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      You think so?

      The Creator has a master plan. Y’all were meant to be,

      you’ll be. Can’t nobody stop that.

      . . . .

      That’s a whopper of some news about your birth parents.

      I feel for ya. I do know this, though. There’s a lot of love

      around you, but if you don’t see it, it’s not there. Go climb

      your mountain, see things from the top. Find out the

      answers you need, seek what’s really important.

      Chapel. She’s what’s important.

      If she’s meant to shine in your life, so be it, he says,

      hugging me, then handing me a guitar from out of

      nowhere, like we’re saying goodbye, and he’s been

      expecting this all along.

      Let’s play one for the road, Youngblood.

      I’ve known the rules

      since I could smell

      the vodka

      on his breath

      drown in its rancor.

      I know, when it hits the fan, to:

      Avoid all stores

      with newsstands.

      Don’t watch any

      entertainment shows,

      and stay away

      from social media

      because

      your family

      is a trending topic

      and the world laughs.

      So I drive

      the Sunset Strip

      in search of a guitar shop

      to buy a new strap

      and try to clear my head.

      But there with a camera

      pointed like a gun

      to my face

      is a paparazzo

      shouting,

      How does it feel

      to know

      you’re not the heir

      to rock and roll royalty?

      It feels

      like countless mirrors

      crashing around me

      in an empty space

      where there’s

      no way in

      and no way out.

      Day 1

      I will never leave

      this bedroom again.

      I stare at the walls.

      The ugly, empty space

      imprisons me.

      There is nothing

      left for me

      if she’s gone.

      A bare, unspoken

      language that has

      no words, no gestures—

      a song

      of sinking silence.

      I’ve texted her

      thirteen times.

      All the Songs That Make Me Think of You

      For What It’s Worth

      Gold Dust Woman

      You Shook Me All Night Long

      Tangled Up in Blue

      Dreams I’ll Never See

      The Story in Your Eyes

      Oh! Darling

      Wish You Were Here

      Where the Streets Have No Name

      The Sky Is Falling

      While My Guitar Gently Weeps

      Who’ll Stop the Rain?

      Day 2

      What is this blood

      coursing through my veins?

      It’s not Morrison.

      It’s a red river

      of who the hell am I.

      Yesterday I was the son

      of a narcissist,

      but at least I knew . . .

      Today it could be anyone

      of the seven-plus billion

      freaks and strangers

      who could give

      two craps about me.

      Why am I even here?

      Eat your food.

      Freakin’ A, Storm! COULD YOU PLEASE LEAVE ME

      ALONE!

      You must eat, she says, from the other side of the door.

      . . . .

      Your life may seem like a mystery right now, but you’re still

      here.

      MYSTERY? TRY MISERY. I’M NOT FEEDING

      THAT MONSTER.

      Day 3

      I open the door.

      Grab the tray

      of bread and pasta

      pushed against the wall.

      The smell of goodness

      offends me.

      Probably takeout,

      ’cause Storm can’t cook.

      I remember Mom

      taking me to

      our favorite diner

      in Thousand Oaks

      for their homemade rolls and honey.

      She called me her sweet boy,

      her precious one.

      If she were here . . .

      I could ask her why

      she used to say,

      You can’t live on bread

      and love alone.

      But the real question is

      how can I possibly live without her?

      How can any of us?

      Dream Variation: Soul on Fire

      The dining room

      is a field

      of fire

      and I dash

      and thrash

      my way

      through the flames

      with a big, red spider

      with a dreadful face

      on my heels.

      (It looks familiar, but I can’t tell.)

      Run, Mom whispers.

      So I do

      I run

      I run away

      I run away, fast,

      I run away, fast, toward

      I run away, fast, toward the end.

      There’s an end.

      And there’s my mother.

      And If I can get to her

      everything will make sense.

      I can breathe.

      I’ll be saved.

      But I never get to her,

      and right before

      my soul catches

      on fire

      I wake up.

      Funny

      how your questions

      never get answered

      in dreams

      like you’re a ghost

      floating

      and trapped

      in your own mind.

      Day 4

      Who are they?

      Why didn’t I matter enough

      or at all?

      How do you give up

      on your own

      flesh,

      your own blood,

      the bones you made?

      How?

      Storm knocks

      like she’s pounding a drum.

      You alive? Unlock the door.

      I walk over to my dresser.

      Blade? I’ll start singing if you don’t open up.

