The smell of burning wire

Ugh. Holiday fire risk. The outlet in the dark corner into which the old lamp was plugged scorched and melted the plug and its plastic cladding. It was sparking. It was smoking. I used the fire extinguisher on it. I didn’t understand that the extinguisher was mostly powder. It was Christmas eve, for Pete’s sake.

However, this has been going on a much longer time. I didn’t turn on the furnace until December and then only after the furnace guy gave it a thumbs up. The smell of electrical fire–melting plastic–had been hovering in the den for weeks. I couldn’t tell where it came from. I thought it was the dehumidifier, which keeps losing functions–display doesn’t work, auto shut-off doesn’t work–and unplugged it and moved it out. I never looked at the outlet under the desk–or not until I (this terrifies me) heard it–sizzling, zapping. That’s when I pulled out the fire extinguisher.

Now, the electrician (who came on Christmas eve) says I don’t need to upgrade the fuse box. It’s safe. I said, can you come back to inspect all the wires. He said he’d be in touch.

On December 23, I put my oldest cat to sleep. He was cancer-ridden and weak, but a more brutal thing I don’t know of. You hold them, knowing you are killing them. I watched his pupils dilate as the drug took hold. I put my head down and sobbed.

There were no fires in my house after the outlet imploded. On the 25th I went to eat Chinese and see a movie with friends. One of the friends came over on Wednesday and helped me empty some cat-hair and cat-pee ridden boxes. Doing this uncovered the following: pee-ruined carpet. Pee-ruined upholstery. Pee-ruined room.

Today it’s sunny and cold and lonely. The grief has depressed my body: I am slow and confused. Nothing makes sense. I clean, sit at the computer, eat (or not). Time drags forward as I watch, bemused. The future is a heavy black curtain that will flower into days. All I have to do is wait.

The Planters

I spent the week this way.

Thursday morning, June 18. I often set the clock-radio to go off much earlier than I know I’ll be getting up. That morning I absorbed the news of the shootings in the Mother Church in Charleston before my first coffee. By the time I was at my computer I was feeling the blow. Terror? Of course it’s terror. Reconstruction was yesterday. Jim Crow was an hour ago (or — now. Look up, look around.)

Here is a paragraph about South Carolina’s early history from the College of Charleston’s Lowcountry Digital Archive.

The development of a plantation economy and African slavery in Carolina began before English colonists even settled Charles Town in 1670. In 1663, eight Lords Proprietors in England received land grants in North America from King Charles II for their loyalty to the monarchy during the English Civil War. The Lords decided to combine their shares to establish a profit-seeking proprietary settlement, Carolina, between the English colony of Virginia and Spanish Florida. To ensure financial success, they sent representatives to study the lucrative sugar plantation system on the Caribbean island of Barbados. They also recruited white settlers from this English West Indian colony to help launch their new North American settlement. These white Barbadians often brought enslaved Africans and African Barbadians with them.

Here are a few of the names of white terror organizations that grew up as a response to Reconstruction.

Paramilitary: The White League. The Knights of the White Camellia. The Red Shirts.

Fellow travelers: The Redeemers. (They were starched-shirt businessmen. They wanted lower taxes and smaller government.)

The White League was responsible for the Colfax Massacre in northern Louisiana. They killed between 60 and 130 freedmen and black members of the state militia. They were armed with rifles and a small cannon.

Rifles, and a small cannon.

It was impossible to determine the number of black dead because so many bodies had been removed or “thrown into the river.” That’s the Red River. It still flows.

The historical marker still refers to the Colfax “riots” and attributes the trouble to white scalawags.

When I was in high school in Atlanta I went on an exploratory drive with my friend. We ended up in East Point, where the commercial establishments had signs like Kwik Klean Kloze.

The White League

The development of a plantation economy and African slavery in Carolina began before English colonists even settled Charles Town in 1670. In 1663, eight Lords Proprietors in England received land grants in North America from King Charles II for their loyalty to the monarchy during the English Civil War. The Lords decided to combine their shares to establish a profit-seeking proprietary settlement, Carolina, between the English colony of Virginia and Spanish Florida. To ensure financial success, they sent representatives to study the lucrative sugar plantation system on the Caribbean island of Barbados. They also recruited white settlers from this English West Indian colony to help launch their new North American settlement. These white Barbadians often brought enslaved Africans and African Barbadians with them.

To be continued. 

It’s a fox

NASHVILLE. Mister Green’s paw was hurt, but it seems to have healed. Miss Hissy has returned. She and Mister Green are married for the moment. Daddy-o hates Mister Green and pins his ears back whenever Mr. G comes into view. A little gold horse. I bought an anti-destructible toy lion for Djuna and I mistake it for one of the cats three times a day. The grass is up. The daffs will be played out in two days. I planted foxgloves. We’ll see.

Last night I dreamt of a brown fox. My cohort peered at it, faintly disgusted by its (or any?) fur. “It’s a fox!” I say. They don’t respond. “It’s a FOX,” I repeat, as if speaking more loudly would convince them. I have no idea, when I am using a normal speaking voice, how loud it is or is not.