FRESH
YARN presents:
Just
Like My Daddy
By Kambri
Crews
It was August
12, 2003. The former Governor of Texas, Ann Richards, was giving a speech
at a private party held in her honor, and said "
and I'd like
to thank Kambri Crews
" To her, I was a producer, event planner
and publicist. Little did she know that I grew up in a tin shed, my parents
are deaf, I witnessed my dad try to kill my mom, and he is now imprisoned
for attempting to kill his girlfriend.
My mother
was born to two deaf-mute parents. Although she could speak, her hearing
was impaired enough to require her to attend the Oklahoma State School
for the Deaf. It was there she met her husband, and my father, Theodore
Crews, Jr. He was the seventh of ten children born to farmers in Bowlegs,
Oklahoma. Although his twin brother was hearing, my father was born completely
deaf with a precocious wild streak. He quickly became the black sheep
of his very strict Christian family.
At five,
he was sent away to deaf school to live in the dorms. Known to classmates
as Teddy, he was a charismatic ladies man. A strikingly handsome athlete,
gregarious and affable storyteller and a bit of a bad boy, so it was no
surprise he charmed my mother. They married at 19 and had my brother at
age 20. I was born four years later and our family was complete. After
a couple of years living in Houston with me a latchkey kid at age five
and my brother hanging with older kids unsupervised, my parents decided
to try a more rural lifestyle. So, when I was six years old, they moved
us deep into the undeveloped woods of Montgomery, Texas.
Our early
time there was spent camping in tents as we worked to clear the heavy
brush, but we were soon living in a one-room tin shed approximately 20
x 20 in size with a concrete slab floor. We made the most of our space
by sleeping on bunk beds made of chicken coop wire pulled taut over 2
x 4s and fashioning a closet out of rope attached to two posts. We were
resourceful, too. An oversized electric cable spool turned on its side
served as a table, a discarded pick-up truck bench was our couch; we used
kerosene lanterns for light and camping gear for cooking. We had an outhouse,
which required a flashlight and some guts to brave at night. "Be
sure to check the hole before you sit, you don't want a snake to bite
you in the ass," my mom would warn -- words to live by.
With no running
water or nearby source, we resorted to thievery. At night, my dad would
load the back of our dilapidated '66 Chevy pick-up truck with a few ten
gallon jugs and drive several miles down the road to steal water from
the only store in town. We treated that hijacked water like gold. We cooked,
cleaned and bathed with it very sparingly. We used a metal trough as our
tub and would share the same bathwater. Luckily, I was the youngest and
least dirty so I bathed first. But dirty we were. This land took work.
Each day consisted of chopping, dragging, burning, cutting and building.
My dad led the expedition and had big plans for our four acres. Down time
was spent looking at floor plans of pre-fabricated homes, sketches drawn
by my mom of her ultimate dream house complete with elaborate landscaping,
and talking of the day when we would have a real house with electricity
and water that came out of faucets. That wish came true when I was ten
years old and our new mobile home was delivered to our humble acreage.
Modern day conveniences would soon follow.
One hot summer
evening, we all gathered around a pole and watched my dad finish wiring
the box that would catapult us into the 20th Century. I treasure a photo
I have of him, his white smile gleaming through the grime on his face,
as he flipped the switch. Electricity! As far as I knew, he was Ben Franklin.
In the following months, he dug a water well which tapped into the natural
spring that flowed freely beneath our land and a septic tank which meant
we wouldn't need that outhouse anymore.
Life in Montgomery
wasn't always work, it was an exciting adventure for a young girl. I swam
in the nearby creek, played football, collected turtles and built my own
shanty out of loose brush and spare wood. My parents were always hosting
big parties with bonfires and eclectic friends. My brother and I partied
alongside the adults, passing around joints and stealing sips of alcohol.
We were given adult freedoms, sexuality was never censored, we were free
to come and go as we pleased and often left to supervise ourselves. Although
I instinctively knew it was illegal, my parents would constantly remind
me, "You know not to tell anyone we smoke marijuana, right?"
"I know, I know!" I would sign. Jeez, what did they think I
was? A kid?
In the summertime
we would pile into the Chevy and drive to Galveston Beach. My mom would
make homemade sour cream and onion dip, and my dad would scold me for
double dipping the Ruffles. When we would finally get back to our trailer
in the woods, I would smell the ocean for days. Tiny grains of the beach
would find their way into my bed and scratch my sunburned skin as I slept.
