1.
According to the flashing sign at the end of the fume choked passenger loading zone
outside the New Orleans airport, it was ten seventeen p.m. and seventy-five degrees. The
spirited breeze, charged with ozone from the electrical storm that lit the dragon belly clouds,
whipped my long silver hair about like Spanish moss, snatching away the smoke of the cigarette
I had been longing for all day.
I had to take a cab from the terminal to Saint Catherine’s because the staff chauffeurs
were off duty after eight o’clock; not like the old days when we were treated like royalty
twenty-four-seven. I detest being a car passenger, especially so when riding in a taxi driven by
a stranger. Besides, a New Orleans cab is about as comfortable as a paddy wagon. Shock
absorbers don’t last long on the teeth rattling, root-thrusted streets, and the request for
replacements tend to get stuck away with limitless other things in a vast file labeled “Manana”.
The drive from the airport into the heart of the city passes through some of the more
sordid, squalid sections of New Orleans - in other words, most of it. The structures seem to be
slowly crawling, consuming space like crusty mold, and when it’s raining like this the tar
patched streets, the trees and the shadows are oily slick, shiny as black patent leather. Whatthere is of a downtown skyline cowers beneath that alien, super bowl monstrosity that has
landed and taken control.
No, though it has its moments, at face value it is not what I would call a pretty city. But
if you care more for laughter than money, or have money with a capital “M” like my brother and
his wife, it is sexy, exciting, alluring, beautiful nonetheless.
I don’t have much money. All I have is the last name and the blood. The last name
works wonders here. And the blood? Well, we will get to that.
My older brother, the poet and painter Eric Dawson, and his wife, the celebrated novelist
Regina Dawson live in the Garden District of New Orleans - an enclave of white, upper middle
class and old money rich surrounded by the sprawling, rotting, dirty, pothole of a city that is
seventy-five percent poverty stricken blacks with little hope of escape.
With the fall of darkness a legion of security guards emerge from the perimeters to skulk
about the Garden District like armed voyeurs while an African American is murdered once an
hour in the projects a few blocks away. If you venture too far off the major thoroughfares, your
life is in danger, day or night. Do not cross the invisible barriers – neither the blacks nor the
whites will tolerate it. No need locking the car. If you do, they’ll just break the window. Keep
moving. That’s the trick. Calling the cops is a waste of time.
The Garden District came to be as a result of the Louisiana Purchase. It was the white,
Anglo-Saxon American response to the French-Spanish-African culture of the Vieux Carre. Canal
Street, which bisects downtown, was originally a wall of attitude tracing the contours of
demarcation separating American protestant and European Catholic versions of morality and
sanctity. The physical boundaries are blurred now, but the philosophical divergence and many
of the money trail bloodlines remain intact.
I wish I could say that an energy current composed of the rainbow hues of the future
nourishes New Orleans like the veins of a leaf transpiring change and renewal into the
atmosphere, but that is just not the case. The Garden District remains to this day a conservative
whiteout covering ten square miles of third world New Orleans like a spotless white tablecloth
with a tattered, scorched, blood stained edge.
The Garden District; lush, elegant, charming, historically bountiful, on the surface
sensibly respectable - propped up by cold cash and countless layers of paint – constructed,
nurtured and preserved by slaves who became maids and gardeners, plumbers and roofers,
carpenters and pest exterminators in a relentless, plodding battle against rot and ruin.
Though at first glance disdainfully aloof, the graceful, immaculate mansions are subject
to the same steamy sub tropical climate and the passion it inspires as the ramshackle shanties a
few blocks away. Rich and poor alike are linked by the ebb and flow of divergent aromas
drifting on the sweaty air – forsythia and flesh, mold and magnolias, leather and spice, shrimp
and semen, blood and swamp, exhaust fumes and cement, wet iron and window glass all
gumboed together and simmering beneath sea level in the soggy, fecund mixing bowl womb of
the Queen City.
Unencumbered by the burden of possessions or the muscle that money provides, I live a
lean, simple life in which experience and knowledge are foremost. Only people I love give a
damn that I am and I like it that way. A life of luxurious seclusion where thought is filtered by
spring water and clear light before taking form has rendered me as likely to carry on a
conversation with a tree or a blue jay as a human being. If fish could talk, they would warn you
about me.
