“Arias” by Mardith Louisell

Five years after my younger sister Barbara  died of a malignant brain tumor, I moved from Minnesota to California. I loved the soft tilt of the large round hills, the unfiltered California light, the green Irish spring and golden Italian summer.  Being alone, without Barbara, wasn’t what I had thought would happen. When she died, both of us were in our forties and neither of us had married.I had presumed that the two of us would age, visiting each other’s homes where we would both wash dishes with a sponge, not a rag, use SOS for burned pans, and, like Mother, wrap everything in plastic. Eventually we would end up in a nursing home, eccentric old maids rocking side by side; I imagined her tormenting me with her singing.

Instead I sat in my dusty studio in the Marin Headlands overlooking the Pacific Ocean and just across the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco.  It was a 170 square foot garret in an old army quarterhouse with rutted floor boards that caught my chair as I rolled from one part of the room to another, and in the inflated real estate market, I was lucky to have it. In summer my room was often cold and smelled of the spit of the swallows that nested in the eaves. If I opened the skylight, the resident cat jumped out on the roof and attacked the swallows.

In this room for the next five years, I tried to resurrect my sister. At times, Barb’s spirit had given me a friendly wave, and at other times, chastised me as it emanated from one vertical file cabinet, then another, from Minneapolis to San Francisco and places in-between. Now, a yellow folder sat at the front of the file cabinet, luminous against the royal blue hanging file. When I unpacked the files, I felt I was removing a body wrapped in fragile papyrus.

I had Barb’s dresser and desk, I wore her chartreuse harem pants and her red and black striped socks. I had a soft leather purse with her pink plastic comb, boxes of letters, and wads of photographs in rubber bands. I had her sheet music and her scribblings about the voice lessons she took. I drove her 86 Camry across the country and back. I had her eulogy and three-inch thick binders filled with notes and flip chart pages on which I had written “What is the meaning?”

Perhaps our meaning was in singing, maybe even our faith, certainly our hope was. The women in our family had been as one with the Metropolitan Opera as Texaco, which sponsored the Met’s Saturday afternoon broadcasts from 1940 to 2003. My grandmother in Massachusetts sang to those broadcasts and so did my mother in Duluth, Minnesota, turning the volume so high that the basses and sopranos rocked through the oak doors of our house, from the den to the kitchen where, apron tied around her middle, Mother sponged dishes and sang along with Leontyne Price, even though a high school chorus teacher had told her to mouth the words in chorus. Unless the opera were extraordinarily long, broadcasts started unfailingly at 1:00 and my mother refused any invitations for Saturday afternoon.

When each of the three sisters in the family reached fifth grade, our parents took us to the Metropolitan Opera, which toured every year in Minneapolis. Riding in the back seat of the old Buick into downtown Minneapolis, I saw the Pillsbury and General Mills factories stationed like sentries over the Mississippi River. To me they meant, not farming and food processing, but opera and food. In the Curtis Hotel, I walked importantly through the green and red train style lobby, ate in the hotel coffee shop, walked through Dayton’s Department Store with my mother, saw the sunset glow a deeper gold than in Duluth and sniffed grainer, less piney smells. All of this was going to the opera. After I left Minnesota and returned to Minneapolis for graduate school,  by which time the Curtis Hotel had been demolished, my feelings remained the same about the opera and so did Barb’s, who had entered law school in Minneapolis.

That year, the May of opera week was humid and hot and the auditorium wasn’t air-conditioned. Three times that week, Barb and I  joined the opera mavens, their long silk gowns rustling in the soft night breeze, high heels clicking on the stone plaza of Northrup Auditorium. The first night we dressed in black and white and pretended to be ushers. The second night we wore our dress-up hippie clothes, long, pink and black flowered skirts with peasant blouses. The skirts would blend colorfully with the gowns the wealthier patrons wore – we would fit right in, we were sure of it. At the end of the first act, imitating the privileged patrons, we strode to empty seats in the first row. Jittery, we eased into the maroon velvet. A well-dressed matron stopped us and said, “These are not your seats!” We stood up, smiled and walked with injured dignity to the side of the auditorium, where we remained until we found a seat for the next act.

The last night of the opera there were no empty seats in the front rows. We stood at the side and as soon as the curtain went up, Barb beckoned me, then walked across the first row of seats, crossed the few yards separating the audience from the orchestra, and casually walked towards the seven steps on the far left that led to the stage. Praying that I was invisible I followed. There we sat, on the fourth and fifth steps, nearly on the stage, twenty feet away from the silver streaked hair of Cesare Siepi, who was singing Mephistopheles in Faust, his tall lanky body packed into a red jacket threaded with gold and silver. The dimension and timbre of his bass voice slid into every cavity of our bodies in the same way a morning jump into Lake Superior cuts to your vital organs and makes your body tingle until nightfall. My ears reverberated and my heart beat – in part I was afraid we would be asked to leave but Barbara wasn’t perturbed – she hummed along with the music. I  heard the music note by note, the melody almost fragmented, each note becoming both more and less than it was alone as it joined up with the others and strolled or marched or leapt toward the end of the aria.

It was certainly possible that we would be kicked off the stage steps and tossed out of the auditorium, but I went with Barb year after year because to hear Violetta die in La Traviata and Lucia go mad in Lucia di Lammermoor from six yards away thrilled me. Concentrated in one night were all the bliss and fear I had yet imagined. I felt proud going to the opera with Barbara in the same way I had felt special when my parents took me in fifth grade. I was going with  someone who cared. It was my good luck to be with her.

After Barbara passed the bar exam and joined my dad’s Duluth law practice, she took voice lessons in Duluth and kept written vocal instructions in a booklet lined with bass and treble clefs, as she practiced arias from the operas we had seen as children. She did breathing exercises every day and learned how to support the voice and how to locate the place where the sound comes from, behind the bridge of the nose, deep in the sinus cavities.

Eight years later, Barbara was diagnosed with a brain tumor that started in her visual cortex. “If I hadn’t identified so strongly with Violetta when I was a little girl,” she cried as I sat with her in the hospital, “do you think this would have happened?” Violetta, a young courtesan, is Alfredo’s lover in Verdi’s opera La Traviata. Alfredo’s father begs Violetta to leave Alfredo so that Alfredo’s sister can make a good marriage. Violetta, sick with tuberculosis, is reluctant to leave the man she loves, and during the duet, you’re not sure what will happen, she could go either way. Finally, generously, she  forsakes Alfredo and moves to the country to die of tuberculosis. Believing himself abandoned, Alfredo rages. When at last he learns of  Violetta’s sacrifice, he rushes to her bedroom and they are reunited. Minutes later she dies. Barb and I grew up listening to La Traviata as my mother played it on the old mahogany record player in the front hall. We both thought it could be the most beautiful opera ever written. Verdi’s combination of tragedy and score – the troubled relationship of father and son, the family pride, the illness-crossed love of Alfredo and Violetta, the courtesan who sacrifices so another woman can marry in an almost feminist gesture – all of this thrilled us. Oh, to be so grand, to love so well, to sacrifice so nobly. To die so beautifully. Barbara had always identified with Violetta, I think because she felt things wouldn’t work out in her own life, and because Verdi’s flowing melodies express a bittersweet longing for all that is unattainable.The story would be melodrama without the music. The despairing “Addio” is filled with longing and the melody searches. Why do we enjoy wallowing in sad music? Because the song’s end promises, not joy, but the knowledge that others have felt what we feel. If you know an aria, you silently join in that place at the top of your soft palette where music soars. You feel it in your chest and throat and lift your rib cage, involuntarily breathing as though you were singing, and climb over and under, up and down, your pleasure in the melody and the search propelling the aria forward. The music of “Addio del passato,” which Violetta sings at the end of La Traviata, melds a sublime musical line with an earthly story, guiding you from loss, to rage against that loss, until, eventually, over the course of the aria, you are able to reflect on what happened. After she got the tumor, Barb couldn’t see well but she could still sing while I played. She sat scrunched against me on the piano bench, so close that my arm couldn’t move. Then she stood. “It’s better to sing standing and better to see too,” she added.

“I can’t see either, Barb,” I said.

“You act like you don’t believe I can’t see.  You don’t want to admit what is happening to me because it makes you unhappy.  You’re trying to make me feel better, but it doesn’t.” I was lucky we continued. I stilled my back and shoulders so they didn’t betray contradiction. Only my fingers moved. She was so close I could smell her if we hadn’t smelled so much alike that I smelled nothing. Would she sulk? I couldn’t see very well but who could say how well I saw compared to her or what made it dark – the light or the angle or the blindness caused by the tumor? We had really believed, Barb and I,  we could burrow inside each other’s skin or behind each other’s eyes, that we knew what the other was feeling. Now I couldn’t make the leaps of understanding that came so easily before. I couldn’t be inside her head. I was careful not to look at her in case that made her angrier. I couldn’t see what she saw. I could only see how to find the keys in her purse and open the door to the porch, how to put bright lights in her lamps, and when to shut the windows because it might rain. I could only see that she wanted to sing and I waned to play. A match. Rejoice!

“Shhh,” I whispered, meaning, “Sing softer.”

“Were you telling me to be quieter?  I haven’t sung in over six months. I am lucky to get out anything at all much less the variances necessary to do it At the piano I kept silent, breathed slowly, acted calm. I loved playing and hearing her sing the arias from La Traviata, Un di felice – A happy day, Sempre libera – Forever free, and Addio del passato.