I always got too much sun so my mom would rub me down with vinegar to
take the chills and blisters away. We would talk about the trip and recall
how my Flintstones flip-flop fell through a rotted slat while riding in
the back of the Chevy. Without hesitation my dad had stopped the truck
and ran across four lanes of highway traffic to rescue it for me. "I
can't believe he did that!" I marveled, before drifting off to sleep.
Somehow
I managed to fit in with the wealthier kids. During sleepovers, I would
show off to my friends by screaming curse words at the top of my lungs
when my dad was in the room, and we would laugh hysterically. He knew
what we were up to, but he didn't want to spoil my devilish fun. When
Dad was a boy, he was punished regularly with a razor strap or switches
made of cherry tree branches for the smallest infractions. At age three,
his father left him at the shantytown where the poorest black families
lived. At dusk, his father returned and threatened to leave him there
"to live with the niggers" if he didn't behave. He held onto
this memory with bitterness; so instead of scolding me, his carbon copy,
he laughed along with us. "You're just like your daddy," my
parents would tell me.
As I entered
my teens, it started to bother me that I didn't have what other kids had,
especially the little things. Soda was served only on Thanksgiving and
Christmas. Desserts were a rare splurge and strictly rationed. I never
got strawberry flavored lip gloss or Gloria Vanderbilt jeans. We shopped
for clothes once a year at a discount store called Weiner's. Weiner's.
And that Chevy that had transported our precious water and so faithfully
taken us to the beach? It became a constant reminder of who I was and
who I was not. I never looked right or got attention from boys, so at
13 I got a job bussing tables at the nearby yacht club and used the money
for new clothes, junk food and cigarettes. I would wait on kids I went
to school with and ask, "Pepper for your salad?" They always
looked shocked and perhaps a bit awed. I had a job; I was a grown-up.
Eventually
my parents' partying and drinking began to take its toll. Our trailer
was repossessed and we moved back into the tin shed that had been serving
as a barn for our horse. My dad would miss work to nurse his hangovers
and would sometimes disappear for days at a time. I would fretfully pace
the driveway and waste time by drawing patterns in the dirt with my shoes.
"What if he died in a car wreck? What would we do?" My mom would
never tell me the truth, saying simply, "I don't know where he is.
Why don't you ask him when he comes back?" Years later I would learn
that he was with his mistress. My mom was a faithful wife, hard worker
and good mother. She could have allayed my fears with a simple, "He's
with friends," but she wanted my dad to answer my questions, to see
first-hand the angst he caused me, his "baby girl." When I would
finally see his headlights advancing down our long, windy dirt road, I
would race to greet him and open his car door. "Where have you been?
I was worried sick about you!" He would smile, looking pleased at
how much I needed him and sign, "I'm sorry. I was with friends."
"Why didn't you call us?" I would sign back. "No phone,"
was his reply. That seemed to be a good enough reason for me. He was home.
During my
freshman year of high school, we ventured north to Ft. Worth. Bars that
had taken an hour to reach were now across the street. I barely saw my
parents. I was working full-time and busy with school, and they were enjoying
the nightlife the city had to offer. Despite their marital and financial
woes, my parents supported my ventures. My junior year, they traveled
to Austin to see my drama troupe compete in the Texas State one-act play
finals competition. A very serious outing, we aspiring actors were on
our best behavior. Just before the awards ceremony began, I heard a smattering
of gasps and giggles mixed in with familiar guttural noises and high-pitched
nonsensical sounds reverberating through the sound system. Anyone who
looked up at the stage observed a deaf-mute man doing his best gyrating
Elvis impersonation into the microphone. A few people rushed the stage
and the emcee wrested the microphone from Elvis's hands. Rather than exit
the stage, Elvis continued to perform more enthusiastically to the crowd.
The emcee announced, "If he belongs to you, would you get this monkey
off the stage?" My friend Scott queried, "Hey, Kambri, isn't
that your dad?" Always up for a dare, he had impressed his
friends and made everyone but me laugh hysterically as we watched my mother
scramble to get him off stage.
The laughs
shared between my parents were becoming further apart. My brother was
heavily into drugs, had dropped out of high school and would disappear
for weeks. I was the polar opposite: a successful student, working full
time and active in theater after school. With her responsibility to two
children waning, my mother decided to separate from my father. He couldn't
bear the thought of her living a life without him. He began harassing
her by surprising her with drunken, late night visits and angrily accusing
her of sleeping with other men.
It culminated
on one very long August night. The sounds I heard woke me up from a deep
sleep. I looked into my mother's bedroom to find her on the floor and
my dad straddled atop of her with his arm cocked back ready to punch.