Just a few hours before, I was on horseback in the Oregon mountains. Rode up there to
dust off the moon. My thoughts were as lucid as the pure, chilled air, as unsullied as fresh
moonlit snow, as soft and deep as the indigo shadow. But now, as the rattletrap cab,
sporadically flushed with the amusement park sheen of restaurants and neighborhood taverns,
corner markets and businesses, lurched and bucketed down St. Charles Avenue alongside the
trolley tracks, my thoughts rattled about in my head like ball bearings. The canopy of ancient
live oaks fronting the extravagant mansions like colossal palace guards opened their tentacles to
me and sung my name with the voice of air. My thoughts grew formless, mumbling like
phantoms through the muddle of time. Penetrating deeper into the complex realities of the elite,
the rich and famous, the movers and shakers, the so-called privileged, I could feel the money,
the power, and the fraud and debauchery that go with it oozing all over me as viscous as
andouille, spinning out convoluted spirals like a reluctant toilet flush.
I knew then as I know now my spirit belongs to the mountains, but my soul,
my soul I give to New Orleans. For me, arrival in the Crescent City is a metamorphosis.
Becoming a more distinct and powerful version of myself, I stand poised at the brink of
elevated perspective. With the force of my own powers peaking, I invariably find myself
ascending gracefully, with transformed clarity and the gentle uplift of providence into an
enchanted world created for my sole (soul) satisfaction.
Yes and why not?
I shut my eyes and willed, no, allowed myself to be swept along on the languid soul
flow that is New Orleans’ lifeblood; became a part of the storm lashed river of human activity
shuffling up and down St. Charles Avenue. I smiled inwardly and settled down into the bony
cab seat and gazed out, as though underwater in a submarine, at the passing of alien creatures
in a world of liquid. By the time the cab reached Louisiana Street, I was feeling the rhythm - the
sway of the hips; the break dance of the funhouse sidewalks; the tap dance of the glass slipper
on hardwood floors; the soft shoe shuffle of footsore poverty across littered concrete; the
barefoot Cajun swamp stomp; the staccato rap of the dispossessed; the cool sigh of the hot
musician; the gyrations of jazz, the brawling blues. Once my heartbeat synched with the beat of
overlapping ethos, I was home, baby, and ready to be me.
I lay my head back, shut my eyes and let my mind drift. It settled on an image of my
brother Eric, who had been wafting in and out of my thoughts a lot lately.
I was fifteen when Eric gave me an old guitar with only three strings. He had no idea he
was forming my future. Instinctively, I tuned it to an open “E” and immediately realized that I
had been writing lyrics rather than poetry. Within four years I would record an album of my
own songs. That’s the way the big brother trickle down theory (and love) works.
Three years later, I would drop out of North Texas State University and head out in an Alpha
Romeo convertible with a friend and that guitar for San Francisco. I can well imagine my
father’s reaction to the note atop my pile of belongings in the middle of my apartment floorexplaining that I was going searching for the “truth”. The friend I left with confided a quarter
century later that he was looking for drugs. Well, he found plenty (he died last year of hepatitis
C, kidney failure and lung cancer - a broken, angry, bitter and lost man).
This extended, inspired, spiritual trek cross country included a stay in the El Paso County
Jail on a bogus charge of vagrancy, and it was almost a month later at about seven in the
morning when we finally made it to Eric and Regina’s apartment on Clayton off Haight Street.
Eric was awake and led us up the dark stairwell into the cluttered little living room striped with
the rising sun flowing through the bay windows facing the street. He sat at his desk like it was
the cockpit of a space ship and he its captain and asked, ancient eyes guileless as a fawn,“ Want to get high? "
And get high we did, but it was never the object. Such things were just tools to us - like
a typewriter, paintbrush, or food. Eric and I took our first acid trip together at Cronkite Beachon Easter day with Julia, who was Eric’s close friend and later to become my wife. We had a
beautiful experience on some of the purest acid the world has ever known - manufactured by
the notorious Owsley. One has to have a strong sense of self and the ability to separate reality
from mental projections to enjoy, or even survive such a trip. Frankly, in such matters a good
sense of humor goes a long way. My friend spent most of the day in a fetal position while the
rest of us took communion from dew collected in plants and had a glorious revelatory
experience.