      I put on my headphones, stare

      at the painting

      of Mom

      that I painted

      when I was just three

      and believed

      she was my world.

      I take it down

      and throw it in the closet.

      I grab the torn teddy bear that’s wearing

      a Detroit Rocks T-shirt

      that Rutherford gave me

      after one of his sold-out concerts

      and toss it in the trash.

      These things that

      felt like security

      a long time ago

      were a lie.

      A big lie.

      The sadness

      is even in the rain;

      it hits the window

      like a sledgehammer,

      the hurt

      banging away

      at my nothingness.

      So I do the only

      thing that soothes

      the only thing that fills

      the void.

      I write.

      I Miss You

      Rain rolls down my window

      Reminding me of you

      Feel so uneasy

      ’Cause I’m still crying here for you

      Tell me again, why did you leave?

      Don’t you know without you, I cannot breathe?

      I give everything, everything to feel your touch

      You’ll never know how much

      I
    miss you

      Don’t wanna say it

      Just wanna play it

      ’Cause I miss you!

      I wish it weren’t but it’s true

      I miss you

      You had my heart, you had my soul

      You had the love my heart could hold

      And you simply walked away

      You just walked away

      I miss you

      Don’t wanna say it

      Just wanna play it

      ’Cause I miss you!

      I’m such a fool

      And, I miss you

      © BLADE MORRISON

      Day 5

      A piece of paper clipped

      to an envelope

      slides beneath my door.

      To Blade:

      This is what I have.

      I’m still sorry.

      —Rutherford

      I stare at the envelope

      and chills

      like an army

      of fear

      march up

      the left side

      and down

      the right.

      There’s no one

      to hold

      my hand.

      No one

      to encourage me

      to stop me

      from leaving

      the stage.

      No drum roll.

      No lead guitar

      firing up the crowd.

      Simply—

      A manila envelope

      with a Post-It

      note

      affixed

      that reads:

      Lucy Pearl November, Hammond, Louisiana.

      And inside

      another envelope,

      sealed,

      with a note

      on the front:

      To Blade, our son,

      in the event

      you should want

      to know more.

      Love,

      Mom

      Day 6

      I have the name

      of the woman

      who gave me life

      and then took it away.

      But

      I can’t see

      unsealing

      envelope #2

      right now,

      if ever.

      I’m going to

      shower off this pain

      eat real food

      empty out this sorrow

      on my guitar

      take this name

      on the front

      of this envelope

      and climb.

      I search

      her name

      and find pictures

      of a young Lucy November

      teaching in a preschool

      in Louisiana,

      but also an older Lucy November

      building a school

      in Ghana.

      Phone Conversation

      Good morning. Ark Day School.

      (My heart pounds. Come on, Blade . . . speak. Just get it

      out.)

      Hi, I’m looking for a teacher by the name of Lucy

      November. I believe she’s in the pre—

      Lucy November?

      (My head is spinning.)

      Yeah. Yes. Sorry, is this the wrong school?

      Honey, it’s the right school, just the wrong decade. Lucy

      Pearl hasn’t worked here in a long time. Can I help you

      with something?

      (My breath slowly gets lost.)

      No, I just needed to speak to Lucy. It’s important.

      Well, I’m sorry, sweetie. As I said, she’s not here anymore.

      But I can put you in touch with her mother.

      Her mother? Grandmother.

      No, her mother, baby.

      Right. No, I know. I’m just, ugh—

      (Everything pounds. Everything’s real. Too real.)

      You okay, sir?

      I’m okay.

      Her mother is Minnie. She’s in the phone book. Willie and

      Minnie November.

      Thank you, ma’am.

      The Call

      I push the numbers

      like I’m entering a code

      that’s going to unlock

      a firewall

      and every detail

      and secret

      will rush out

      and burn me.

      Each time I go

      to hit the last number

      I push the red button

      to end the call

      to stop the knowing

      right in its tracks.

      I can’t seem to

      make myself

      get to the point

      where there’s

      no turning back.

      I do this

      for an hour

      before I call.

      Conversation

      Hel-lo.

      Hi.

      Hi. Who is this?

      Ma’am, my name is Blade—

      I don’t need nothing else around here, young man. No

      more thingamajigs and whatchamacallits, so save your

      breath.

      No, ma’am, I’m not selling anything.