Ten years after Barbara died, I walked down a sandy hill to the Pacific and felt the familiar tears welling up as I thought about Barbara’s lengthy and violent dying. I had cried almost every day, sometimes several times, from loss, guilt, anger, all the usual emotions of grief. Startling myself, I thought, “I don’t have to cry.” I felt some guilt, as though I were choosing to ignore Barb. I smiled anyway. It was a windy afternoon softened by warm moisture from the sea. The hills were blossoming with bushes of lavender lupine and on the sand were unruly spreads of fuchsia iceplant. I heard the brown pelicans’ wings tapping softly against the water in Rodeo Lagoon when they landed. In 1962, Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring, for which I imagine these brown pelicans, nearly wiped out by DDT then, flap their wings in gratitude. Carson herself died of breast cancer in 1964, but not before visiting Rodeo Lagoon in a wheelchair to witness fifty brown pelicans gliding to the ocean on their huge floppy wings and splash-landing in the water. Before that day, I hadn’t known that one could choose not to be sad, not to cry, that one could move around in the mind like a chessboard, taking a pawn and sliding it to a safe place instead of placing it directly in the path of  the queen. At the turnoff on Coastal Trail, I started singing. I had begun singing lessons nine years after Barb died and I breathed through my diaphragm and tried to flare my nostrils and smile, as my singing teacher had instructed me. In classical singing, you pull your chin down, push out your diaphragm, let your stomach flop, flare your nostrils, flatten your tongue, make fish lips and smile. When I neared the east end of the lagoon, nostrils flaring and stomach flopping, I thought I was singing well.Addio, dorati sogni, cari fantasmi, addio. . . .  (Farewell, golden dreams, dear spirits, farewell. There is no room for you in my heart anymore.) My teacher picked this song for me, along with Come Away Death by Sibelius, Dido’s Lament by Purcell, and several other death-oriented arias. It troubled me that she thought I was suited only for death. The music of Addio has an agitated marching rhythm and an acrobatic melody but the lyrics are angry and depressed: “Woe is me, in the strife of the world sorrow cannot be forgotten. Death is the only true farewell and that pleases me.” It pleased me to sing the song, but I didn’t understand its emotions until I remembered Barb saying she needed distance from me. By the time she said that, I had thought things would be peaceful but they weren’t. I saw that it was wrenching for her to pull away from the living and when Barb pulled away, I felt like she’d socked me in the stomach.

Suddenly, in front of me in Rodeo Lagoon, a Great Blue Heron lifted its terrific wing spread and flew to the next cove. My body on the shore seemed utterly unimpressive and finite. I walked to the bridge over the lagoon and she did it again, flying back to where my singing had disturbed her. She landed on the grey rocks and was still. After a few seconds, I couldn’t make her out. Perfectly camouflaged. I began to sing again.

 

 

Mardith Louisell has published essays, profiles, and book reviews in Italy, A Love Story, The House on Via Gombito Street, The Best American Erotica, and in journals and magazines. She writes about music, color, obsession, the WWII Holocaust, feminism, food and relationships. She lives in San Francisco where she works in child welfare and just finished singing the Mozart Requiem.

“Alameda Street” (Author Unknown)

 

The yellow light turned red. Emma expected a miracle from her mother. The magic trick.
But maybe there’d never be another day like the time they got off the freeway and
every light on Alameda street turned green with a flick of her mother’s wrist.

Emma loved and hated Alameda street. She loved it when she and her mother drove
away from their South-Central apartment to Griffith Park to see the horses or to
Redondo Beach to ride the ferryboat. She hated the dreariness of the street and only
liked the Farmer John factory with its pictures of happy pigs and Farmer John himself,
wearing blue overalls and a big hat. She listened for the sound of snorting pigs, but
only smelled a nasty odor of raw bacon.

“Can we have McDonald’s tonight?” Emma said.

“We have left-over steak from Sizzler’s. We also have hot dogs,” her mother said.

“Hot dogs. You’ve got to be kidding.”

“Do I look like I’m kidding?” Her mother scrunched her lips to her left cheek and made
the I’m-not-kidding face.

Emma thought her mother’s I’m-not-kidding face was stupid. She wasn’t a baby; she
was ten and a half years old.

The light turned green again, but a slow car in front of them boxed their blue Datsun
next to a beat-up pickup truck the color of rust and swimming pool algae. The driver of
the pickup caught Emma’s attention as he flapped his pink puckered lips, his white shirt
billowed like a pirate ship’s sail. Emma pretended not to see the dark-haired stranger
and the guy next to him blowing kisses at her.

Her mother smiled and drew Emma’s bangs away from her eyes.

“Give them a thrill, baby. You can do it.” Her mother blew a kiss to the pickup as it
slowed passed them.

The men turned. Their eyes widened as they smiled back and gave each other a loud
high-five slap.

Emma didn’t say anything.

“Flirt with them a little.” Her mother winked and shimmied her shoulders.

“Mom.” Emma wrinkled her nose and stared hard at her mother.

“I won’t tell grandma.” Her mother persisted.

“I don’t care.” She flung her bangs back over her eyes and plucked at her split ends.

Emma was lost in her thoughts when the men in the rusty truck caught up with them
again. The driver in the white shirt gave Emma a strange look she didn’t understand like
she had taken something from him or like he knew her.

“I like your smile, mamita.” The driver licked his lips as he made goo-goo eyes at Emma.
“Que chula you are linda bebita,” he said.

She frowned at him. Emma wanted to make a gagging gesture, but instead looked
straight ahead.

Her mother was no longer flirting with the men. Her smile had faded back to the I’m-
not-kidding look.

The pickup truck stayed next to them.

“This is my nephew. Do you like him? Do you like me?” The driver gave Emma a gold-
toothy smile.

Emma jerked her head and looked away from him.

“Roll up the window and write down their license plate number.” Her mother sped up,
then slowed down and went around the pickup truck.

“Mom. There’s nothing to write with.” She rifled through the glove compartment. But
only found the Pat Benatar bumper sticker she’d been looking for, her charm bracelet,
and a plastic spoon.

No pens, pencils, crayons, or markers.

“It’s okay, sweetheart. They’ll go away,” she said. “Remember the license plate.”

Her mother flipped the men off with her middle finger held high in the rear view mirror.
In return, the driver flicked his skinny tongue up and down. The pickup truck looped
over and passed her mother on her left and then slowed down.

“Your girl’s fine. Like her foxy mama,” the driver yelled. He stuck out his tongue and
pretended to lick a popsicle. He continued to slobber and drool like her uncle Oscar’s
German Shepherd.

“What creeps!” Her mother rolled up her window and maneuvered the Datsun to the far
right lane.

Emma knew her mother wasn’t able to change the light fast enough to get away from
those guys.

She’d lost her magic.

It frightened Emma to see her mother looking so scared and wild-eyed, the way she got
whenever the man, who supposedly was her father, dropped in on them.

They came to another light. The men were not in sight, but Emma pleaded silently for
the light to change.

“One, two, change,” Emma whispered. Only her words sounded loud like a car coming
to a screeching halt on the freeway.

Something did happen. But it wasn’t the signal changing to green. Their car rocked
back and forth like a bumper car ride at Knott’s Berry Farm. The jolt shook their necks
forward. Emma reached for the useless, broken seatbelt at her side and flinched at the
sight of her mother’s arm flashing across her chest. It was those guys in the pickup
truck.

The men blew kisses back at them and laughed as they gunned their engine and
honked. As their car sped down Alameda, Emma’s mother seemed equally eager to put
dust between her and the pickup. Without waiting for the red light to change, she hung
an illegal left onto Gage Avenue and the Datsun rattled over the railroad tracks. Her
mother wiped another tear away and looked nervously into the rearview mirror.

“Mom! The light was red.”

“Tranquila, m’hijita.” Her mother kept her eyes on the road. “Tranquila,” she repeated.
She murmured to herself as if reciting a Hail Mary.

Emma was grateful to see the sights of her neighborhood, Magda’s gaudy, pink house,
the McDonald’s golden arches, and their beige appartment building in the distance. She
vowed never to let her mother play that game again. She wanted to say I told you so.
But her mother’s face glistened, trails of sweat and tears rolled past her lips.

“Roll down your window. It’s stuffy in here.” Her mother wiped her face with her fingers.

Emma tried to think of something to say to make her mother feel better. “I memorized
the license number,” was all she managed.

“Don’t worry. They’re gone.” She stroked Emma’s hair.

Once home, her mother drew open the kitchen curtains to let the late summer light into
their dark apartment. She tugged the bathroom’s accordion door open, showered, then
blow-dried her hair. The rickety accordion door snapped ajar.

“Are we going somewhere?” Emma stood high on her tiptoes and clasped her hands
tightly.

“I’m going out. You’re staying home.” Steam drifted out as her mother pushed in the
flimsy door.

“But it’s your day off.” Emma tried to sound like she was having a mature conversation
with her mother.

“And I’m going out,” her mother said.

“But you promised. And those–.”

“We went to the car wash. We went to the park. You rode the ponies. We got ice
cream and you had a pretzel. Don’t I deserve some fun?”

“Who are you going with?” Emma said.

“I don’t know. One of Lucy’s coworkers.”