Eric drove us all home in his VW van without a problem. This was before LSD was illegal
and it was being experimented with by the select few. It was the same with the pot smoking –
something done by beatniks and bohemians and people of color. There was not much heat on
us white boys yet.
The word “hippie” had not yet been coined by Herb Caen to describe those of us involved
in this phenomenon. Haight Ashbury was just another neighborhood, though a haven for artists
and writers because of its proximity to the panhandle and Golden Gate Park. Then one day the
donut shop across the street closed and reopened as The Psychedelic Shop . Neither one of
us even knew what “psychedelic” meant. I missed my doughnuts.
I remember asking Eric one day if he had noticed how many strange and outrageouspeople were wandering Haight Street. He looked at me with a sly grin and asked, “ Have you
looked at yourself in a mirror lately? “ He was right. I had earrings in both ears, hair past my
shoulders and wore green, wide wale corduroy hip huggers with suede cavalier boots that
extended above my knees. I thought I was being individualistic. After all, I was an artist and a
wizard. I looked over at Eric. He had on one of those wild, flowery la bamba shirts with puffy
sleeves, black pants so tight it’s a wonder he could move and Sahara boots that looked like he
had walked across the Sahara in them. By God, he was right, something vitally significant was
happening. It soon became apparent that we were the vanguard of a revolution of human
consciousness. A renaissance was in full cycle and we were spinning at the center of the hub.
Within six months, you could barely walk down Haight Street because of the throngs of young
truth and thrill seekers. Which was just the incentive we needed to get the hell out of there.
Ah, memories – we tend to keep the good ones and they improve with time. But the
carefree days of youthful discovery and Frisbee in the park are far behind now, at least for Eric.
Eric grew up. Faceless servants and all the cursed intrusions that go with fame and wealth now
order his reality. I know he longs for the days when anonymity fit like a flak jacket as
protection against arrogance, misinformed egos, navy-blazered mediocrity, money sucking
sycophants and friends and relatives desperately in need of help. But we do not discuss it
much. He had always insisted that the only reason he desired money was to liberate himself
from it. Unfortunately, it has not worked out that way…yet.
Regina’s career soared - one bestseller after another, international acclaim, adoration of
the masses, fabulous wealth. She became a celebrity, a household word, affected the
consciousness of the planet while Eric, Mister Regina, stood in the background. It was hard for
him and he never denied it. A smaller man would have shied away (run like hell) from the
situation in search of something more equitable, but not Eric. He loved and admired Regina and
would swallow his pride and stand by her to the end. He reveled in her success even though it
sometimes contributed to his own sense of inadequacy. Alongside her remarkable approbation
and triumph he sometimes felt insignificant. What man wouldn’t? However, his reaction was not
to give up. Giving up is not in our blood. To the exclusion of all else, including me, he retreated
farther into his microcosmic world and painted and wrote with fervent passion that could neither
be extinguished nor ignored.
An artist puts self, heart and integrity on the line. Every word, every stroke of the brush
is open to the criticism and analysis of any Joe Blow. If you don’t believe in yourself you are
doomed, especially so because for many years, maybe even your whole life, few people are
even aware of your hard earned development or the noble character of your effort. In the mind
of any materialist, which includes most people, you are a loser.
I laughed when I heard Eric was no longer going to sell any of his paintings. I
considered it a very wise move and admired the flare of defiance with which it was executed. I
fully supported his decision to protect his work from being judged by whether or not it hung on
someone else’s wall, while shielding him from the heartbreak of rejection. In addition, he was
padding posterity, upping the value of his work by declaring it unobtainable. Of course, it helps
to be fabulously wealthy and own your own eighty-thousand square foot museum. He would be
the first to admit it; he paints like a man who can afford it. You know, not for a minute have I
ever envied Eric’s situation. I want his success as much as my own and would not exchange my
own experience for anyone else’s - on Earth or off.
