Q: What is decomposition? Use examples to
illustrate your answer.
A: Decomposition
is simple
AB
→ A + B
It’s a change of direction a reconstruction of atoms see heat breaks down bonds or you break down in a grocery store aisle to enter rot you attach to pieces love is no longer a drop of water Hydrogen and Oxygen separately can’t reason the two can’t breathe not together not alone either it tastes a little like ache like closing the gates no more customers today on the page it looks like this:
H2O→
H2 + O
Break open an apple for example slice its heart slice again your unpracticed hands destroy it easy like a cake you never learned to bake like the jasmine that fell too soon grief wants to grow branches parasites attaching to blood no one can see deep in the earth dripping from the ceiling making you dead cold in ways you didn’t even imagine it is a reaction people say compose yourself and by that they mean dig up your bones cover that grief with dirt not six feet under but two because decay happens so much easier in the shallow or perhaps think of it like this: in the shelves of a grocery store there are many things dying a pack of bagels for example meant for a family of four a smoothie never bought a man holding his wife while the ambulances arrives molecules shift shapes when heated the same two look different when holding on differently like Hydrogen Peroxide
2 H2O2 → 2 H2O
+ O2
two shelves over from the floor where she fell the same bottle they emptied in the aisle take my answer say it was a whole a promise and then something dispersed what I mean to say is everything decomposes
even people
even words
Hananah Zaheer is a fiction editor for Four Way Review. Her recent
work has appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review where it won the
Lawrence Foundation Literary prize for 2017, Alaska Quarterly Review,
Gargoyle, Moon City Review, Westview and Willow Review, among
others. She received a 2016 Pushcart nomination from Moon City Review and has
been awarded fellowships by the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts (VCCA)
and Rivendell Writers’ Colony.
The day before I bury her I measure her in negatives they have removed everything heart lungs her liver her abdomen sinks my home hollowed by someone’s hands she was opened she smelled sweet and sometimes bitter her hands bathed me where does the blood come from when I wipe her chest she is sewn shut jagged cuts across I hold her hair It still looks the same
Hananah Zaheer is a fiction editor for Four Way Review. Her recent
work has appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review where it won the
Lawrence Foundation Literary prize for 2017, Alaska Quarterly Review,
Gargoyle, Moon City Review, Westview and Willow Review, among
others. She received a 2016 Pushcart nomination from Moon City Review and has
been awarded fellowships by the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts (VCCA)
and Rivendell Writers’ Colony.
On a frosty March morning, Leon Esterlink left his Louisville home, running with a slow, steady pace. “It’s made for running,” he said to himself, moving up Eastern Parkway to Cherokee Park. There he found a gentle, dry breeze and made friends with it. “Perfect,” he said. He did the hills with ease, past the golf course, the pond, and then out of the park toward downtown. He knew he was sweating, but the dry air wicked it away. “Symbiosis,” he shouted. A man in a bright yellow parka walking his dog turned around to look. A trumpet voluntary marched through Leon’s head. The music paced him and he was lost in its melody. He barely noticed crossing the Second Street Bridge into Indiana. Leon’s goal was Indianapolis. If he could keep his normal pace, he’d be there before midnight. A film crew accompanied him: three guys in a flatbed truck and two more in a helicopter. He did his best to ignore them.
During his years of isolation after his hair fell out, Leon had survived on daily patterns that kept him from thinking about the injustice of his disease, about relationships never made, loves never found. He was alone. “Like a tree next to a stream,” he said once to the woman who cleaned and shopped for him. “I can see it, I take nourishment from it, but I can’t dip my toe in it. I can’t go swimming.”
She had laughed. “A tree swimming,” she said, wiping clean the electric cook top. “A swimming tree.” The thought tickled her.
Before he took up running, this was his pattern: Monday, Tuesday and Thursday he’d get up at seven, make breakfast, read the paper, listen to the morning news. He’d spend an hour on the treadmill and two hours on records for his insurance business and talking on the phone to the home office. In the afternoon, he’d call clients and prospects. Most of his business was transacted over the phone and through the Internet. E-mail had been a boon to Leon. He used a courier service to get papers signed and to deliver policies. Evenings were spent back on the treadmill and reading. His favorite book was The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill, Alone 1932-1940.
He’d sleep later on Wednesday, Friday, and the weekend. He tried not to work on those days. He’d read, play the guitar, cook. And jog on the treadmill, where he had a good view of the street from his living room window. He’d spend weeks, sometime months, this way, seeing only the woman who cleaned and shopped for him. Even for her, he’d wear a cap and draw in eyebrows. She understood that he was doing this for her. If he noticed that she wore lipstick and nylons on the days she cleaned for him, he never let on.
Some years earlier, when Dr. Fannin confirmed it really was alopecia universalis, he told Leon, “It needn’t be a death sentence.”
No, not death. Life in solitary confinement, thought Leon as he left the office. Six months earlier the first clump of hair had come off in his hand. Now he saw himself as a hairless freak.
“There are treatments,” Dr. Fannin said. Leon tried them without success. “There are wigs. Nowadays you can’t tell them from real.” Sure. And finally, “There are support groups.”