“A blind date! After what happened to us, you’re going to meet some weirdo?” Emma
rolled her eyes, threw her hands in the air. Emma knew she was acting like a baby, but
she continued to sigh and whine.

Her mother eyed Emma with her serious face. “Basta! No more of this. He works with
Lucy and she’ll be there with her date. Okay!”

Emma went into the bedroom and closed the door. But she soon crept back to the
hallway where she watched her mother put on her make-up. Emma thought her mother
looked like a movie star when she dressed up. Like one of Charlie’s Angels. Her mother
caught her crouching near the door and handed her the black pencil. Emma took the
eyeliner and melted it with the stove’s flame. She ran back to the bathroom so her
mother could make the line under her eyes while the pencil was still hot. Her mother put
red lipstick on Emma and they gave each other air kisses so they wouldn’t smudge their
cherried lips.

“See. I can be fun.” Emma made one last attempt to change her mother’s mind.

“I know, baby. But when you start dating, you won’t even remember you have a
mother.

Besides you’ll be snoring when I get home.” Her mother slipped on a short black dress
over a bra and pantyhose.

“Not true.” Emma slumped on her vinyl bean bag in front of the television set.

“Will you get to bed on time?” Her mother adjusted the strap on her heels.

“Yes, mommy, dearest. I’ll say my prayers and brush my teeth too.” Emma used the
falsetto voice she knew grated on her mother’s nerves.

“Don’t be smart, young lady.” Her mother said slowly, but loudly through her clenched
teeth.

“You have Mrs. Garcia’s number from upstairs.” Her voice returned to normal and she
pointed to her knit sweater. Emma dutifully brought it and draped it over her mother’s
bent arm. Her mother kissed Emma on the top of her forehead, the sweet spot–she
called it.

Emma went back to sulking.

Before she left, her mother shook a box of macaroni and cheese, left it on the kitchen
counter and then waved goodbye. Emma was not excited about cooking the pasta for
dinner. She pulled a big fake smile as her mother gestured for her to also lock the
deadbolt.

Emma brushed her teeth and went to bed. But she couldn’t sleep. A few times during
the night, she thought she heard the rumble of the rusty pickup truck’s engine. She
worried until she heard the locks click open and heels lightly tap across the linoleum.
Emma closed her eyes and relaxed into sleep. She knew her mother was safe tonight.

 

 

Author Unknown. If you are the author of this piece or know who is, please let us know at r.kv.r.y.editor(at)gmail(dot)com. We lost records when the old website imploded, and would like to fully credit all authors who have generously shared their work with us. Thank you.

“Balancing Act: No Net Required” (Author Unknown)

 

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I enter the house, balancing the dry cleaning and a bag of
groceries, and discover the door is unlocked. Damn, Kaitlin. How many
times have I told you to check the lock before you get on the bus! Or did
you lose your key again? When she gets home… I feel a twinge of guilt.
She is reliable, and I give her so much responsibility…Damn, it! I trip over
something and almost drop the groceries. Did she leave her backpack
again… Oh. It’s his bags. He let himself in the same way he had gone out.

He’s back.

My stomach knots, a hundred twisting, tearing knots. I balance
myself against the wall, suppressing the need to vomit. I remember this
feeling. The panic, the loss of breath. The pain. The day I came home
from work, carrying a bag of Chinese take-out, finding his drawers
empty, his bags gone. And all the days, and nights, after that first day,
the terrible, gnawing, suffocating pain…But it had disappeared. I had
managed to pack it away in the unknown closets of my heart.

Until now.

What was once the anxiety of his absence is now the regret of his
return. I had survived the rejection, endured the humiliation. I had finally
picked myself up, steadied myself. How dare he come back now!

I stand in the doorway, shifting the weight of the bag against my
heaving chest, Afraid to enter my own home. Gathering courage through
righteous anger. I can hear the intruder in the kitchen.

He steps out, carrying a pile of folded shirts. He is doing his laundry.
He isn’t back! Only stopped by to take care of his dirty laundry.

How tidy.

We face one another. We do not speak because there is too much
to say. Why did you leave me? Why can’t you love me? What do I do
now? Questions hang over our heads, suspended by silence, building an
insurmountable wall between us.

Again he fills his bags with garments now washed gray. He is bent
over, at my feet. I stand like a warrior, the dry cleaning slung over my
shoulder, groceries beneath one arm, afraid to breathe least I fall. No one
speaks.

He zips the back with finality and maneuvers around my balanced
body. He turns his back to go, carrying his bags one on each side, like
the scales of justice. I watch him leave, wondering why I feel guilty in the
service of this life sentence. I notice how easily he manages the stairs.
His baggage does not weigh him down.

Now I am alone, again. The door remains open, making me feel
vulnerable, so I kick it shut with one foot. Alone, until Kaitlin comes home
with her backpack full of books and crumpled papers.

When I was young, my grandmother took me to the circus. I
remember the acrobats. The Flying Wallendas. A family climbing into a
pyramid and balancing upon the high wire. I was terrified for them.

“Don’t worry,” my Grammy assured me. “They are a family. They
have practiced supporting one another. See how easily the man holds
the woman upon his shoulders? See how the children are balanced
against their mother. They are holding each other up.”

“But what if one of them falls?” I persisted.

“Well, sometimes that happens,” Grammy admitted. “One may
falter, or get tired and let go. Then they will all be off-balanced.”

“Will they die?”

“Not if there is a net beneath. With a net, they bounce back. Of
course, they have to climb back to the top, and they are no doubt angry,
probably embarrassed, knowing everyone is watching. It doesn’t make
for a very good show.”

“What if there is no net?”

“Well,” the old woman sighed, “that has happened. People died.
Others were crippled, paralyzed.”

What the hell kind of show is that, I thought then. I think it now.

I am crying. Tears of regret and of relief. He is gone. I am still
standing. I try to wipe my eyes, but my hands are full. Juggling the
groceries and the dry cleaning, I step lightly across the tight rope into
my future.

 

Author Unknown. If you are the author of this piece or know who is, please let us know at r.kv.r.y.editor(at)gmail(dot)com. We lost records when the old website imploded, and would like to fully credit all authors who have generously shared their work with us. Thank you.

“Debbie’s Ranch” by Scott Kauffman

https://www.reviewjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/web1_welcometonevada_7069366.jpg

Eddie McCoy was an hour’s drive out of Battle Mountain, Nevada, heading north on U.S. 95 for the Oregon border, when he slowed his Ford pickup and eased it onto the shoulder. He cut the engine, and the cylinders misfired and rattled on for a few seconds more before a final, smoky cough belched from the exhaust pipe. Eddie opened the door and stepped down into the sand, leaving his keys in the ignition. He limped around the truck bed and on out into the desert, his head down, his hands clasped behind his back, the look about him of a man who had reached the end of something.

A hundred yards from the truck Eddie came upon a shoulder-high boulder. He pulled himself up and sat, his legs dangling over the edge. A crimson fan of light was unfolding before the Rockies as the sun came up, blood red and as squat as a knifed-out heart somebody had put his boot to. Eddie reached into a shirt pocket for his Winstons and shook one out. He was edging a thumbnail under the matchbook cover when he noticed her. Eddie took out his cigarette. Pointed at him from the midnight-blue cover was a bent over, thonged bottom. Looking around from in front of the bottom smiled a woman with shoulder-length hair the color of dirty snow, “Debbie’s Ranch” etched above her head in an arc of pink script.

He shook his head. “Now, who in Hell ever heard of a cathouse advertising themselves with matchbooks? Like they was a bar or a restaurant. Some filling station a dad might consider stopping by for a Pepsi with his kids.”

Eddie rubbed a callused thumb over the woman’s bottom, shapely as any in a cowboy dream. “Well, I guess there’s a somebody out there who’s thought of everything you ain’t and are unlikely to ever will.”

He had gotten off I-80 a mile south of Battle Mountain the evening before, so dazed from the day’s driving he almost missed the exit. Twenty-four hours earlier, the clerk behind the desk in a Motel Six on the other side of Cheyenne had asked him when he checked in if he cared to reserve the room for a second night. The Weather Service was calling for a freak summer snowstorm to hit before the next nightfall.

“Room’s will be gone before you know it.” The clerk nodded at Eddie’s feet. “Hellfire, son. We’ll have folks sleeping where you’re standing.”

Eddie showered, and after he came out he sat on the bed wrapped in the towel and considered waiting out the storm in his room, catch up on some sleep. One turn through the channels on the chained-to-the-wall television settled his decision for him otherwise. Re-runs of sitcoms with no plots he thought dumb and had refused to watch the first time they’d been on. Mindless game shows with mindless contestants. People jawing about their problems who wouldn’t know a real one if it came up and kicked them in their rumps grown wide from sitting around jawing about their problems. He was up and on the road before dawn.

His truck had no air conditioning, and by evening Eddie was dehydrated from driving first
through the mountains and then the high desert. He hadn’t eaten anything since the jelly
doughnut he’d scarfed down in the motel lobby when he was checking out, and now he could hear his stomach growling even with the wind blasting through both rolled-down windows. The gas gauge needle was riding on “E” and had been for fifteen minutes. There were no cars before him and none behind, and with his bum leg, unless somebody stopped, he’d be crow bait before he limped into the next town.

Five days before, Eddie had blinked his eyes open at 4:44. The same time as he did every
morning. No alarm clock needed. He reached for Lisa, but because he was sleeping on the couch, his hand found only air.