Not long ago, I made the comment that one of the reasons I create is because I have
something to give, implying that I care about my audience, and I asked Eric what his motive
was. He bristled and snapped back defensively, “ Well, not for any altruistic reasons. "
At that moment, the basic philosophical difference between the two of us really struck
home. A little shocked and somehow offended I asked, “ Why then? "
“ Self-enlargement, “ he said, “ self-enlargement. "
Well, along with everything else, Regina Dawson was very astute at self-enlargement,yet she did care about her audience – maybe too much. In fact, she underwent a transformation
that rather astounded me. The once shy, humble, ex-Catholic schoolgirl in the simple white
blouse and dark pleated skirt had become somewhat of a public relations genius. Not only did
she write brilliantly and thereby garnish a devout following rendering her “critic proof”, she also
tended her flock of fans like a loving matriarch. Now she wears expensive, hand tailored, regal
garments and bejeweled head veils and has her own Mardi gras float in the Orpheus parade
upon which she is enthroned every year. Years ago, she began promoting her own real estate
holdings by featuring them in her books.
But back to the fundamental difference between Eric and myself - I have always
perceived the existence of a human spirit, but I will accept other explanations with different
terms and symbols. Metaphysicists and physicists are drawing identical conclusions these days.
In my opinion, Eric’s rejection of human soul is a citadel of cynicism with few windows or
doors. He considers such an attitude mealy mouthed, as in chicken shit. He rejects the notion of
a human spirit as the wishful thinking of the sentimentalist at best. He once told me that he
would be willing to take a sleeping bag and crash in the most reputedly haunted place there is.
He meant it. And afterlife? To him, what you see is what you get. You create your own hell and
heaven here on earth. You get one shot and its over. Kaput! Personally, I see this as just
another conceptual trap, extremely self-limiting and every bit as closed minded as the religious
fanatic. I have had some experiences that go far beyond what is normally accepted as possible
by the skeptic, simply because I was open. Who cares if they are “real” or not? What is “real”?
As far as I am concerned, if it happened it is real. I consider hard boiled concepts extremely
dangerous and ruinous to true scientific research – a bias is a bias. I say form an hypothesis
and test it with real life experimentation. To simply draw conclusions based on feeling or the
logic of a puny, human brain and then set out to prove it with thought, produces nothing but
intellectual ranting, about as valuable as sentimental claptrap. It is a wonder to me we even
recognize the shadow of truth after it passes through and is distorted by the hopeless tangle of
concepts and self imposed limitations most people call reality.
After all this time, all the exploration and experimentation, all that happened, I would
have to say if you asked me if I believed in God that I don’t know, but I have strong indications
that there is such an intelligence. The jury is still out and I am going to go buy them some
pizza. This, I consider flexible enough to allow for growth. How could an investigation of the
infinite be other than a continuous discovery? But alas, to he who values so highly words and
the concepts they compose, an investigation of the ineffable is a ludicrous and futile exercise of
the desperate – an insult to intelligence, a waste of precious time.
You see the situation between the two of us. We are both writers and painters and ourreasons for doing so are, for all practical purposes, diametrically opposed. However, it is my
belief that there is a meeting place of these two extremes. That meeting place is love.
I have always maintained that, in the actual process of our lives and art, my brother and I
experience much the same thing. But with different explanations attached. And if there is a God,
He/She respects Eric’s explanation as much as my own, maybe more - for in the human arena it
takes guts to be wrong, brains to be right and balls to be neither. At any rate, in the final
analysis it would appear that life’s purpose is a two way street - the self is as sure a path to God
as God is a path to the self.
“ Napoleon and Perrier? " the cab driver asked.
“ ‘Scuse me? "
“ Napoleon and Perrier? "
“ Oh… Yeah, that’s right. Take a right on Perrier and turn in at the back gate. "
Ah, Saint Catherine’s, what a lovely sight to behold; the center section lustrous in the
spotlights like a great, white wooden arc of spirit, the stained glass windows of the chapel
sparkling like pillars of precious gems. The three stories of brick walls encircle a square city
block of prime New Orleans like a fortress of spirit. The windows gleam like the eyes in dreams,
mirrors of the past reflecting, containing, concealing and revealing enchanted mystery.
This is Regina’s child - embodying the endurance of her own hope, faith and vision. She
resuscitated this dying beast and nursed it back to health, transformed it, sanctified it and gave it
back to New Orleans on a silver leash. It has become a symbol and a manifestation of what
wealth means to people like Eric and Regina Dawson, people to whom money is a by-product of
the pursuit of truth and beauty.
In essence, also due to the generosity and love of Eric and Regina, it is mine in a way;my monastery, my palace, my chapel , ballroom, art galleries, libraries and grand pianos, my
kingdom and even my home, for I live there for extended periods in the deep of winter.