Support this, Doc, he wanted to say. Leon, toting his empty follicles, walked home from the doctor’s office three weeks before his thirty-seventh birthday planning for a life alone. His three-bedroom brick bungalow, with its sharp roof lines and wide oak flooring, provided sanctuary.
He was headed now north into the heart of Indiana, red with the glow of oxygenation, shadowed by the flatbed truck and the helicopter. The music was gone, the cadence called by his beating heart. It was mile fifty and his breathing was steady, his gait strong. He smiled thinking about how worried Dr. Fannin had been just a few years earlier. “I know your lifestyle, Leon. You’re a time bomb ready to explode,” he said. He tapped Leon’s belly. “Look at that paunch. Triglycerides above 500. HDL very low. You’ll need to shed some weight. And you’ll need to get more exercise.”
Leon bought the treadmill and like everything else he did, applied himself assiduously to the task of losing the paunch and getting into shape. He incorporated the treadmill into his daily patterns. He watched what he was eating. The woman shopped accordingly. She also changed her diet and began exercising.
He was on his treadmill late on an April day when a congregation of runners passed in front of his living room window. Hundreds. It could have been thousands. Serious athletes, poseurs, men, women, old, young. Running, jogging. Some walked. Some were in costume!
“They’re going somewhere,” he said out loud, “and I’m stuck here treading water.”
“Treading water on the treadmill. Treading water. Getting nowhere.” This mantra of the moment kept the tempo as he beat out the miles. “Treading water, getting nowhere.” The next day, after dark, he put on his blue running pants with the double white stripe down the sides, his Centre College sweatshirt and a baseball cap, and ventured outside for the first time in weeks. His first run. The windless air sat heavy on his Highlands neighborhood as he started out. One block. Two blocks. A mile. Three miles. Enough.
He walked back to his house, sweating heavily and humming show tunes. He passed a well-manicured hedge and ran his hand across the top leaves. It tickled. He leaned into a lamppost stretching his calf muscles, first one, then the other. He slept until ten the following morning.
The cleaning and shopping woman noticed something different. “Chipper today,” she said putting a carton of eggs in the refrigerator.
He couldn’t wait until nightfall.
Leon’s run to Indianapolis was, for the most part, along Route 31. Through Sellersburg, Memphis, Henryville, and Underwood. Past the deep cornfields of Vienna, Austin, Crothersville, and Uniontown. Up past Reddington, Azalia, and on to Columbus. Mile seventy. He had just completed a repetition of The Esterlink and felt confident. It was The Runner that gave it a name and made Leon wealthy. His technique, it was claimed, enabled a runner to get past the wall, to continue running much farther than would otherwise be possible. It looked bizarre even to Leon. “Who’s crazy enough to do this shit in public?” he thought. “You’d look like a fool.”
People lined the road approaching Columbus. First only a few, but the closer he got to the city the larger the crowd became. “Go Leon,” some shouted. “Esther-Link, Esther-Link,” groups of teens chanted. It made him nervous. He was expected to wave and smile.
It had taken a month or so of nighttime running before he got up the nerve to run in daylight around Louisville. There was little in the way of encouraging chants then. “Mexican Hairless,” young toughs would taunt. “Freak,” they’d shout. He took to running on country roads where he would be less likely to be harangued. And it was there, among the rolling hills, the farmhouses and the occasional horse that he discovered the secret of long-distance running. Loping along early one June morning and out of boredom, more than anything else, he started to skip. Feeling playful, he began goose-stepping, like the leader of a marching band. He noticed, quite by accident, that he felt refreshed. He ran farther that morning than ever before. And he could have run farther still were it not for the fact that he was due back home to take a call from the head office.
Leon sensed he was on to something, and he began methodically experimenting with various movements. It took a few months of trial and error, but he was able to eliminate the extraneous and whittle down the possibilities to the basic moves we know now as The Esterlink. With this technique, Leon felt he could run a hundred miles or more.
He was aware that the sight of a tall, thin (for by now he was thin), hairless man running, goose stepping, leaping and waddling would not go unnoticed. In his first marathon, his hairlessness garnered some attention, but he was not yet ready to use his newly discovered technique. He finished, but not without having to stop and walk several times.
He entered the Chicago Marathon, lost in the blur of thirty-seven thousand other runners. At the sixteenth mile, when he felt he could run no farther, he unveiled The Esterlink. Other runners dodged his goose stepping, avoided his leaping and, too oxygen starved to laugh, smiled at his waddling. At the twentieth mile, it was picked up by the television cameras. By the time he reached the finish line, a coven of reporters was waiting for him. He feigned exhaustion and refused to answer questions. “Thanks. Thanks,” was all he said.
He developed a following. In subsequent races, the people lining the streets were cheering for the skinny, hairless man with the strange moves. Newspaper reporters and television crews followed in his wake. A sports physician appeared on 60 Minutes explaining that the Esterlink technique couldn’t possibly work to eliminate fatigue. Another went on Oprah convinced that the Esterlink was the greatest advance in running since pavement. Leon made the cover of The Runner magazine. Weekend runners practiced the Esterlink and entered marathons. The notoriety was torture for Leon. He wanted to be left alone, but he recognized the improbability of that.