Eddie unwound the sheet he had wrapped himself into during the night and swung his legs to the carpet and went into the quarter-bath off the kitchen. When he came out, he switched on the overhead stove light and from a cupboard took out a can of Fancy Feast. He stooped and divided it between Satchmoe and Sophie. The kitties were sitting by their respective bowls, in no hurry to get at their food and instead watching him, their ears perked, judging by his voice, his stroke of their coats, whether they would spend the day napping on their sun nook or hiding out in closet corners. On his way to the sink, Eddie emptied their water bowls in the one potted fern out of a dozen he’d not managed to kill. He filled the bowls and returned them and walked back to the bedroom.

He opened the closet door and with his toe poked at the pile of clothes heaped on the floor. He bent over and picked out a blue-denim shirt, and before he reached his arms into its sleeves he held it to his nose. As Eddie buttoned up the front, he sucked in the Rolling-Rock belly he’d been working on. He pulled on his gray canvas trousers, abraded and threadbare at the knees, and reached for his steel-toed boots. Before lacing up the left, he reached in a finger and traced the scar slicing his Achilles tendon.

“You ain’t dreamed of doin’ nothing since the day you bought this.” He took out his finger and knotted the laces. “Maybe it’s time you started.”

Eddie returned to the kitchen and scooped uncooked oatmeal into a bowl and poured over it last week’s milk. He walked out to the picture window in the living room and, as he ate, watched a full moon set over the duck pond across the street.

At the midmorning break, Eddie shut down his arc weld and walked into the supervisor’s office, his work cap in hand behind his back and asked for a couple of weeks off.

“Surprised you hadn’t asked for any before now.”

“Yes, sir.”

“You came in the day after the funeral.”

Eddie shifted his cap to his other hand. He looked at the office door window, its smoky, pebbled glass opaque. “I like to stay busy. Keeps me from wandering where I shouldn’t.”

After his shift let out, Eddie gassed up the truck and from a rack of roadmaps took one for the eastern half of the country. He’d have gotten one for the western states too, but the attendant said there wasn’t sufficient demand for the station to justify stocking them.

When he got home, Eddie walked next door to Jude and Christina Hardy’s. In their mailbox he laid a note with feeding instructions for the kitties and dropped his key on top of the note and crossed back across their lawns. Eddie put a TV dinner in the oven and went into the bedroom and packed a duffle bag and his toilet kit. At his dresser, Eddie studied her photograph, twisting his wedding band back and forth on his finger as if it were a lock whose combination he couldn’t quite get. He took it off and laid it before the frame, a thumb resting for a moment on the gold rim. Ten minutes later Eddie had eaten his half cooked supper and was in the truck, his Thermos of black coffee on the seat beside him, headed up Route 7 toward the Turnpike.

* * *

At the Battle Mountain exit, Eddie turned right and followed the sign pointing to town and
stopped at the first filling station he came to. He pulled up to one of eight rows of pumps and turned off the ignition and sat back in his seat. He looked at the gas gauge and tapped it with a knuckle. The needle didn’t so much as flicker.

He got out of his truck and walked around to a pump and studied the prices before he crossed the cement concourse and pushed open the door to the station. Behind the counter were two teenage boys, one slouched against the cash register, the other, his arms raised like a prize fighter, jabbing into the air with quick left stabs as he recounted a street fight he had witnessed the night before. The two wore identical sky-blue shirts with “Earl” stitched above the breast pocket of one and “Sam” above that of the other. Out of each ink-stained pocket protruded an air gauge and half a dozen pens. All twenty of their fingernails were broken and jagged and grease filled. They wore khaki-colored baseball caps, which bore above the bill a red and yellow “Sanderson’s Shell” decal. Out from under the caps spilled their oily, collar-length hair. Earl was cultivating a wispy mustache, and both were badly pimpled from a filling station fare of Cokes and Snickers and Lays, their faces red-budded like cactus flowers ready to pop.

Sam, the boy behind the cash register, straightened when Eddie came in. “Yes, sir?”

Eddie reached into a back pocket for his wallet and took out two fives and a ten and lay the bills on the counter. “Twenty on number thirteen pump.”

Sam reached for the money with one hand and rang up the purchase with the other. “Yes, sir. Twenty on lucky thirteen.”

Eddie turned to go, but halfway to the door he stopped and looked out the plate glass window.

The boys watched him.

“Will there be anything else?” Sam asked.

Eddie didn’t answer. He was studying his truck, which had taken on an odd hue under the
florescent lights, as though by some magic of desert air its paint had turned translucent and beneath it his truck glowed, softly, like a lanterned candle.

“I hope he ain’t going to get weird on us,” Earl whispered. He reached up and took down the restroom key that was hanging behind them and slid it under the counter. He looked out at Eddie’s truck. “Fornicate hisself all over our head like that one dude done last week.”
Eddie turned to the boys. “There some place abouts I can grab a bite to eat?”

A smile slowly spread across Earl’s face. He jostled Sam with his elbow. “Notice them plates?”

Sam nodded.

“Go ahead,” Earl hissed. “Tell him.”

“There’s Debbie’s.”

“Good place to eat?”

“None better,” Sam said. “Ask them about their desserts they serve with whipped cream
delight.”

Earl raised a hand to the other boy’s shoulder and turned his back. He seemed to have caught something in his throat.

“Which way is it?” Eddie asked.

Sam pointed out the window. “Go left when you pull back on the highway. ‘Bout two mile down the road. Big red sign out front right before their turnoff. Can’t miss it.”

Earl hacked all the harder.

“Thanks,” Eddie said and went out.

As he filled his gas tank, Eddie cleaned the dirt and the smashed, sun-baked bugs from the windshield. He went to the dispenser and grabbed a handful of paper towels. When he turned around, he took one step back toward his truck and stopped. A set of yellow eyes were pointing at him from behind the front grill. Eddie let go the towels, and the evening wind that had begun to rise at sunset scattered them across concourse and out into the desert.

He walked to the front of his truck and stooped and reached up under his bumper with the
handle of the window squeegee and pried out the carcass of the jackrabbit he’d thumped a mile this side of the Nevada line. Eddie grabbed the fur on the back of its neck and walked it to the trash container and dropped the rabbit in, pushing on its hindquarters with the squeegee handle to get it down the hole. “Let the dead bury the dead.”

He climbed back into his truck and pulled up to the road and stopped. At first the boys weren’t certain if he would go left, but he did.

“Think he’ll come back pissed?” Sam said.

“How long have you been pumping gas here?”

“Be a year in December.”

“So far, any of ‘em ever come back? Even that minister with his wife and kids in tow?”

Sam shook his head. He drummed his fingers on top of the register and looked down the road, the glow of Eddie’s taillights already swallowed by the coming of night, the red desert dust filling the air.

“Miss Debbie ought to be aputting us on commission for all the business we’re sending her way,” Earl said. “At least let us take it out in trade now and again with one of them big-titted girls of hers.”

Sam grinned. “You are one horned-up toad tonight.”

“No different than any other.”

When he saw the twenty-foot-tall billboard, Eddie took his foot from the gas pedal and touched his brakes. The lower row of bulbs had either not yet come on or burned out and not been replaced. The top row was lit, though, and beneath the lights “Debbie’s Ranch” was written in script.

A hundred feet beyond the sign he came to a gravel drive and stopped. He leaned over and
cranked open his passenger window. He saw no buildings, no window lights, just a blue neon “D” that hovered in the dark. Eddie shifted into first and followed the drive to a parking lot where the only other vehicle was a dust-covered Ram Charger. He switched off his headlights.

Outside his windshield, heat lightning flashed above the desert floor, illuminating within tall,
Telarian skeins hundreds of cacti, T-shaped like graveyard crosses. Along the horizon, he could make out the silhouette of the western most Rocky Mountains he had come out of late that morning as the snow had started to spit on his windshield.

When he climbed down from his pickup, the sand carried in the wind stung his eyes almost shut.

He lowered his head and limped as quickly as he could across the lot to the front door. Inside, Eddie took out his bandana and wiped the grit from his face, and he stood there a moment, his eyes graying a dark lit by brass lanterns hung from overhead beams.

The room had about it a queer odor, something similar to an alchemy of cow manure and
Channel Number 5. The sides of the adobe building swayed and had two-inch cracks running from floor to ceiling, and its walls were buttressed with piers not all a part of the original Spanish architecture. Hung on the walls were oil paintings framed in black patina as finely cracked as old enamel glazing. Portraits of formally dressed men and women who stood out in front of the premises, a woman in one holding a Winchester .30-.30 carbine in the crook of her arms.

Beneath the prints a collection of pioneer antiques. A foot-pedaled Singer sewing machine. An ancient stereopticon.

At a table near the bar sat a pot-bellied, wide-butted rancher, maybe ten years older than
Eddie, outfitted in too-tight jeans and ostrich-leather cowboy boots. He wore a snap-button
shirt made of red-checkered gingham, and an inch-thick dewlap of fat rolled over his neck collar he had drawn tight with a black string tie. A woman with orange-dyed hair and dressed in a rainbow-colored robe and matching turban sat dealing him cards, five times larger in size than cards from an ordinary deck and oddly printed. No spades or clubs. No hearts. The only card Eddie could make out had on it a hooded skeleton holding a scythe.

