 Mona had changed. It was not the manicured lawns of my childhood nor was it the world that I'd described in some of my stories that I'd published in Uncle Obadiah and the Alien in which my friends, Paul, David, Pat, Bruce,
Mona had changed. It was not the manicured lawns of my childhood nor was it the world that I'd described in some of my stories that I'd published in Uncle Obadiah and the Alien in which my friends, Paul, David, Pat, Bruce, In fact, I didn't see any children playing cricket or football as we had done at
I walked through the streets like a ghost, unknown and not knowing anyone, until I reached the gates of my aunt who had lived in London , Ontario , and New York 
I knocked on the gate and one of my cousins, Paul, peered up from behind his car. This was a sure sign that she was home because Paul has been charged by my uncle (her brother) with taking care of my aunt whenever she is in Jamaica 
Paul and I chatted for a while and he told me that his brother, Hew, had moved to Canada 
Then, she asked me where I was staying and she offered to give me a ride to the hotel. I told her that I wanted to visit my old school and she understood. I said goodbye and as I walked through the gates, I looked back at the woman who I admired for being one of the most independent of my grandfather's children. She had never got married, never had any children, never took any crap from any man, and never compromised on anything. And now she was being helped into a car by my cousin.
I crossed Daisy   Avenue Hope Road 
As I walked by St. Dunstan's, past the names of the JC Old Boys who had died in World War I, I saw behind an open window, the eager faces of young men behind desks in what was once One Chambers. I used to be one of them. I snapped a few pictures of the school and felt vaguely nostalgic about the place that been the setting for my semi-autobiographical novel, Benjamin, my son. Of course, I had to take pictures of "Holy Ground," and the Assembly Hall, and then, went back to Mona on a hunch, a feeling that Paul Smith, one of my childhood friends was back in Jamaica 
I was right. The hunch paid off. Paul wasn't home, but his helper gave me his address and synchronicity! His business, Reggae Vacations, was right beside my hotel in the heart of New Kingston. I practically ran back to Hope Road 
From Half-Way-Tree, I walked over to Reggae Vacations and went up to Paul's office. I knocked on the door. No answer. I knocked gain. Still no answer. I went down stairs and talked with a receptionist who insisted that Paul had not left the building.
I want upstairs and knocked again. Nothing. Then, I heard a voice that I was certain was Paul's coming from an adjacent office. I knocked on the door. Silence. A voice said, "Come in." It wasn't Paul's. I backed away from the door. A moment of hesitation. The door opened and my Idren, Paul, was startled. He laughed. He  immediately introduced me to his friend, and we were off to eat at one of his favorite East Indian restaurants in Liguanea.
It was if we'd never had a break in seeing each other. We picked up the conversation since he told me about three years ago that he was leaving for Dominica Dominica 
Paul, Norman, and I go way, way back. Our friendships started at Mona Primary. Norman Norman Jamaica  College 
We started calling friends around the island and I learned that Bruce was now a successful dentist in May Pen. I asked about Errol McDonald (Macky D) who given me the name, "Herbert Spliffington." He said Errol was in Ghana 
By the time we had caught up with everybody and everything, it was dark and we decided to go to the Top  Park  in Mona  Heights 
As we were about to leave, Paul's sister, Gail, came by and we sat down and ate barbequed chicken (Okay, Peter, I hear you!) and talked some more until nine o'clock We reminisced about the annual Christmas fair at the community center where many of us smoked our first cigarette or kissed or first girlfriend. Or got caught doing both. Sometimes on the same day and by different parents.
We finished the chicken and our beers at about ten thirty and followed Gail back to her house. Paul drove me back to the hotel and promised me he would pick me up the next day and take me to the airport.
I slept well that night and got up the next day, ready to go back to Miami 
As I waited for Paul on a bench near the reception area of the hotel, I looked up at the hills how much I had missed waking up every morning as Paul, Norman, Bruce and I walked to Jamaica  College Kingston 
I opened Kendel Hippolyte's Night Vision with the haunting phrase, "our first generation of unmeaning," and I became conscious of how much I had changed and my connection with the generations that had grown up since I had left in 1979 was tenuous at best. My impending mortality in the face of my aunt (I turn fifty next year), and that my football friends were now called "old timers" stayed with me.
Listening to the hotel workers going back and forth as they did their duties, I realized that Jamaicans laugh at the sheer pleasure of being alive. No matter how hard the times, how dread the circumstances, we laugh. A lot.
I glanced across the front of the hotel. The two guards that I'd talked with the day before were outside smoking cigarettes and I told them about my adventures. One said that I was brave and one hinted that I had been very foolish to go out on my own like that. But that's Jamaica 
I sat back on the bench and looked at the hills once again. I closed my eyes and gave thanks for the good time, however brief, that I'd had on my return.
When I opened my eyes, my Idren, Paul, had pulled into the driveway to take me to the airport and back to Miami 
***
For photos of the trip, please follow this link: My Jamaica.
***
Related post: My Jamaica (Part One).
***
On Wednesday (12/5/2007), I will be posting"A Conversation With Peter Schmitt," and on Friday (12/7/2007), I will be featuring an interview with Mervyn Morris.
***
Technorati Tags: Jamaican vacation experience, ,Jamaican vacation essay
Technorati Tags: Jamaican vacation experience, ,Jamaican vacation essay
 
 
6 comments:
This is a great story. I saw it yesterday and told myself I would come back to read it. Beautiful. Thanks for sharing. By the way, thanks for the affirmation on my post. I knew that you would understand.
Give thanks, Stephen.
Yes, Anita Baker is one of my favorites.
Bless,
Geoffrey
This is a great story. I saw it yesterday and told myself I would come back to read it. Beautiful. Thanks for sharing. By the way, thanks for the affirmation on my post. I knew that you would understand
Give thanks, Anonymous, wherever you are.
Geoffrey, I forgive you for that crack about STGC. I know that you were overcome by your emotions. Its the only way you could have made such a statement (JC the best school... please!) ;)
Great story of your visit. Bless.
something like that, Mad Bull.
LOL
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