Wherever he ran, the press barked at his heels. Fartlek Shoes approached him with a seven million-dollar offer. A three-year deal. He’d be required to run in at least three marathons a year and make two television commercials and a video. The rest of the time he was free to run as he saw fit, as long as he wore the Fartlek insignia on his singlet and the Fartlek Esterlink running shoes. “I can’t do it,” he said to the woman as she sorted through his mail and straightened the papers on his desk. “I don’t think I could stand the spotlight.
“No, she said, “it would be too difficult for you. Such a shame. The money would make you independent, of course. You could retire after the three years and do whatever you pleased.”
“You think I’m crazy,” he said, “turning down that kind of money.”
“No. Not for a tree,” she smiled. He stopped the treadmill and turned to say something, but she had moved on to the kitchen and was running the disposal. Later that day, he called his attorney and instructed him to accept.
Fartlek’s Esterlink model became a best seller, in the first year rivaling the sales of Nike’s Air Jordan models. The shoe was designed to his specifications and each week, along with a large check, he received a new pair in the mail.
Leon refused in-person interviews with reporters, but he agreed to a telephone interview with a newspaper reporter who wouldn’t take no for an answer.
“How do you react when you hear that youngsters are shaving off all the hair on their bodies so they can look more like you?” the reporter began.
“I’m flattered, of course. I’m sure it’s a fad that will fade away soon enough. It’s ironic. Here I’ve spent years hiding my hairlessness, staying indoors, skulking around in long coats and sunglasses, and all of a sudden teenagers, even some adults, are using depilatories and shaving their body hair just to look more like me. The mind boggles.”
The reporter scribbled “humble” in his notebook. He got Leon to explain the development of the Esterlink movements. “I have to admit, I watched the video and began to laugh when you started with those steps. You have to be aware of how strange you look,” he said.
“I understand in the last Bay to Breakers there was a group of seven runners who did it in unison throughout the entire course. Now that must have looked goofy. Sure, I was scared and felt stupid the first time I did it in a race. But there was no other way I could have gone the distance. It’s easier now.”
“What’s next for Esterlink, Inc?” the reporter asked.
“You make it sound like I’m an industry. I’m just a runner, and not a particularly fast one. I didn’t seek out the notoriety or the money. Maybe it’s just my fifteen minutes of fame.” He was trying to sound the way he thought a sports star should sound. It was painful for him. “Look, I really have to go,” he said by way of ending the interview.
The reporter thanked him. “Clueless schmuck,” he wrote.
Running had become an obstacle course for Leon. Well-wishers, autograph hounds, reporters. Jimmy Fallon wanted him on his show. Louisville renamed a street after him. There was a rumor he had donated a million dollars to endow the yearly Mini-Marathon on the condition that the city change the name of the race to the Esterlink Mini. The more he denied it, the more people assumed it was true. Fancy women called him at night suggesting things that turned his ears red. He yearned for the solitude hairlessness had imposed. He’d learned to tolerate the stares and the ridicule accompanying his early daylight runs. Adulation proved more difficult.
“My life’s no longer my own,” he moaned to the woman who cleaned and shopped. “My agent is suggesting bodyguards now. Goons in cars to shoo away anyone approaching me. How am I supposed to live like that?”
“Less than three years,” she said softly, putting orange juice and soy milk in the refrigerator. She suggested he see someone.
“I don’t need help. I need to be left alone,” he shouted and went upstairs to his bedroom.
The throng of people waiting for him in Indianapolis was clapping and hooting as he entered the downtown area and circled the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument. A young woman with long auburn hair broke through the police line and tried to grab his shorts. It was after eleven by the time he hopped in the cab of the flatbed truck and headed home, the helicopter leading the way.
Two months later, on a sunny Monday, Leon awoke at seven. He made breakfast and read the paper. He flipped on the radio and listened to the news. On the treadmill he looked out onto the street. Nothing out of the ordinary. People going about their business, children waiting for the school bus. He thought about the nastiness surrounding his break with Fartlek. “I did the video; I ran in two marathons. They can continue to use my name on their shoes. I want out,” he had told his lawyer.
The contract had two more years to run, but Leon was through. He wanted to keep the two million Fartlek had paid him so far and walk away. Fartlek sued for the return of most of the money. His lawyer convinced him to counter sue for a share of the profits from shoe and video sales. The litigation, his lawyer assured him, would last for years.
In the two months after the filming and his decision to abandon his obligations to Fartlek, Leon hadn’t left his home. Every day he received dozens of letters from people he didn’t know, wishing him well and hoping he’d return to running. Many explained how he had inspired them with his courage. Some contained pictures of hairless children with notes about how he had given them self-esteem. These touched him.
There was a letter from the reporter. He was writing a screenplay about Leon’s life and he’d like Leon to work with him on it. “One of the movie studios had shown some interest,” he wrote. Leon was offered $25,000 to speak at the annual meeting of the National Sporting Goods Association in Las Vegas.
His popularity continued to grow. This, in turn, had a positive impact on his insurance business. He had planned to give it up, but found himself busier than ever and with mounting legal fees to pay, he was thankful for the business. He added Wednesday as a work day. The woman who cleaned and shopped agreed to help him handle the extra business. She moved into his guest bedroom so she’d be available to streamline his work flow.