On the other side of the room sat two women, smiling at him with a casual carnality. One,
looking at him from over her shoulder, wore a pink, long-sleeved evening gown, similar to one he had seen on television when he managed to stay awake for the Academy Awards, except this woman’s dress was cut so low in the back the crack of her bottom showed. The other wore something like a one-piece bathing suit. Banana yellow, frilly and lacy, the woman’s enormous breasts all but spilling like cantaloupes out onto the table. The two kept on talking even as they appraised him from head to toe but mostly in the middle, eating him with their predacious eyes, and for the first time in months Eddie felt a swelling inside his trousers.

A white-haired man with a Colonel Sanders’ goatee stood behind a polished counter cut from birds-eye-maple. Eddie walked over to him and sat on a stool upholstered in rawhide and ran a hand through his hair.

“What’ll it be?”

Eddie didn’t look at him. He was trying to keep his focus on a square foot of wood-planked floor halfway between him and the two women. Out of the corner of his eye he saw the turbaned woman studying the cards before her, shaking her head as though what she saw met with her disapproval. He told the barman to bring him a Rolling Rock.

The fat man sitting at the table with the turbaned woman twisted around and smirked. The
barman arched his white eyebrows. He studied Eddie’s washed out, button-down shirt and
craned his neck over the counter and nodded at his boots. “Shoot. I could tell you was an
Eastern dude soon as you come through my door.”

“A what?”

“Ain’t no Rock served west of Omaha, son.”

“No?”

“Hardly any served west of St. Louis.”

Eddie nodded thoughtfully, as though the barman had graced him with one of life’s smaller
epiphanies. “I guess I hadn’t been paying all that much attention. Last few days I’ve been tryin’ some of the brews I can’t ordinarily get.”

Eddie scanned the backbar, studying the signs advertising Budweiser and Blue Ribbon and Mail Pouch Chewing Tobacco. “Just give me whatever you got on draught.”

“We only carry about ten.”

Eddie leaned forward and squinted at the tap handles.

“How ‘bout a nice cold Mich?” the barman said. “You got the look of about you of one of them Reno-high-rollers.”

Eddie grinned. “In that case . . .”

“Tall Michelob comin’ at you.”

The barman walked down the counter and crouched. Out of a freezer beneath the bar he took a frosted, fishbowl mug so large it took him both hands to hold. He stood and put mug beneath a tap, whistling as he drew the beer.

Along the backbar hung plastic-bagged snacks of peanuts and cashews. A raunchy Penthouse calendar. At one end, stood a tall jar with a rattlesnake coiled inside, the alcohol evaporated down so the tip of its tail had rotted white and a bit of its spine showed. Above the row of beer taps midway to the ceiling hung a chrome-plated reading light and beneath it a sign:

Our Pleasure Menu
Appetizers
Sensual Breast Massage
Lingerie Show
Power Shower for Two
Very Naughty Dancing
Entrees
Straight Lay
½ and ½
Reverse ½ and ½
Bondage for You or Me

The barman set the foaming mug before him. “That’ll be two-fifty.”

Eddie swallowed, his eyes locked on the Pleasure Menu.

“Two dollars and fifty cents,” the barman repeated, slowly and raising his voice, holding onto the mug by its stem.

The fat man at the table looked up to the ceiling and shook his head.

“Sorry,” Eddie said and reached for his wallet and put down a five-dollar bill.

The barman let go the mug and picked up the bill. “That’s okay, son. His first time here, our
menu has a way of sucking a man’s wind out right down to his gonads.”

Eddie looked back to the menu. “Boy, you got that right.”

The barman went to the register. When he came back, he lay down Eddie’s change and went to the sink at the other end and began to wash out the glasses he’d left soaping. Eddie lifted the fishbowl with both hands and emptied half of it. Across the room, Eddie could hear the whispers of the two women, but not the words. Their eyes never strayed from him. When he tried to get a better look, the women in pink gave him a pout, and with her hand parted the slit in the gown running along her thigh.

Eddie took another long drink of beer and stood and walked over to the old-time Wurlitzer
setting against the wall opposite from the two women and reached into his jeans’ pocket.

“It’s unplugged,” the barman called over to him.

Eddie turned around.

The barman was holding a glass up to a lantern, twisting it in the waxen light. He huffed on the glass and wiped at it some more with his cloth. “Got us a live orcheestra coming on in a bit.”

“You got a band?”

“No, an orchestra. One with violins and a cello and the whole shebang.”

“Shebanged before you get banged,” said the fat man at the table.

Eddie pushed the quarter back into his pocket. Above the jukebox hung a row of pencil
sketches. One of empty train tracks, a thin spire of smoke rising into the air far in the distance, the mountains in the background resembling those he’d seen from out in the parking lot. One of what looked like a portrait of the goateed barman. Pretty good likeness too. Another of a car plunging over a cliff into nothingness, a girl behind the wheel, an older woman behind her in the back seat holding up a bottle, the mouth of the girl open, her hair coming out in her hands like bunches of charred straw. A voice behind Eddie spoke.

“See anything you like?”

Eddie McCoy was an hour’s drive out of Battle Mountain, Nevada, heading north on U.S.
95 for the Oregon border, when he slowed his Ford pickup and eased it onto the
shoulder. He cut the engine, and the cylinders misfired and rattled on for a few seconds
more before a final, smoky cough belched from the exhaust pipe. Eddie opened the door
and stepped down into the sand, leaving his keys in the ignition. He limped around the
truck bed and on out into the desert, his head down, his hands clasped behind his back,
the look about him of a man who had reached the end of something.

A hundred yards from the truck Eddie came upon a shoulder-high boulder. He pulled
himself up and sat, his legs dangling over the edge. A crimson fan of light was unfolding
before the Rockies as the sun came up, blood red and as squat as a knifed-out heart
somebody had put his boot to.

Eddie reached into a shirt pocket for his Winstons and shook one out. He was edging a
thumbnail under the matchbook cover when he noticed her. Eddie took out his cigarette.
Pointed at him from the midnight-blue cover was a bent over, thonged bottom. Looking
around from in front of the bottom smiled a woman with shoulder-length hair the color of
dirty snow, Debbie’s Ranch etched above her head in an arc of pink script.

He shook his head. “Now, who in Hell ever heard of a cathouse advertising themselves
with matchbooks? Like they was a bar or a restaurant. Some filling station a dad might
consider stopping by for a Pepsi with his kids.”

Eddie rubbed a callused thumb over the woman’s bottom, shapely as any in a cowboy
dream. “Well, I guess there’s a somebody out there who’s thought of everything you ain’t
and are unlikely to ever will.”

He had gotten off I-80 a mile south of Battle Mountain the evening before, so dazed from
the day’s driving he almost missed the exit. Twenty-four hours earlier, the clerk behind
the desk in a Motel Six on the other side of Cheyenne had asked him when he checked in
if he cared to reserve the room for a second night. The Weather Service was calling for a
freak summer snowstorm to hit before the next nightfall.

“Room’s will be gone before you know it.” The clerk nodded at Eddie’s feet. “Hellfire, son.
We’ll have folks sleeping where you’re standing.”

Eddie showered, and after he came out he sat on the bed wrapped in the towel and
considered waiting out the storm in his room, catch up on some sleep. One turn through
the channels on the chained-to-the-wall television settled his decision for him otherwise.
Re-runs of sitcoms with no plots he thought dumb and had refused to watch the first
time they’d been on. Mindless game shows with mindless contestants. People jawing
about their problems who wouldn’t know a real one if it came up and kicked them in their
rumps grown wide from sitting around jawing about their problems. He was up and on the
road before dawn.

His truck had no air conditioning, and by evening Eddie was dehydrated from driving first
through the mountains and then the high desert. He hadn’t eaten anything since the jelly
doughnut he’d scarfed down in the motel lobby when he was checking out, and now he
could hear his stomach growling even with the wind blasting through both rolled-down
windows. The gas gauge needle was riding on “E” and had been for fifteen minutes. There
were no cars before him and none behind, and with his bum leg, unless somebody
stopped, he’d be crow bait before he limped into the next town.

Five days before, Eddie had blinked his eyes open at 4:44. The same time as he did every
morning. No alarm clock needed. He reached for Lisa, but because he was sleeping on the
couch, his hand found only air.

Eddie unwound the sheet he had wrapped himself into during the night and swung his
legs to the carpet and went into the quarter-bath off the kitchen. When he came out, he
switched on the overhead stove light and from a cupboard took out a can of Fancy Feast.
He stooped and divided it between Satchmoe and Sophie. The kitties were sitting by their
respective bowls, in no hurry to get at their food and instead watching him, their ears
perked, judging by his voice, his stroke of their coats, whether they would spend the day
napping on their sun nook or hiding out in closet corners. On his way to the sink, Eddie
emptied their water bowls in the one potted fern out of a dozen he’d not managed to kill.
He filled the bowls and returned them and walked back to the bedroom.

He opened the closet door and with his toe poked at the pile of clothes heaped on the
floor. He bent over and picked out a blue-denim shirt, and before he reached his arms into
its sleeves he held it to his nose. As Eddie buttoned up the front, he sucked in the Rolling-
Rock belly he’d been working on. He pulled on his gray canvas trousers, abraded and
threadbare at the knees, and reached for his steel-toed boots. Before lacing up the left,
he reached in a finger and traced the scar slicing his Achilles tendon.