The massive silhouette of Pierre filled the doorway of the guard station when the taxi
pulled up to the rear gate. His caramel colored face beamed a white-toothed smile when he
recognized me.
“ Mistah Neal! Hi you dowin’? "
The cab driver got the bags out of the trunk and I paid him as the six foot high chain linkgate slowly rumbled open. With the gate rumbling and screeching to a close behind me, I set
my bags down with a heavy sigh and clasped Pierre’s hand brother style. “ Long day, Pierre.
Had two canceled flights. Got a free trip to Utah and Chicago. I feel like a lost Fed Ex package.
How ‘bout you? "
Pierre flashed another bright smile before his features darkened. “ Aw, not too good,
Mistuh Neal. Ah gut a problem wid my eyes. Ahm awmos totally blind in dis one. But ahm gon
git a op’ration dat should fix it op. "
He was fine the last time I saw him and that was about three months previously. “
Damn, man. I’m so sorry. ” I mean, what can you say? I was too tired to hear the details at the
moment, but I asked anyway, “ Uhhh…does it hurt? "
“ Naw, not really. Ah jes cain’t see too good. But I guess it could be a lot wuhse. "
“Damn. Well, that’s good, anyway. I mean, that it’s only temporary… ” There was anawkward silence during which I saw in his eyes that he was not sure it was temporary. I
changed the subject. “You still working at the Boys Club? "
“ Naw. I had to quit, Mistuh Neal. Some kids jawmped me and I beat ‘em ahp pretty bad.
I was jes protectin’ mahsef, you know. Anyway, ah broke sum bones in mah hand and I just
decided to let it go, you know. Ah been wuhkin wid de chuch though. "
The responsibility attached to caring about a person sometimes catches me off guard. Ienjoy communication, but I have to admit, I prefer to choose the time and place. Yet I had
come to care about Pierre over the years. I am probably one of the only white people he knows
who would consider coming out in the middle of the night to talk to him about his dreams and
his mom and his heartbreaks in the little, dimly lit office cubical with the eight inch T.V. Pierre
may at times seem like just a big, kind mama’s boy to me, but he wears a forty-four at his hip
and will guard me with his life as I sleep upstairs like a log (a white log). I owed him a little
civility and I paid up like a good sport, though I was not in the mood.
Pierre was the one who told me the story of the ghost in the northeast tower – how the
second floor window was open and rattling in the wind and he went up and checked the room
and shut and locked the window. Once back at the bottom of the stairs, he again heard the
rattle and looked up to find the window open. Again, he climbed the three long flights of
twisting stairs, the clack of his boot heels echoing hollowly off the whitewashed walls. This time
he thoroughly checked the laundry room, the long adjacent hallway lined with storage rooms,
the back offices and all the unlocked closets. Finding nothing out of the ordinary, he again shut
and locked the window and went back downstairs (a little faster this time). Sure enough, by the
time he reached the bottom, the window was open. This time he kept his distance. He confided
in me that he never went in that room at night again.
It had always struck me as strange that this was the only room in the whole building thatwas not restored. Oh, there was an explanation all right. Eric had set it aside for a possible
studio that never materialized. The room remained a large, dingy, depressing cubicle with moldy,
institutional tan paint peeling off the walls like aspen bark. It had all the charm of an interroga-tion room, but it always appealed to me, nonetheless. I would have lived there in a New York
second.
I was reluctant to ask, but I did. “ How’s your Mom? "
“ Ohhh, Mahm, she’s fine. She’s in bettuh shape than me. She’s an angel. I really mean
that Mistuh Neal. Say, you evah see Stephanie? "
“ Yeah, we usually get together when I come down. "
“ Now that’s a fine, sweethaht of a woman. How come you don’ see huh moah offen?
Man couldn’t do no bettuh ‘n at. "
“ Yeah, she’s a wonderful woman. Too good for me, Pierre, that’s what. Best thing I can
do for a woman like that is give her freedom. "
Pierre looked puzzled.
I yawned. “ Man, I’m bushed. I need to sign off. "
“ Heah now, lemme hep you wid dose bags. "
He picked up my heavy suitcases like they were filled with packing peanuts and started
off for the back doors of the main building before I could stop him.
I hate to be waited on. Makes me feel guilty as hell.