A year passed. He was sitting in the living room watching Stephen Colbert talk to a man from Madison, Wisconsin, who opened beer bottles with his bellybutton. The cleaning and shopping woman sat down beside him. “Any regrets, Leon?” she whispered.
He thought for a moment about the fame and fortune, the adulation, his contribution to the sport of running, the positive role model he had been to alopecia sufferers. He laid his head on her bosom. “None,” he said.
Robert
Sachs’ work has appeared most recently in The Louisville Review, the Chicago Quarterly Review, and the Delmarva Review. He earned an M.F.A. in Writing from Spalding University in
2009. His story, “Vondelpark,” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2017.
Originally from Chicago, he currently lives in Louisville, Kentucky. He serves
on the board of Louisville Literary Arts. Read more at www.roberthsachs.com.
Why don’t you…? people offer, meaning well, not knowing the hole its murk and depth, its rootedness, the soul rot-riddled. To watch another suffer distresses, brings out the fixer. Dis-ease, alas, is not so easily fixed, the brain stubbornly attuned to its frequency of pain. Sure, one can medicate, finding one’s ease in the cat-grab of pills at the nape, but then one’s paws spin above the ground, the world distant, both sense and sound muted. —Better the feces-throwing ape that hoots in the head’s cage. Do you see the dilemma? Hamlet’s to be or not to be?
Devon Balwit‘s most recent collection is titled A
Brief Way to Identify a Body (Ursus Americanus Press). Her individual poems can
be found in The Cincinnati Review, Fifth
Wednesday (on-line), apt, Grist, and Rattle
among others. For more on her book and movie reviews, chapbooks, collections
and individual works, see her website at: https://pelapdx.wixsite.com/devonbalwitpoet
Across the canal, at Higbee’s Beach, paths wind through a sanctuary of seabirds and water fowl. A ferry I do not board
backs into a November night, backs through the remains of horseshoe crabs laying eggs on shore. I reach an apology
in the sand, find the stick used to imprint it; sand clogs the end. It smells of low tide, a single strand of woman’s hair
caught against the rim of bamboo. If I had stayed, I would not have closed the future of you, but picked up the child’s boot
from the debris of tide, wrapped it up with the entanglements of seaweed and saltgrass, brought it home on another road. And I
will think of you years hence, of your foot in a rubber boot trying to catch flounder from the bay, pole stand dug into
the last sandbar, small hand winding the line in, slow click and turn of the reel, the sand shark you almost wrestle
to your feet, the empty hook, your surprise at how just before the last hitch of the reel it slips away, how you will never
really learn to fish, to catch anything other than what has to be thrown back in.
Kyle Laws is
based out of the Arts Alliance Studios Community in Pueblo, CO where she
directs Line/Circle: Women Poets in Performance. Her collections include Faces of Fishing Creek (Middle Creek
Publishing), So Bright to Blind (Five
Oaks Press), and Wildwood (Lummox
Press). Ride the Pink Horse is
forthcoming from Spartan Press. With six nominations for a Pushcart Prize, her
poems and essays have appeared in magazines and anthologies in the U.S., U.K.,
and Canada. She is the editor and publisher of Casa de Cinco Hermanas Press.
Catherine stood frozen, paintbrush held an inch from the canvas and dripping blue paint on the art studio’s wooden floor. She strained to focus, but all she could think of was the last time she painted and the morning that followed.
The memories
of that night came to her in brief flashes – Aaron standing behind her as he
guided her in finishing up a design on the nursery walls that he had started, pressing
warm kisses against her neck in between forming perfect swirls of pale green
paint spelling out the gender neutral baby name, Aaron stopping for a brief
moment to rest his palm against her stomach to see if the baby was moving
despite the doctor telling them a million times that it was too soon for that,
Aaron spinning her around and kissing her over and over until she could no
longer tell where one kiss ended and the next began, until she forgot where he
ended and she began.
The
following morning began with them sharing breakfast in bed. He rubbed her
stomach, laughing when she complained about swelling up like a balloon, even
though she was not that far along. Everything was fine until he mentioned
wanting to tell his parents about the baby. She rejected the idea. No
hesitation. It had little to do with the fact that she disliked them as people
and more to do with the fact that Aaron still had nightmares about failing as a
person – failing her – because of the mental abuse he had endured growing up.
He had grown angry and pointed out that her parents were not flawless either. Even
when he reminded her that his parents had apologized and were trying to do
better, she stubbornly refused to let them have anything to do with their baby.
He had turned away, grumbling something under his breath about how ridiculous
she was being. In a moment of weakness, she’d sworn that the baby would never
meet them if she could help it. Saying the morning ended on a sour note was
putting it mildly.
She’d
spent six months since that morning, wondering what would have happened if she
had done something differently. If she had grabbed his arm before he walked
out, stopped thinking about herself for once and just accepted they had their
differences, could she have stopped it or would she have only been delaying the
inevitable? There were no right answers.
She
dragged herself out of her daze and stared at the puddle of paint at her feet.