He caught sight of me and punched the floor instead. They scrambled to
their feet and I tried to get my mother to tell me what was happening.
I wanted to call 911 but wasn't sure if I should. I didn't want to get
Dad into trouble but I was terrified -- I had never seen him act this
way, and the walls were riddled with holes. I had slept through punch
after punch after punch. The next few hours were a blur. In an instant
he would turn from calm to enraged. He punched the walls, broke glass,
and graphically described my mother's sex life telling me, "Your
mom gives good head. Did you know that?"
He worked
himself into a frenzy. He grabbed her by her neck and lifted her off the
floor. I couldn't pry away a single finger of his, so I switched tactics.
I tried to get his eye contact and signed, "Please, don't do this.
Look at me. I'm your baby girl, remember?" With that line,
he let go. I screamed to anyone who could hear me through our thin apartment
walls, "Somebody help us! Call 911!" Nothing. The calm broke
to rage again when he picked up a knife and held it to my mother's throat.
I raced to the phone and dialed 911. My dad caught me and disconnected
the call, but they called back within seconds. Being deaf, he wasn't aware
the phone rang and had lost sight of me. I quickly confirmed our address
and made sure the operator realized my father was deaf and therefore might
not comply with the officers' vocal commands.
Domestic
violence laws were much different then -- it was at least five years before
Nicole Brown Simpson's murder would change the laws in favor of victims
of spousal abuse. When the police arrived, my father was in a calm state
and seated at our kitchen table, so the police simply sent him on his
way. Minutes later he returned with a vengeance. He busted the front door
off its hinges and ripped my phone out of the wall. I made a quick escape
and called 911 using another phone. The police arrested him for trespassing,
but a day later he was free to continue his harassment.
I thought
my cries for help that night had not been heard. I was wrong. We were
evicted from our apartment within a week for "excessive noise disturbance."
We found a new apartment, and my mom and I went into hiding. A few weeks
later I began my senior year of high school with trepidation and fear.
Would I be safe at night? Would I go to college?
Over the
years, I re-established communication with my father. He never apologized
and never admitted responsibility for his actions, but I didn't hold it
against him. I felt it better to have a relationship with him than hold
a grudge. I moved to Ohio and I no longer had to be afraid of him since
he lived so far away. The distance helped us develop a new relationship
through correspondence and sporadic visits. Occasionally, I would receive
late night calls from drunken women who would interpret for him. "Kambri,
I love you. I miss you, Kambri." I wrote him about my escapades,
foreign travels and aversion to being tied down. "You are just like
your daddy," he'd write back.
Our shared
sense of adventure and exploration led me to the British Virgin Islands
in June 2002. I was hosting an exclusive party for Jose Cuervo contest
winners on the privately owned, five-acre island dubbed "The Cuervo
Nation." For me, it was just another paying gig masquerading as an
outrageous and elite event. That is, until I received a late night phone
call. My father's girlfriend was in the hospital and might not survive.
Dad had stabbed her five times and slashed her throat so severely she
was nearly decapitated. The police had broken into their apartment and
found him straddling her -- the same way I had found him on top of my
mother that August night 15 years earlier. His girlfriend lived, but this
time there were consequences he could not escape. He is now serving a
20-year sentence in the Texas Department of Corrections with a possibility
for parole in ten years.
We still
write to each other. He sends me drawings, asserts his innocence and gives
me fatherly advice in his deaf-speak: "Remember don't take any dopes
and heaving drinkers." (Translation: Don't take dope or drink heavily.)
I buy him writing supplies, subscriptions to periodicals and deposit money
into his inmate trust fund so he can purchase strawberry ice cream, toiletries
and other treats. "I'm exciting to have some money from you. Don't
worry it. I will pay you back when I'm free world!! Oh boy I can't wait
to buy toothpaste and deordant [sic]." I research various things
for him on the internet -- the history of HIV/AIDS, ADA laws for the Deaf,
who Prometheus and Atlas were and whatever other whimsical queries strike
him -- send him postcards and photos, and tell him about my life as a
producer in New York City.
In the same
way he was destined to fail, I could have, too, and no one would have
blamed me. I used to dwell on how much better my life could have been,
if only. Mourning for my past seemed to drop away that August night in
2003. In one of those moments while I listened to Governor Richards thanking
me, I suddenly felt an intoxicating sense of relief. It dawned on me in
that instant how far I have come. The realization was intense, dizzying,
overwhelming and took me by surprise. There, in the midst of all the celebrities,
paparazzi and silly indulgence, I felt for the first time that maybe,
just maybe, I didn't have to be "just like my daddy."
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