss Emily, that’s the name of that ole witch. Nobody mess wit her. I mean nobody. And they always speak when they see her. They be like, How you today, Miss Emily? Fine. All she ever say. Fine. Ole bitch be throwin—

Do you have to use that word? It’s disrespectful.

Disrespectful? Baby, I got a lot of respect. All sorts of respect.

He kissed her on the cheek. A bird peck.

Anyway, Miss Emily always be throwin her liquor bottles out the window and bustin somebody head. You see her bout once a week. Be ridin round on one of those lectric wheelchairs and shit, you know, those ones that go real slow. Everybody be calling her Lectric EEL. EE. But we jus thinks it. Keep it way back in our mind. Call her Miss Emily to her face, cause she got power. Most ole folks be all scared to even leave they apartment and come out in the hall. And somebody crippled and ole too. But EE, she ride all round on that thing, all over Red Hook, circle all the buildings five or six times, jus creepin long in that slow lectric wheelchair. And you know the jets, all them buildings and shit, every lap bout eight blocks.

Porsha didn’t know. She had only driven to Red Hook once or twice to pick up Deathrow.

Niggas speak to her every time she pass. They be like, How you, Miss Emily? Fine. Do her last lap and she go right into the elevator on that thing. He pulled back, pausing to word it right. Like a worm in a dirty hole, or a roach in the wall or somephun, and ride up to her apartment.

She look jus like a witch too. Big-ass head with these two little tiny dots for eyes. And can’t hardly see. All this thick green stuff on her eyeballs. And her body all skinny and wrinkled up. Hands all balled up like crabs. And her arms all wrinkled up like some tree branch.

Don’t sound like nobody wit power to me, Porsha said.

That’s because you don’t know power when you see it.

How you know what I know?

I know.

You don’t know as much as you think you know.

You gon let me finish?

I ain’t stoppin you.

Well, this one day, I see EE ridin round and goin slow as hell, and I jus walks right up to her, jus walks right on up to her and say, How you today, Miss Emily? then I whips out my dick.

What?

Straight up. Pop goes the weasel.

I don’t believe you, Porsha said, thinking, Maybe he did.

For real.

You tellin a story.

You know I don’t lie.

Porsha thought about it. Well, what she do?

I’m fin to tell you. I whips it out and shakes it a little, right in her face. I say, Trick fo trick. EE open her mouth and smile at me. Got all this gray shit on her teeth. Like steel wool or somephun. She say, Chillen are such a comfort to the body.

No she didn’t?

Straight up.

What you do?

What you think? I wore my jimmy.

Niggas ain’t shit.

Better believe it.

Fairy tale.

Only fairies tell tales. And you know I ain’t no fairy.

What am I going to do wit you?

All the good things.

DEATHROW WAS BETTER than most of the men she’d dealt with. Trifling niggas. (One boldly told her: Baby, I’m only out for one thang. The pussy and the money.) Especially Les Payne. Fine nigga. Tall and muscular. Honey-brown skin. I got a weakness for these good-lookin browns. The rod of his penis printed against his tight jeans. Eyes you could leap into, singing and splashing. Rolled his own cigarettes (liked her to roll them for him) with Top paper — to make everyone think he fired up joints as normal people fire up cigarettes — and sweet-smelling tobacco. That was during her only year of college — Freeport University, downstate, a stone’s throw from Kankakee County, Decatur, Beulah — a decade ago.

She met him at a Greek Club dance. Ah, remember it. Couples revolved around each other like spheres. Orderly motion. Beneath the long, skinny, white arms of the searching hall lights, she buoyed her way, mapped it out, speaking and receiving many flying words of friendship, her long fingers fluttering in every direction, clawing up cookies, cake, pie, potato chips, punch. Girl, you ate like a pig back then. But the engine was working and you could burn it off. She shone in her best outfit, a gown of polka-dotted tulle with short sleeves and puffed shoulders, a wide red belt cinching her waist. She removed a silk handkerchief from her purse and cleaned her fingers, one at a time. She shot a challenging look around the room. The man she would come to know as Les invited her to dance. Immediately, they were locked in a tight embrace among a whirlwind of incessantly moving feet. She felt so light in his arms. He kept his mouth close to her ear, and his tongue …

I gotta go. They had danced for hours.

Why? The stroke of midnight? His eyes searched her body. Your dress gon turn into rags?

She let slip a laugh. Not quite. Tomorrow’s Sunday. I got things to do. Cooking. Cleaning. Church. Things.

Can I help? He batted his eyes, quick church fans.

She felt the slightest rising of her heart. No.

How bout tomorrow? Dinner at yo house.

Maybe. Give me a call and we’ll see.

Next day, he called. She heard his eyes through the phone receiver, fluttering and flapping. She accepted the previous night’s invitation. Cooked him a down-home meal. Her neckbones were his for the sucking.

They quickly established a lovers’ routine. A fast drive away from the campus, Les Payne’s old Mustang lurching like a gurney. They drove with the windows down, laughing big laughs, cornfields breathing in their faces. A midnight walk through the fields, holding corn-scented hands. Wet moonlight changed the fields into a sea of rippling yellow and green waves. They paused in an open spot, a circle in the corn. Settled down into the blind dirt. Les Payne’s kisses moved like ants over her body. He breathed hard before he entered her, laboring like a steam locomotive. Afterward, they drove down to a quiet spot on the Kankakee River. Let the cold river water wash the manure from their bodies.

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