“You ain’t dreamed of doin’ nothing since the day you bought this.” He took out his finger
and knotted the laces. “Maybe it’s time you started.”

Eddie returned to the kitchen and scooped uncooked oatmeal into a bowl and poured over
it last week’s milk. He walked out to the picture window in the living room and, as he ate,
watched a full moon set over the duck pond across the street.

At the midmorning break, Eddie shut down his arc weld and walked into the supervisor’s
office, his work cap in hand behind his back and asked for a couple of weeks off.

“Surprised you hadn’t asked for any before now.”

“Yes, sir.”

“You came in the day after the funeral.”

Eddie shifted his cap to his other hand. He looked at the office door window, its smoky,
pebbled glass opaque. “I like to stay busy. Keeps me from wandering where I shouldn’t.”

After his shift let out, Eddie gassed up the truck and from a rack of roadmaps took one
for the eastern half of the country. He’d have gotten one for the western states too, but
the attendant said there wasn’t sufficient demand for the station to justify stocking them.

When he got home, Eddie walked next door to Jude and Christina Hardy’s. In their
mailbox he laid a note with feeding instructions for the kitties and dropped his key on top
of the note and crossed back across their lawns. Eddie put a TV dinner in the oven and
went into the bedroom and packed a duffel bag and his toilet kit. At his dresser, Eddie
studied her photograph, twisting his wedding band back and forth on his finger as if it
were a lock whose combination he couldn’t quite get. He took it off and laid it before the
frame, a thumb resting for a moment on the gold rim. Ten minutes later Eddie had eaten
his half cooked supper and was in the truck, his Thermos of black coffee on the seat
beside him, headed up Route 7 toward the Turnpike.

* * *

At the Battle Mountain exit, Eddie turned right and followed the sign pointing to town and
stopped at the first filling station he came to. He pulled up to one of eight rows of pumps
and turned off the ignition and sat back in his seat. He looked at the gas gauge and
tapped it with a knuckle. The needle didn’t so much as flicker.

He got out of his truck and walked around to a pump and studied the prices before he
crossed the cement concourse and pushed open the door to the station. Behind the
counter were two teenage boys, one slouched against the cash register, the other, his
arms raised like a prize fighter, jabbing into the air with quick left stabs as he recounted a
street fight he had witnessed the night before. The two wore identical sky-blue shirts with
“Earl” stitched above the breast pocket of one and “Sam” above that of the other. Out of
each ink-stained pocket protruded an air gauge and half a dozen pens. All twenty of their
fingernails were broken and jagged and greasefilled.
They wore khaki-colored baseball caps, which bore above the bill a red and yellow
Sanderson’s Shell decal. Out from under the caps spilled their oily, collar-length hair. Earl
was cultivating a wispy mustache, and both were badly pimpled from a filling station fare
of Cokes and Snickers and Lays, their faces red-budded like cactus flowers ready to pop.

Sam, the boy behind the cash register, straightened when Eddie came in. “Yes, sir?”

Eddie reached into a back pocket for his wallet and took out two fives and a ten
and lay the bills on the counter. “Twenty on number thirteen pump.”

Sam reached for the money with one hand and rang up the purchase with the
other. “Yes, sir. Twenty on lucky thirteen.”

Eddie turned to go, but halfway to the door he stopped and looked out the plate
glass window. The boys watched him.

“Will there be anything else?” Sam asked.

Eddie didn’t answer. He was studying his truck, which had taken on an odd hue
under the florescent lights, as though by some magic of desert air its paint had
turned translucent and beneath it his truck glowed, softly, like a lanterned candle.

“I hope he ain’t going to get weird on us,” Earl whispered. He reached up and
took down the restroom key that was hanging behind them and slid it under the
counter. He looked out at Eddie’s truck. “Fornicate hisself all over our head like
that one dude done last week.”

Eddie turned to the boys. “There some place abouts I can grab a bite to eat?”

A smile slowly spread across Earl’s face. He jostled Sam with his elbow. “Notice
them plates?”

Sam nodded.

“Go ahead,” Earl hissed. “Tell him.”

“There’s Debbie’s.”

“Good place to eat?”

“None better,” Sam said. “Ask them about their desserts they serve with whipped
cream delight.”

Earl raised a hand to the other boy’s shoulder and turned his back. He seemed to
have caught something in his throat.

“Which way is it?” Eddie asked.

Sam pointed out the window. “Go left when you pull back on the highway. ‘Bout
two mile down the road. Big red sign out front right before their turnoff. Can’t
miss it.”

Earl hacked all the harder.

“Thanks,” Eddie said and went out.

As he filled his gas tank, Eddie cleaned the dirt and the smashed, sun-baked
bugs from the windshield. He went to the dispenser and grabbed a handful of
paper towels. When he turned around, he took one step back toward his truck
and stopped. A set of yellow eyes were pointing at him from behind the front grill.
Eddie let go the towels, and the evening wind that had begun to rise at sunset
scattered them across concourse and out into the desert.

He walked to the front of his truck and stooped and reached up under his
bumper with the handle of the window squeegee and pried out the carcass of the
jackrabbit he’d thumped a mile this side of the Nevada line. Eddie grabbed the fur
on the back of its neck and walked it to the trash container and dropped the
rabbit in, pushing on its hindquarters with the squeegee handle to get it down
the hole. “Let the dead bury the dead.”

He climbed back into his truck and pulled up to the road and stopped. At first the
boys weren’t certain if he would go left, but he did.

“Think he’ll come back pissed?” Sam said.

“How long have you been pumping gas here?”

“Be a year in December.”

“So far, any of ‘em ever come back? Even that minister with his wife and kids in
tow?”

Sam shook his head. He drummed his fingers on top of the register and looked
down the road, the glow of Eddie’s taillights already swallowed by the coming of
night, the red desert dust filling the air.

“Miss Debbie ought to be aputting us on commission for all the business we’re
sending her way,” Earl said. “At least let us take it out in trade now and again
with one of them big-titted girls of hers.”

Sam grinned. “You are one horned-up toad tonight.”

“No different than any other.”

When he saw the twenty-foot-tall billboard, Eddie took his foot from the gas
pedal and touched his brakes. The lower row of bulbs had either not yet come on
or burned out and not been replaced. The top row was lit, though, and beneath
the lights Debbie’s Ranch was written in script.

A hundred feet beyond the sign he came to a gravel drive and stopped. He leaned
over and cranked open his passenger window. He saw no buildings, no window
lights, just a blue neon “D” that hovered in the dark. Eddie shifted into first and
followed the drive to a parking lot where the only other vehicle was a dust-
covered Ram Charger. He switched off his headlights. Outside his windshield, heat
lightning flashed above the desert floor, illuminating within tall, Telarian skeins
hundreds of cacti, T-shaped like graveyard crosses. Along the horizon, he could
make out the silhouette of the western most Rocky Mountains he had come out
of late that morning as the snow had started to spit on his windshield.

When he climbed down from his pickup, the sand carried in the wind stung his
eyes almost shut. He lowered his head and limped as quickly as he could across
the lot to the front door. Inside, Eddie took out his bandana and wiped the grit
from his face, and he stood there a moment, his eyes graying a dark lit by brass
lanterns hung from overhead beams.

The room had about it a queer odor, something similar to an alchemy of cow
manure and Channel Number 5. The sides of the adobe building swayed and had
two-inch cracks running from floor to ceiling, and its walls were buttressed with
piers not all a part of the original Spanish architecture. Hung on the walls were oil
paintings framed in black patina as finely cracked as old enamel glazing. Portraits
of formally dressed men and women who stood out in front of the premises, a
woman in one holding a Winchester .30-.30 carbine in the crook of her arms.

Beneath the prints a collection of pioneer antiques. A foot-pedaled Singer sewing
machine. An ancient stereopticon.

At a table near the bar sat a pot-bellied, wide-butted rancher, maybe ten years
older than Eddie, outfitted in too-tight jeans and ostrich-leather cowboy boots.

He wore a snap-button shirt made of red-checkered gingham, and an inch-thick
dewlap of fat rolled over his neck collar he had drawn tight with a black string tie.

A woman with orange-dyed hair and dressed in a rainbow-colored robe and
matching turban sat dealing him cards, five times larger in size than cards from
an ordinary deck and oddly printed. No spades or clubs. No hearts. The only card
Eddie could make out had on it a hooded skeleton holding a scythe.

On the other side of the room sat two women, smiling at him with a casual
carnality. One, looking at him from over her shoulder, wore a pink, long-sleeved
evening gown, similar to one he had seen on television when he managed to stay
awake for the Academy Awards, except this woman’s dress was cut so low in the
back the crack of her bottom showed. The other wore something like a one-piece
bathing suit. Banana yellow, frilly and lacy, the woman’s enormous breasts all but
spilling like cantaloupes out onto the table. The two kept on talking even as they
appraised him from head to toe but mostly in the middle, eating him with their
predacious eyes, and for the first time in months Eddie felt a welling inside his
trousers.

A white-haired man with a Colonel Sanders’ goatee stood behind a polished
counter cut from birds-eye-maple. Eddie walked over to him and sat on a stool
upholstered in rawhide and ran a hand through his hair.

“What’ll it be?”

Eddie didn’t look at him. He was trying to keep his focus on a square foot of
wood-planked floor halfway between him and the two women. Out of the corner
of his eye he saw the turbaned woman studying the cards before her, shaking
her head as though what she saw met with her disapproval. He told the barman
to bring him a Rolling Rock.