Even the good memories made her sad nowadays. She and Aaron would never again
hold hands, never share a hug or a kiss, never get to hold their baby and coo
over how perfect he or she was together. Everything that happened between them then
no longer mattered and she reminded herself of that daily to distract herself
from ever thinking about the future. She did not want to think about what she
would do with herself now. What could she, a twenty-four-year-old unmarried and
now widowed painter who never left the house do?
Catherine
tore off a wad of paper towels and knelt, cleaning up the mess haphazardly. The
white pine was now tinged a faint blue. What did it matter? She would be moving
out in less than a week and the family moving in to fill her place had already
gushed to her about redecorating the whole place. The happy couple – expecting
parents, no less – even brought along paint samples and chosen which colors
would go where. It stung, knowing everything that made the place hers and
Aaron’s would be gone, but she tried not to put a damper on their excitement. She
even went so far as to walk them out and wave a goodbye from the front porch.
Then she went into the nursery and sat there, cheek pressed against the wall
and eyes closed as if she could feel Aaron there.
No. She
would not think about them again or envy them their happiness. Nothing good
ever came out of feeling sorry for yourself just because other people’s lives
were going well. She knew that much.
Brushing
a tendril of wild hair out of her face and rising to her feet, she set the
paintbrush and the paper towel on the easel. She needed something to distract
her. Before she could talk herself out of it, she strode into her bedroom. The
boxes were mostly empty in here. Although she had already packed up the rest of
the house, she was not ready to face going through Aaron’s belongings, deciding
what to keep and what to donate or throw away. She bit her lip as she glanced
around, trying to decide where to start. It was too much, too soon. There was
no way she could do this. Who was she kidding, trying to act like she was fine?
“Quit
being a baby.” She took a deep breath. “Okay, Catherine, you can do this.”
She
opened Aaron’s closet door. It had been practically forever since she had last
been in there. During the move, they agreed that the separate closets were
their own personal spaces. She stayed out of his and he stayed out of hers. As
such, she knew he had hidden many birthday and anniversary presents for her
there in the three years that they had lived there. Although she hated
surprises, she had never broken her promise to stay out of there. It felt wrong
to now. Even after six months had passed, it still felt like an invasion of
privacy.
All his
clothes hung there, freshly laundered. His favorite pair of shoes were kicked
into the corner. Something caught her eye and she glanced up. Perched on the
edge of the shelf, too high for her to reach, was a box. She pulled up a chair
to get it down. It fit easily in the palm of her hand. Leaving the closet as it
was, she walked over to sit on the bed and opened it. Out spilled a handful of
petals and a slip of paper about the size of her thumb.
“Call this
phone number,” she read aloud. “Ask for me.”
Catherine
stared at the note. It was Aaron’s handwriting, but why would he leave a note
like this to himself? She dialed the phone number before she could change her
mind.
“Hello,
you have reached Helen’s Handfuls of Happiness. This is Helen speaking. How may
I help you today?”
“Well…”
She hesitated. “I was calling about Aaron Johnson.”
There
was a long pause. What if she was completely wrong about this? All she knew
about Helen’s Handfuls of Happiness was that it was a florist about fifteen
minutes away. How would Aaron react if he were here right now and knew that she
dug through something that he obviously wanted to be private? What if this
Helen thought she was completely insane for asking about something so vague?
Her hands started shaking. Swallowing her pride, Catherine started to apologize
and claim she had the wrong phone number.
“Oh!”
Helen interrupted her frantic thoughts. “He told me you would be calling.”
“He
did?”
“Of
course he did!” She sounded horrified that Catherine would ever think
otherwise. Before she could ask for more information, Helen beat her to the
punch. “It was about nine months ago. He came in and bought a dozen red roses
and asked me for a favor.”
“A
favor.” She was at a loss for words, only able to repeat what she was being
told at this point. “What was the favor?”
“He
told me that he and his girlfriend were expecting and that he wanted to
surprise her with something special before the baby was born. He asked me to
wait until you called, so that I could give you the next clue.”
“What
clue?”
“For
the treasure hunt.”
“A
treasure hunt?”
“Oh,
no.” Helen sounded upset. “Did I ruin the surprise?”
“No,
no!” Catherine hastened to reassure her. She could hear Helen rustling papers
around on the other end, no doubt still wondering if she had spoiled everything.
“What is the clue?”
“He
said to go read your favorite quote from The
Choice of the Solstice.”
“Thank
you so much, Helen. You have been a big help.”
“No
problem, honey.” There was a pause. “I sure do miss seeing Aaron around here.
He came in to buy flowers every Friday. He was always telling me how much you
loved surprises. I wish I could have made it to the funeral. My condolences.”
She
drew in a shaky breath. “Thank you.”
“You
take care of you and that baby now.”
It hit
Catherine like a punch in the gut. She wheezed out a quick thank-you and hung
up before she did or said something embarrassing she would regret. She dropped
the phone on the bed.
Six
months was an awfully long time to be without someone you loved. Forever was a
hell of a lot longer. As far as she was concerned, she was as adjusted as she
was going to get. Aaron had only been a year older than her. It was unfair and
that made coping harder. She had been to see one of the grief counselors at the
hospital where Aaron had been admitted after the car accident and a therapist
that had been highly recommended to her. According to them, her grief had gone
from healthy to concerning when she lost the baby a week later and fell into a
deep depression. People told her over and over that it was common to have a
miscarriage in the first trimester but it almost felt to her like she was
losing all she had left of Aaron. A small part of her even thought that she
deserved to feel this way – that she should feel guilty because she had wished
so much for Aaron not to be gone that she stopped focusing on how grateful she
should be that she still had the baby. Now that she was on antidepressants, she
had been told her grief would naturally lessen with time. She was still waiting.
