The Gift. By Wayland Jackson

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Transcription:

The Gift By Wayland Jackson When the first chords of Amazing Grace touched my ear, something moved me. I couldn t stop myself. I put down my soup ladle and a few steps brought me to the side of the grand piano in the corner of the dining room. My heart and my mouth opened and the sound flowed. The pianist Marvin found my key, and the chords he played embraced my voice. I felt at home in the lyrics, in the music. Right at the climax of the stanza, from behind me a high-pitched voice interrupted, Please, Shayla, could I have some more lemonade? Alice sounded like an aged Oliver Twist. I was working for minimum wage in a nursing home and was glad of it. In a few minutes, entrees and desserts would be up. The old and lame would eat, then return to their rooms, or sit in the hall and watch passersby while I cleared tables and recorded how much each person ate. As I turned to get Alice s lemonade, Marvin said, You have a nice voice, Shayla. You should sing more. I said, Oh, I can t sing. He said, Sounds pretty good to me. I ve played for quite a few singers. That night when I got home, I sank into an upholstered chair that had sprung its last spring years ago. Mama reigned from her newer chair to my left. When I told my family what the pianist had said about my voice, my younger brother laughed and said, He must be crazy. My sister rolled her eyes. Mama sighed and said, Baby, different folks have different gifts. You ll find yours. I thought, Could it be that waiting tables in a nursing home is my gift? I like the patients and the people I work with. I make a lot of them smile. The following day five minutes before the doors were opened,

lunch was ready and bibs rested beside each plate. Residents can t enter until a CNA, a Certified Nurse s Assistant, is present, just in case someone gets choked or has an attack of some sort. Marvin asked, You got time to belt one out? I thought, Why not? What have I got to lose? He played the opening phrase of How Great Thou Art, one of Mama s favorites. The song swept me along like a bird winging its way through the air. I like your voice. Perhaps you could do something with it. Like what? I asked. Like sing. Nobody thinks I can sing, I said. Still fresh in my mind were the words of the music director at New Harmony Church. Eight of us were practicing a gospel arrangement, backed by a small band. In the midst of The Road to Glory, with its message of hope, my voice moved up and down like a ship in a storm. I was singing what I felt. The leader motioned me aside and said, I m sorry. You re not fitting in. You can t keep the beat. The room was dead silent. I didn t look up as I took my coat off the hanger and slipped out the front door. The next time Marvin invited me to sing, I didn t know what to choose. I just knew I d do it. After the drinks and soup were served, there were a few minutes before the entrée was served. I went over to the piano and said, Marvin, I m ready to try again, but we have to squeeze it in quickly. I need my job. I don t want to do anything that would be a mark against me. Marvin smiled and said, Fine. Let s do it. His hand swept up the keyboard, and I began to sing Stormy Weather, a song that tells how a storm on the outside is like a storm on the inside. When we stopped, the patients clapped, like I was doing a show at Carnegie Hall. I felt proud and embarrassed at the same time.

That evening I told my family about the patients clapping. Sure they clapped, said my brother. They were glad you stopped. My sister reminded me that old people don t hear well. They like almost anything. Baby, you might not be as smart as your brother or as pretty as your sister, but you work hard. You know all those old people by name. Look at yourself. You style your hair nicely. You dress pretty. You have a sweet smile. But what about my voice, Mama? Do I sing as bad as my brother and sister say? You re a good singer. What do you think? It don t hurt to try, Baby, Mama s eyes were pleading, but remember we need all three checks from you kids to keep this house going. Just don t do anything to get fired. Medicare paid for only a part of Mama s high blood pressure medicines. During lunch the next day, Marvin was seated at the piano. I asked him if I could talk to him after the tables were cleared. I said, How would you describe my style? He didn t hesitate. Your style is gospel. Gospel? What do you mean? Traditional singers sing the notes on the page, he explained. Gospel singers add notes that come from their hearts. They sing all over the page. But the good ones also respect the music. They know what they re doing when they add extra notes. Stormy Weather s not gospel. Gospel is not only religious. It s music where the singer s feelings are out in the open. Everything a gospel singer feels emotionally can show up. You need a little rehearsal, he added, and some exposure. I can help you if you want to give it a go. We began working that evening. He taught me how to sing Amazing Grace, what he called straight.