The fat man sitting at the table with the turbaned woman twisted around and
smirked. The barman arched his white eyebrows. He studied Eddie’s washed out,
button-down shirt and craned his neck over the counter and nodded at his
boots. “Shoot. I could tell you was an Eastern dude soon as you come through
my door.”

“A what?”

“Ain’t no Rock served west of Omaha, son.”

“No?”

“Hardly any served west of St. Louis.”

Eddie nodded thoughtfully, as though the barman had graced him with one of life’
s smaller epiphanies. “I guess I hadn’t been paying all that much attention. Last
few days I’ve been tryin’ some of the brews I can’t ordinarily get.”

Eddie scanned the back bar, studying the signs advertising Budweiser and Blue
Ribbon and Mail Pouch Chewing Tobacco. “Just give me whatever you got on
draught.”

“We only carry about ten.”

Eddie leaned forward and squinted at the tap handles.

“How ‘bout a nice cold Mich?” the barman said. “You got the look of about you of
one of them Reno-high-rollers.”

Eddie grinned. “In that case . . .”

“Tall Michelob comin’ at you.”

The barman walked down the counter and crouched. Out of a freezer beneath the
bar he took a frosted, fishbowl mug so large it took him both hands to hold. He
stood and put mug beneath a tap, whistling as he drew the beer.

Along the backbar hung plastic-bagged snacks of peanuts and cashews. A
raunchy Penthouse calendar. At one end, stood a tall jar with a rattlesnake coiled
inside, the alcohol evaporated down so the tip of its tail had rotted white and a
bit of its spine showed. Above the row of beer taps midway to the ceiling hung a
chrome-plated reading light and beneath it a sign:

Our Pleasure Menu
Appetizers
Sensual Breast Massage
Lingerie Show
Power Shower for Two
Very Naughty Dancing
Entrees
Straight Lay
½ and ½
Reverse ½ and ½
Bondage for You or Me

The barman set the foaming mug before him. “That’ll be two-fifty.”

Eddie swallowed, his eyes locked on the Pleasure Menu.

“Two dollars and fifty cents,” the barman repeated, slowly and raising his voice,
holding onto the mug by its stem.

The fat man at the table looked up to the ceiling and shook his head.

“Sorry,” Eddie said and reached for his wallet and put down a five-dollar bill.

The barman let go the mug and picked up the bill. “That’s okay, son. His first time
here, our menu has a way of sucking a man’s wind out right down to his gonads.”
Eddie looked back to the menu. “Boy, you got that right.”

The barman went to the register. When he came back, he lay down Eddie’s
change and went to the sink at the other end and began to wash out the glasses
he’d left soaping. Eddie lifted the fishbowl with both hands and emptied half of it.

Across the room, Eddie could hear the whispers of the two women, but not the
words. Their eyes never strayed from him. When he tried to get a better look,
the women in pink gave him a pout, and with her hand parted the slit in the gown
running along her thigh.

Eddie took another long drink of beer and stood and walked over to the old-time
Wurlitzer setting against the wall opposite from the two women and reached into
his jeans’ pocket.

“It’s unplugged,” the barman called over to him.

Eddie turned around.

The barman was holding a glass up to a lantern, twisting it in the waxen light. He
huffed on the glass and wiped at it some more with his cloth. “Got us a live
orcheestra coming on in a bit.”

“You got a band?”

“No, an orcheestra. One with violins and a cello and the whole shebang.”

“Shebanged before you get banged,” said the fat man at the table.

Eddie pushed the quarter back into his pocket. Above the jukebox hung a row of
pencil sketches. One of empty train tracks, a thin spire of smoke rising into the
air far in the distance, the mountains in the background resembling those he’d
seen from out in the parking lot. One of what looked like a portrait of the goateed
barman. Pretty good likeness too. Another of a car plunging over a cliff into
nothingness, a girl behind the wheel, an older woman behind her in the back seat
holding up a bottle, the mouth of the girl open, her hair coming out in her hands
like bunches of charred straw. A voice behind Eddie spoke.

“See anything you like?”

Eddie turned around. She looked to be maybe twenty, tall for a girl even
accounting for her three-inch stiletto pumps. She wore a loose-fitting, black linen
dress that fell half way down her cheerleader-muscled thighs. The dress was
short-sleeved to her elbows, and not low cut across the bust that showed off all
the more her brickhouse figure. When she turned her head, the girl’s dangling
earrings winked in the lantern lights. Her eyes were a forget-me-not blue, shiny,
like those of a small-town girl the first time she thinks a boy likes her. She had
the prettiest smile Eddie had ever seen, yet impish, as though she was about to
have some fun, not with any malice, but only to see if he caught her sense of
humor. She had highlighted her sparrow-brown hair with hints of henna and
permed it into ringlet curls that fell to her neck and gleamed as though she had
wandered in from the rain.

Eddie’s eyes darted across the room to the two women. He looked back to the
girl. “Miss?”

She nodded at the wall behind the jukebox. “See anything you like?”

He turned and looked again at the drawings. “They’re all good.”

“Thank you.”

Eddie tapped a thumb knuckle against his chin. “Very good.”

“I drew them.”

He turned back to her. “No fooling?”

She smiled and cocked her head toward the bar. “Buy a lady a drink?”

The barman had a napkin on the counter next to Eddie’s beer and stood waiting.

“Your usual, sweet pea?”

“Yes, easy on the ice for the first one.”

“As always.” The barman turned to Eddie. “Another fishbowl for you, pardner?”

“I would, thank you,” Eddie said, and reached for his wallet and brought out a
twenty and lay it before him. “In case you’ll be wanting a re-fill,” he said.

A television set was turned on in a room behind the backbar. God talks to us in
Genesis about Adam and Eve. He doesn’t say anything about Adam and Steve.
Not in Genesis and not anywhere else.

The girl giggled. “Debbie loves Jerry Falwell.”

“Really?”

“Sunday mornings he’s on too early. So she videotapes his sermons and watches
the show in the evening.”

The barman set down their drinks.

“Debbie says preachers make the best lays.”

“I’d never heard that.”

The girl twisted around on the stool and with her painted eyes looked about the
bar. She sipped on her straw. “You’d be surprised what you can learn here about
people.”

She set her drink on the bar and rotated the stool so the outside of her knees
touched the inside of his. “So what’s your name, sweetie?”

He told her. “Yours?”

The girl looked up at the lantern above them. She twisted a ringlet of hair about
her forefinger. “Have you ever read Moby Dick?”

Eddie glanced down at his steel-toed boots, dusty and grease stained. He shook
his head. “Never been much of a reader.”

The girl smiled. She took her hand from her hair and put two fingers over the
inside of her wrist as if she’d some blemish to conceal. “Call me Isabella.”

Eddie whispered her name half aloud. “I ain’t never met no Isabella before.”

“Or Izzy if you like.”

He considered her suggestion, slightly rocking his head from side to side. “All
right. Izzy suits me fine.”

“Where you headed to?”

“Portland.”

“As in Oregon? Or the other direction, as in Maine?”

“No, Oregon,” Eddie said. “My buddy, George, works on a paper up there. When I
get to his place he’s fixing to take a few days off to take me fishin’.”

Izzy leaned and sipped at her drink, a tall concoction of various colored liquids
layered one atop the other. She looked at the turbaned woman, and when she
straightened from her drink she sighed. “You have to admire someone who will
cheat at tarot, don’t you think?”

“Excuse me?”

“Of course, it will do her no good. Your fate is your fate. Ahab will tell you as
much.”

Eddie looked down the bar to the cash register. “He the bartender?”

The girl shook her head. A woman came in through the back door, hips swaying
to her own drummer, and Izzy called out. “Now, there’s a real honey.”

The woman put a hand to her peroxide scalded hair. “There’s a real honey,
herself.”

The girl stirred her drink. “Where you from?”

When he told her, Izzy’s eyes lit up. “Me too.”

“Really?”

“Athens. You know where that is?”

“Not exactly.” Eddie emptied his fishbowl and to the bartender pointed two
fingers at their glasses.

“Wasn’t born there,” Izzy said.

“Where was it you was born?”

“Germany. Frankfurt.”

“How’d you come to be born there?”

“My dad was in the Army.”

The barman brought their drinks. She raised her glass to Eddie. “Thank you.”

“My pleasure.”

“It can be,” Izzy said. She put her plum shaded lips to the straw and winked.
Eddie’s face reddened, and Izzy laughed and laid her hand on his forearm. “Just
kidding. Debbie doesn’t pressure us to get down to business. If a guy wants to
come in and talk, what she loses in tricks she makes up on the drinks they buy
us.”

She took back her hand. “I don’t normally start out with a guy by giving up my
life story. Not even a little of it.”

“How come you did with me?”

The girl put her fingertips to the rim of her glass and twisted it back and forth as
she might the channel dial on a car radio. “Because you’re from home.”

“Your mom and dad still there?”

“Her and my step-dad.”

“Step-dad?”

“Mom left my real dad a couple of months after I came along.”

Through the door adjacent the back bar came three young men, striding almost
in a parade march, clean cut, their faces as solemn as door-to-door Jehovah’s
Witnesses, instrument valises in hand and dressed in black tuxedos and white
bow ties and scarlet cummerbunds. They crossed the room to a redwood dais in
the far corner and uncased their instruments. Eddie watched as they tightened
and tuned the strings. After a while he asked Izzy what kind of band they were.