Enough
of that. She went over to the nightstand on his side of the bed and dug through
until she found The Choice of the
Solstice. She and Aaron both read it so many times that the spine was
broken and the pages were starting to fall out. As she thumbed through, his
bookmark fell out and drifted soundlessly to the bedroom floor. A lump rose in
her throat. It was something that seemed inconsequential but, in that moment,
all she could think about was how he was never going to get to read it ever
again.
It was this
book that brought them together. She had been reading in a coffee shop one day
when a shadow fell across the pages. When she glanced up, he was standing there
with a bright smile and a battered copy of the same book clutched in his hands.
She had never read it before. He later admitted that he never finished it
before because he never wanted it to end. They finished it together.
She
turned the page and there it was. Her favorite quote had been underlined before
so many times that she could run her finger along the page and feel the grooves
the pen had left. Someone, presumably Aaron, had highlighted one specific part
that read, “I chose you. I will never stop choosing you.” She blinked away
tears. Scrawled out to the side was the next treasure hunt clue, which simply
said, “Look inside my favorite pair of shoes.”
Catherine
grabbed them from the closet. The last time she held these shoes was when she
had given them to Aaron for his birthday years ago. He put them on once and
immediately declared them the most comfortable shoes he had ever worn. Of
course, she knew he would love them before he even wore them. Situating herself
on the bed, she quickly glanced inside them. As far as she could tell, there
was nothing there. She felt around inside them. Nothing. Her heart sank for a
moment. As she started to pull her hand away, her fingertips brushed against
something that crinkled. Her heart soared. She tilted the shoe towards the
light and smiled when she saw the shred of paper taped to the top of the inside.
She gently tugged it free and unfolded it. “This is the final clue. Turn on the
black light in your art studio.” Again, it was Aaron’s handwriting.
She
felt hesitant now, as if finishing the treasure hunt would mean the happiness
she was feeling now – for the first time in a long time – would be gone again.
Part of her knew she could not stop now when she was so close but the other
part of her was screaming for her to stop. Catherine had no idea where this was
going. For all she knew, it would only lead to more heartache. The worry that
he had never gotten to finish setting up the treasure hunt began to set in. But
she had to try.
Holding
her breath, Catherine walked into the art studio where the blue paint from
earlier was still drying on the floor. The black light hung on the wall in the
corner. It had been a present from Aaron for Christmas one year. It was perfect
for adding details that could only be seen under black light to already
finished paintings. Aaron had joked that it was their little secret. Nervously,
she flipped on the black light. The place lit up like the Fourth of July.
Catherine’s
hand fluttered up to cover her mouth. The walls had been covered before, in
quotes from The Choice of the Solstice,
but now certain words had been painted over to stand out under the black light.
She began to piece together the puzzle in her mind. The section Aaron had
highlighted in the book flashed brightly at her from the wall now. As she spun
around to take it all in, she noticed the floor glowing at her feet. She
stepped aside to read it. Her heart stopped.
“Will
you marry me?” she whispered, reading the words aloud to herself slowly as if
they might disappear. Just underneath them was another line of text. “Turn
around.”
Her
eyes drifted closed. In that moment, she could almost imagine turning around
and opening her eyes to see Aaron waiting there. He would be on one knee,
smiling that smile that made her fall in love the first time they ever met. It
would be everything she ever hoped for. She turned around and opened her eyes,
blinking away her tears as she gazed at the empty doorway.
The
life she and Aaron had had together was done and over with. She knew that and
had known it for months. But, somehow, knowing what he had planned made the
load on her shoulders feel a little lighter. She walked over to the canvas she
had abandoned earlier. Catherine had stopped painting when Aaron died and she
lost the baby. Painting had been the only thing that made her happy anymore and
she was punishing herself. What had happened was no one’s fault. Whether or not
she fought with Aaron that morning, nothing could have prevented the car
accident and nothing could have prevented the miscarriage. She picked up the
paintbrush. For a long moment, she stood there, teetering on the edge of
something practically unknown to her after six long months. Then, she began to
paint, streaking blue across the canvas.
Brittany Franclemont is currently pursuing a BFA in Creative Writing at Stephen F.
Austin State University and has previously been published in The Piney
Dark.
I remember you, the brunette from California, with the sheet music of “Over the Rainbow” framed on your apartment wall. It was autographed by the composer of the music or the lyrics, one of them. I remember, too, clearly, how on that night we met, on the eve of the fall semester, when we first had sex, you said the Tin Man had always been your favorite, ever since you were a little girl, because he didn’t have a penis.
Sometimes I think of you, how you preferred to be eaten than penetrated. You who bragged that same night that you’d slept with over a hundred guys.