      If you’re calling about Willie’s boat, he’s sold it already. For

      sale sign been in the yard for months, and you just calling.

      I don’t want a boat either, ma’am. I’m just looking for

      someone.

      Are you the police?

      I’m a, I’m a, uh, former student of Lucy November, and I

      just wanted to get in touch with her.

      Lucy Pearl was your teacher at the Ark Day School?

      Yes, ma’am.

      She was a good teacher.

      Yes, ma’am.

      . . . .

      . . . .

      . . . .

      Is there a chance I could speak to her, ma’am?

      I reckon there is, if you were in Africa.

      I don’t understand.

      Lucy’s been in Africa for over ten years. Girl said she

      wanted to change the world. Determined, she was. Always

      talking about hope and love and Oprah.

      Is she in Ghana?

      Is that where they make the chocolate? At Christmas, she

      brings me the best chocolate I’ve ever tasted. I can’t eat but

      a piece a week, ’cause it’s just too sweet, you understand.

      Yes, ma’am.

      You’re a polite young man. I guess she did a good job with

      you, ’cause you turned out nice.

      So, is there an address or phone number?

      They don’t have street addresses in Ghana, she tells me.

      So, no mail can get to her. Plus, she’s in the country part,

      not the city part.

      Oh.

      I do think I have the number to the organization she’s

      with. They’ll know where she is. Don’t you young folks . . .

      Doogle this stuff?

      Google. Yes, thank you, ma’am.

      You know, you sound familiar. Have we ever met?

      I don’t know. It’s possible.

      Well, you keep doing good for yourself, young man, and

      if you ever get in touch with Lucy, tell her to bring extra

      chocolate next time. My church group always likes to meet

      here, and they eat up everything sweet.

      I will do. Thank you for your time.

      Track 4: I Was Young When I Left Home

      ROCKER: BOB DYLAN: VOCALS, ACOUSTIC GUITAR / ALBUM: THE BOOTLEG SERIES VOLUME 7: NO DIRECTION HOME / LABEL: COLUMBIA RECORDS / RECORDING DATE: DECEMBER 22, 1961 / STUDIO: THE MINNEAPOLIS APARTMENT OF HIS FRIEND, TWILIGHT ZONE ACTRESS BONNIE BEECHER

      A sad, sad song

      that Dylan

      wrote

      on a train

      about a son

      leaving

      his family

      in search

      of closure

      and salvation

      that he never

      finds.

      Hmmm.

      Day 7

      I finally brush


      my teeth,

      wondering what life

      will look like

      one week,

      six months,

      or even a year

      from now.

      It’s time

      to find my mother,

      to start

      at the beginning.

      I’ve decided

      to climb the mountain

      and I’m not sure what

      route I’ll take

      or how

      I’ll get to the top.

      But I’ll start

      in Ghana.

      Texts to Chapel

      7:39 pm

      Chapel, I miss you

      so much

      the pain feels

      7:39 pm

      like a million

      heart attacks.

      It’s time for us

      7:39 pm

      to jet. Together.

      The world is waiting.

      Let’s run. Far. Fast.

      7:40 pm

      I’ll be at the park.

      Tomorrow, 7:30 pm.

      Meet me, babe.

      Conversation

      AFRICA?!

      Yup.

      Long way to go to, little brother, to find some woman who

      threw you away.

      It’s what I have to do.

      Halfway around the world, and you’re not even sure if she’s

      there.

      She’s with an organization that does work in Ghana. I

      found all the info online.

      Yeah, trust the Internets, why don’t you?

      Hey, if she’s not there, I’ll just go on safari.

      Safari’s in East Africa, Blade.

      Oh, well, it’ll be a vacation before I go off to college.

      I’m worried about you, Blade.

      Really? Well, if you're so “worried” about me, then why

      didn’t you tell me sooner that I was adopted? How come

      you knew before me? That’s just not cool.

      Ugh. I feel terrible. I overheard Dad and Uncle Stevie

      talking one night, a coupla years ago, about a special

      letter Mom had written for you. I asked him why she

      hadn't written one for me. I wanted to tell you, swear, but

      he made me promise to keep it a secret, that he was saving

      the letter for . . .

      Whatever. Save your breath. I don’t want you to cry.

      Everyone’s been worried.

      Too late for that.

      We love you, you know?

      . . . .

      Isn’t it cliché to go looking for your birth parents?

      That’s real sensitive, Storm.

     


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