He said, Tell your heart to take five. Let your mind get a grip on the song as it was written 250 years ago. When you get the bones of the song in place, then you can improvise to your heart s content. That s putting meat on the bones, as Marvin put it. People can still hear the tune within the notes you sing. He was right. It took a couple of weeks of an hour a day, but it worked. I could go wherever my voice and heart took me and still hold onto the melody. I think it s time we take this on the road, Marvin said. Think you re ready? If you think so, I ll try. I ll ask my pastor if I can bring in a soloist. He ll say yes. I ll let you know the date. Two and a half weeks later he told me. It s on. Are you free next Sunday? I didn t invite my family. They might be embarrassed. I told them I was going to church, but not which church. I had driven by First Presbyterian Church many times, but I had never been inside. It was eight or ten times bigger than my church. Their parking lot was filled with row after row of cars. Marvin met me and walked me in the back door. Dressed in royal blue robes, a choir almost as big as my whole church marched past us into the choir loft. I tried to settle my nerves while we waited backstage, but nothing worked. Marvin walked out and took his place at the Steinway grand piano. He nodded and I came out and stood at the microphone. The room got deathly quiet. When I looked up, I saw nothing but vanilla, a couple of Orientals perhaps, nothing that looked Hispanic, not a black face anywhere. And not a smile anywhere. Had I come to a funeral? Mine? Marvin s long introduction gave me a minute to get a grip and gave the audience time to get ready for some music with a beat. By the time I sand three notes, all eyes zeroed in on me. I was either pure gold or the bubonic plague. I couldn t tell which. I sang Amazing Grace in a way they probably never heard it. When I came to the end,

Marvin lifted his fingers from the keyboard. I couldn t read the faces. I held my breath for a lifetime, refusing to let them stare me down. Then two hands came together, then four, then 40, then 400. I could hardly breathe. The air sparkled with excitement. I had done it. After the closing prayer, their choir director said, You have a wonderful gift. Thanks for coming. A lot of their members came and shook my hand. Marvin walked me to my car and pressed an envelope into my hand. The road home had the same chuckholes, and I hit a lot of them, but I felt like I was riding on air. Wait till my brother and sister hear. Mama will be proud of me. I sang a solo in church this morning, I announced before settling into my chair. Oh, Baby. I told your sister we should ve gone with you. My little brother said, Count me out. I ve got enough problems without that. Why didn t you say something? my sister asked. We could ve talked you out of it. How do you feel? I laid the envelope on the table. What s this? she said, opening the envelope. This check is from the Presbyterian church. Mama took the check. It was for as much as I earned in a full day at the nursing home. The church where I sang this morning pays people who sing there. Marvin from the nursing home took me to his church. When I finished, they clapped like I had just won an Emmy for Best Song of the Year. My little brother came over and picked up the check. He stared at it and shook his head. There s gotta be an explanation. You sang they paid you money? It must be a fluke. Momma got a determined look on her face.

A fluke? A fluke? We ll just see. She turned to me, "You ask your friend Marvin if he ll come to our church and play for you. We ll just see. Mama s been a deaconess at our church forever, and when she asks, you can be sure the pastor listens. Let me talk to the choir director, the pastor said. Later that evening, he called. I have to tell you, Sister, it took some convincing, but we re willing to trust your judgment. Should we have Shayla sing at the evening service? We have a much smaller attendance in the evening. You know what I m saying? What do you think? Mama said, Considering the size of the check Shayla brought home from that church uptown, I think Sunday morning. I decided to wait in our church parking lot for Marvin, just as he had waited for me at his church. I thought he would come early as I had done, but when the service began, he was still not there. I could hear the hymns and the prayers. I heard the children s choir sing. When the gospel chorus began singing I knew the offering was being taken. My solo was up next. Did Marvin chicken out? The Gospel Chorus reached the climax of their number as he pulled into the parking lot. Sorry, he said. I ve never been in this part of town before. I couldn t find a soul to ask for help. I wasn t too good at following your directions, but I made it! he said while we rushed toward the door. There s no back door to get into our church auditorium, no secret hall behind the stage. You have to come in the front and walk down the aisle. Everybody can watch your forward progress. When I walked in nobody stirred. When Marvin came following behind me, heads began to turn. A stranger was in our midst. The choir director announced my solo before we could sit down. He sounded like he was apologizing for what was to follow. Marvin went straight to the piano. He gave me his prize-winning smile and nodded before beginning his introduction. As soon as the congregation recognized what he was playing,

a soft humming began to fill the room. Amazing Grace was familiar ground. Marvin paused and I began. As I continued, faces began to light up like Christmas lights coming on around the room. Hands began to move in rhythm to the music. Eyes turned skyward. Deacons chimed in with Amens. When I finished, hands clapped and Mama glowed. My sister sat stunned. My little brother looked around not believing what he had heard and seen. Walking Marvin out to our parking lot, I regretted that I couldn t put a check in his hands as he had done for me. Our church pays our pastor, but no one else. Before I could apologize, he said, I have a bit of news for you. When you sang at my church, we had a visitor from Los Angeles. He s in the music business. He said he d like to hear more from you. It might be nothing, but who knows? I think you have the gift. And I thought, Helping the old folk, singing maybe I have two gifts.