Whenever I find myself in a cemetery, I remember what you said once so many years ago—of course, in Oxford, Mississippi, when we were grad students. We’d watched Ghost at the mall theater, then visited Faulkner’s grave, admiring the stonework, and you said in the shade after some wandering, “There’s nothing sadder than seeing new flowers on old graves.”
Not many weeks later you called me to your apartment because you’d promised paramedics that you wouldn’t spend the night alone. You confessed that it wasn’t the first time you’d asphyxiated yourself but it had been your first time to call 911. You showed me the knitted rope, the bedroom doorknob. Are you beginning to remember me yet?
Then, before long, you lost your teaching post after word got out you had sex with students and your student’s friends at a frat party. We weren’t speaking by then. Different circles.
If you read this, find me on Facebook. You’ll see I’m married to a brunette from Kansas. How about that for irony—me with my Dorothy at last. But do you have your Tin Man? Are you somewhere, or anywhere, by now? If I remembered your name, my approach would’ve been entirely different.
Sidney Thompson holds an
MFA in creative writing and a Ph.D. in American literature, with a secondary
specialization in African-American narratives. He is the author of the short
story collection Sideshow, winner of Foreword Magazine’s Silver Award for Short
Story Collection of the Year (2006). His fiction has appeared in numerous
anthologies and in such literary journals as 2 Bridges Review, Atticus Review, The Carolina Quarterly, Cleaver
Magazine, The Cortland Review, Danse Macabre, Flash: The International
Short-Short Story Magazine, Grey Sparrow Journal, NANO, Prick of the Spindle,
Ragazine, and The Southern Review.
He also has a chapbook of poetry, titled You/Wee, forthcoming in December from
Prolific Press. He lives in Fort Worth, where he teaches creative writing at Texas
Christian University.
Randall Brown (I Might Never Learn and As Designed) is the author of the award-winning Mad to Live, his essay on (very) short fiction appears in The Rose Metal Press Guide to Writing Flash Fiction, and he appears in numerous anthologies. He blogs regularly at FlashFiction.Net and has been published widely, both online and in print. He is also the founder and managing editor of Matter Press and its Journal of Compressed Creative Arts. He received his MFA from Vermont College and now teaches in Rosemont College’s MFA in Creative Writing Program.
Devon Balwit‘s ([Yes, but…]) most recent collection is titled A Brief Way to Identify a Body (Ursus Americanus Press). Her individual poems can be found in The Cincinnati Review, Fifth Wednesday (online),apt, Grist, and Rattle among others. For more on her book and movie reviews, chapbooks, collections and individual works, visit her website.
Alex Chernow (your dog slept on the floor of your) is a poet, nurse, and birth doula currently residing in Baltimore. She holds degrees from NYU and Johns Hopkins, and won Boulevard magazine’s 2014 Contest for Emerging Poets. Her poetry chapbook It wouldn’t be called longing if you only did it for a little while is forthcoming from dancing girl press.
Brittany Franclemont (The Nursery Walls) is currently pursuing a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Creative Writing at Stephen F. Austin State University and has previously had her work published in The Piney Dark.
Stacey Johnson (Between the Living and the Dead: A Chernobyl Monologue) writes and teaches in San Diego County, where she is a current MFA candidate at San Diego State University. Her work has appeared in The Adirondack Review, A Year In Ink, and various small online publications. She lives with her daughter, Grace, who inspires everything.
Kyle Laws (Apology in the Sand) is based out of the Arts Alliance Studios Community in Pueblo, CO where she directs Line/Circle: Women Poets in Performance. Her collections include Faces of Fishing Creek (Middle Creek Publishing), So Bright to Blind (Five Oaks Press), and Wildwood (Lummox Press). Ride the Pink Horse is forthcoming from Spartan Press. With six nominations for a Pushcart Prize, her poems and essays have appeared in magazines and anthologies in the U.S., U.K., and Canada. She is the editor and publisher of Casa de Cinco Hermanas Press.
Jennifer Martelli (Low-/Tide Heart of Mine and The Broken Cherry, The Poplar, The Yew) is the author of MyTarantella (forthcoming, Bordighera Press), as well as the chapbook, After Bird (Grey Book Press, winner of the open reading, 2016). Her work has appeared or will appear in Verse Daily, The Sonora Review, Iron HorseReview (winner, Photo Finish contest), The Sycamore Review, Sugar House, Superstition Review,Thrush, and Tinderbox Poetry Journal. Her prose and artwork have been published in Five-2-One, The Baltimore Review, and Green Mountains Review. Jennifer Martelli has been nominated for Pushcart and Best of the Net Prizes and is the recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Council Grant in Poetry. She is a poetry editor for The Mom Egg Review.
Marcus Meade (Kick Me in the Nuts for $20?) is an Assistant Professor – General Faculty at the University of Virginia in the Academic and Professional Writing Program. He focuses primarily on scholarship in Rhetoric and Composition, but occasionally finds time to write short fiction, music, and baseball commentary. His interests are eclectic, but his intent is always the same, to write something that helps people.
Anna Rac (Illustrator) is an abstract expressionist painter who explores the connection between music and painting. Playing piano since the age of four, Anna graduated with a degree in music from the University of Illinois, and now uses classical music to inspire her artwork. She describes her painting process as an immersive and emotional experience. From music to canvas, her spontaneous approach results in works that are lyrical, dynamic, and multilayered—much like the music from which she draws inspiration. She uses a variety of media and tools to create her compositions. Born in Poland, she now lives in Naples and is an active member of the Florida Artists Group, Naples Art District, and Naples Art Association. Anna’s paintings can be found in galleries in Florida, as well as many private collections in the States and abroad.
Laurie Saurborn (Graft) is the author of two poetry collections, Industry of Brief Distraction and Carnavoria, and a chapbook, Patriot. An NEA Creative Writing Fellowship recipient, her work has appeared in publications such as jubilat, storySouth, The Cincinnati Review, The Southern Review, The Rumpus, and Tupelo Quarterly. Previously, she taught creative writing at the University of Texas at Austin, where she directed the undergraduate creative writing program. She is currently pursuing a graduate degree in psychiatric mental health nursing at Ohio State. Find her at lauriesaurborn.com.
Robert Sachs’ (The Esterlink) work has appeared most recently in The Louisville Review, the Chicago Quarterly Review, and the Delmarva Review. He earned an M.F.A. in Writing from Spalding University in 2009. His story, “Vondelpark,” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2017. Originally from Chicago, he currently lives in Louisville, Kentucky. He serves on the board of Louisville Literary Arts. Read more at www.roberthsachs.com.
Sidney Thompson (To Dorothy) holds an MFA in creative writing and a Ph.D. in American literature, with a secondary specialization in African-American narratives. He is the author of the short story collection Sideshow, winner of Foreword Magazine’s Silver Award for Short Story Collection of the Year (2006). His fiction has appeared in numerous anthologies and in such literary journals as 2 Bridges Review, Atticus Review, The Carolina Quarterly, Cleaver Magazine, The Cortland Review, Danse Macabre, Flash: The International Short-Short Story Magazine, Grey Sparrow Journal, NANO, Prick of the Spindle, Ragazine, and The Southern Review. He also has a chapbook of poetry, titled You/Wee, forthcoming in December from Prolific Press. He lives in Fort Worth, where he teaches creative writing at Texas Christian University.
Hananah Zaheer (Stitches and Final Exam) is a fiction editor for Four Way Review. Her recent work has appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review where it won the Lawrence Foundation Literary prize for 2017, Alaska Quarterly Review, Gargoyle, Moon City Review, Westview and Willow Review, among others. She received a 2016 Pushcart nomination from Moon City Review and has been awarded fellowships by the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts (VCCA) and Rivendell Writers’ Colony.
Reflux runs in my family, burning even as babies, a sharp cringe in every snapshot. This esophageal squall tastes like shredded Firestones, a tired ache that settled in my father’s Adam’s apple. Extended into sinuses, eroded cracks, soft fissures, until he could no longer stomach margaritas with my mother. The outlawed repertoire might leave lesser men impoverished: no lemon tang, no hot press of garlic, no avocado butter. Chocolate turned volatile: no beer, wine, briny cocktail. But my father relaxed into restrictions: a kiosk of pots with broth and worms. Eating without, craving pittance. But not me, no, I continue to burn.
Randall Brown is
the author of the award-winning Mad to
Live, his essay on (very) short fiction appears in The Rose Metal Press Guide to Writing Flash Fiction, and he appears
in numerous anthologies. He blogs regularly at FlashFiction.Net and has been
published widely, both online and in print. He is also the founder and managing
editor of Matter Press and its Journal of
Compressed Creative Arts. He received his MFA from Vermont College and now
teaches in Rosemont College’s MFA in Creative Writing Program.
“I Might Never Learn” first appeared in Corium Magazine.
More and more, he finds himself in the psychedelia of Farmville, the land of Teletubbies without the creatures: crops, a cottage, a line of cherry trees, all of it his. Blueberries to arise in four hours, tomatoes to plant, watermelons to fertilize. He’s saving up for a tractor or seeder. He pets the Clydesdales, gathers the wool, collects truffles from the pigs. He walks along the white-washed fence, passing the red, purple, yellow hay bales. Someone has painted GROOVY onto the day-glo barn. No neighbors’ dogs bark; no face peers over the fence or through the evergreens. A duck sits on an anvil. Any second the pink roses will bloom. Later, the daffodils, the red tulips. A bug in the system has made crops unable to shrivel. There’s no need to harvest, but he keeps to the schedule. Except for the daisies, like miniature suns or cracked-open eggs, alive for weeks, undead, desperate to…. In the corner, by the tombstones, fallow land waits to be plowed. Somewhere a phone rings, like an alarm. Somewhere, a pile of papers. Somewhere, a text. Pick me up. Take me here. Remember to get the milk. Somewhere, outside of Farmville, someone works madly to fix that glitch so flowers will wither, as they should.
Randall Brown is the author of the award-winning Mad to Live, his essay on (very) short fiction appears in The Rose Metal Press Guide to Writing Flash Fiction, and he appears in numerous anthologies. He blogs regularly at FlashFiction.Net and has been published widely, both online and in print. He is also the founder and managing editor of Matter Press and its Journal of Compressed Creative Arts. He received his MFA from Vermont College and now teaches in Rosemont College’s MFA in Creative Writing Program.