“Chamber orchestra.”

“I can’t recollect ever hearing one of them.

“The blond kid is Debbie’s nephew. He’ll be a senior at UNLV come fall. She pays
his tuition. Makes him come up here on his breaks. Says it gives the place some
class. Entice some of those high rollers from Reno to come our way before they
head back to Tahoe and San Francisco.”

She finished her drink. The bartender set before her another. They watched the
musicians. “What kind of tunes is it they play?” Eddie said.

“Lots of Bach. Some Teleman. Debbie prefers baroque to classical, the German
composers to the Italian, seeing how she was brought up Lutheran, but she’ll
allow them to play some Mozart now and again.”

“Charlie Daniels most likely is out of the question?”

“Oh, they could, but they wouldn’t get past the first chord before Debbie would
be out here, cussing them red, Reverend Jerry on Sunday be damned.”

The musicians raised their instruments. “They’re really very good.”

The cello player slowly drew his bow across the strings. Izzy closed her eyes and
smiled like a woman just kissed. “I love the cello.”

As they listened, the girl’s long, unringed fingers moved gently to the music like
they were brushing away smoke.

“Too bad about your folks divorcing when you was so young and all.”

“Better than when I got older. One less person I don’t have to forget.”

“Was your mom expecting when she got married?”

Izzy stirred her drink.

“Sorry. I’ve picked up a bad habit of nosing where I shouldn’t be.”

“She was an orphan.”

“I see,” Eddie said, and nodded, as though her mother being an orphan explained
how it was her daughter had ended up selling herself.

“Mom’s father died of a heart attack before she was born. Her mother when she
was five. Breast cancer. She and Aunt Mary and Uncle Ralph were raised by Aunt
Iris. My great-aunt.”

The musicians had come to the end of the first piece and were leafing through
their sheets of music, quietly debating among themselves what next to play. Izzy
slipped off her stool and crossed to the dais and said something to Debbie’s
nephew. He spoke to the others who again raised their instruments. The girl
returned to the bar.

“It’s an allegro,” Izzy said. “By Vivaldi.”

Eddie lowered his head. It sounded similar to church music only with more joy. He
told her it was very pretty.

“On the day I’m married, this will be my recessional.”

Izzy leaned back and rested both her elbows on the bar behind her so that she
faced the musicians. “On New Year’s Eve, when Iris was at her Saint Patrick’s
bingo extravaganza, Mom snuck out with her cronies and drove to a bar down in
Parkersburg. That’s where she met my dad.”

“Short courtship?”

“Goodness no. Mom’s not cheap. They dated for more than a month. Got married
on Valentine’s Day.”

“Love at first sight?”

Izzy shook her head. “Mom wanted to get away from Iris is all, and she met a
man horned up enough to take her on, warts and all. When I came along, she
was a year younger than I am now. After she dumped him and came home, she
dumped me on Iris. Moved up to Columbus, and from what Iris told me it was
party central.”

“How old was you when she remarried?”

“Almost six.”

“You go to live with them?”

“Yeah. Didn’t want to.”

“I can see why not,” Eddie said.

“She scared me. Before Mom remarried, on the days she could recover from her
hangover and bother herself to drive down, she had a temper that was all match
and no fuse. Sometimes I hid out under the porch until she left.”

Since Eddie had come in, the wind had steadily picked up, and now it whistled
through the cracks that fissured the adobe, swinging the lanterns. The candle
flame in the lamp above them flickered as it healed in a circle around the glass.

“She only got worse,” the girl said.

The orchestra came to the end of the music that some day would usher Izzy into her
new life. The musicians turned the pages.

“After I flunked sophomore chemistry this spring, she told me to get the fuck out of
her house. Her exact words.”

She laughed.

“What’s so funny?”

“Not only did I get the fuck out of her house, I got out of her house fucking.”

Izzy rolled up her right sleeve. “Let me show you. Better than any Reno-Front-Street-
tattoo.”

She shifted around on the stool and held out her arm so that the light illuminating the
Pleasure Menu shone upon it. Below the shoulder, her arm concaved in, a third of the
deltoid muscle carved away, the skin wrinkled and discolored to a deep purple, like an
eggplant someone had set in the oven to bake and forgotten.

Eddie started to reach out to touch her shoulder, but stopped. He emptied his beer.

When the barman brought him another, Eddie asked for a shooter of Old Granddad.

“I ain’t even gonna ask how you managed that one.”

The barman brought the shooter. Eddie downed it before the barman could leave and
handed back the glass and asked him to bring another.

“I was sitting at the kitchen table, working on a sketch of Aunt Iris for art class. Mom
was at the stove, frying cod and drinking wine. Too much wine. Maybe her third or
fourth glass. Like always, mad as hell about something, muttering goddamnit this and
fuck that.”

Izzy raised her glass as if to drink, but set it back on the bar. “Mom lifted the skillet,
like she was going to drain the grease in the sink, holding it on her side between us.

As she passed, I twisted my drawing around to show her, but she was already staring
at it, her hand holding the skillet handle quivering, the grease in the pan swishing
around the rim.

“She tipped the skillet, and the grease splattered over my shoulder. Cooked it like one
more piece of cod. When she ripped off my sweater, she took with it every stitch of
skin right down to the elbow. I must have passed out because the next thing I
remember is waking up in intensive care.”

The barman brought his shooter. Eddied took the drink and downed it, nodding as he
handed back the glass.

“After the social worker allowed me to go home, I had to bathe my arm three and four
times a day because of the puzzy seepage. The odor reminded me of dead fish with
their plucked out eyes that wash up on the beach that I could smell before I saw
them. That was me. You could smell me before you saw me. Know exactly what room
I was in before you came in. Or didn’t come in.

“In the summer, a quack surgeon Mom found in Columbus did the skin grafts. I read
in the paper a while ago he lost his license for over-billing insurance companies and
kicking back half to the patients.”

Izzy fingered the stubble on her shoulder, the hair as thick and fine as that on a
shaved cat. “He took the grafts from my lower abdomen. I hadn’t yet reached
puberty, and in a year or so when I did, not only did I have an ugly scar, but surprise!
I had an ugly scar that grew pussy hair. One I get to shave once a week just like I do
my legs.”

She pulled down her sleeve and smoothed out the material. “She missed my face only
because she was drunk. If she hadn’t, I’d be a star attraction with Barnum & Bailey
rather than in a whorehouse. Come see the girl who grows cunt hair on her face.

“When she told me to get out, I went to Iris. She bought me ‘Hector,’ that yellow
Plymouth parked in back. The next week I headed for California. Got as far as Battle
Mountain before my money ran out.”

She twisted around on the stool, her eyes sweeping over the bar. “I couldn’t have
ended up in a nicer place. I like the guys that come in. Got some regulars going now.”

Eddie emptied the shot glass the barman had set before him. He washed it down with
a good portion of the fishbowl. “Guess you’re glad to be clear of her.”

The girl shook her head. “There’s a dream I started having not long after I got here. I’
ll be driving Hector car west on I-80. My back seat stacked high and my trunk filled full
with everything I own. The sun is shining and a cloudless sky gleams turquoise blue.

The wind is blowing through the rolled-down window and whips my hair so that it
flows out like the tail of a mare at full gallop, and when me and Hector cross the state
line into Indiana, I let go with my best, cheerleader-touchdown whoop.

“As we cross the country, oceans of corn surround us, and I’m the intrepid voyager,
an Ishmael of the Mid-west, finally set free on my life’s journey. I sing along to every
song that plays on the radio, even the country western tunes when I have trouble
picking up rock stations west of the Mississippi, and I sing these all the louder
because Mom hated them so much, and for the first time in a long while I am happy.

“When we climb into the Rockies, Hector struggles up the steep grades. I keep
watching his engine temperature, and as the needle gets close to the red “H” I drop
our speed, sometimes down to 20 miles an hour. Steam smokes out of the radiator. I
hold my breath and ask God to please see us through to California. Please. If He will, I
would never ask for anything more. Oh, please, please, please.

“I pray and pray and pray until a sign tells me that we have crested the Continental
Divide. As Hector and me start our decent to the Pacific, the temperature gauge
drops. I begin to sing California Here We Come, repeating the verses over and over
until in the mirror I see my mother in the back seat, holding up a bottle of Drano, my
possessions strewn across the Interstate behind us.

“She scolds me not to be a nitwit. To watch the road. I do. In the mirror I am
watching her too. As she twists off the bottle cap, my fingers feel glued to the
steering wheel, and I want with all my heart to let go. Bottle in hand, she reaches
over the seat, smiling, her gleaming white teeth pointed, sharp as a she wolf’s, and
pours the Drano over my head, like a priest blessing me into a new life might
administer a baptismal, burning into my scalp, eating away my skin, blinding my eyes.

I finally let go the steering wheel and reach up and my hair comes out in handfuls.
Hector careens off the road and crashes through the guardrail. As we’re falling, my
mother leans over the seat and whispers in my ear, asking me if I really believed
escaping her would be all that easy. Asking me why I was so silly to believe it even
possible.”

Izzy emptied her glass. She raised it to the barman, but his back was to her, pouring
a drink for the fat man who had left the tarot cards and now stood at the far end of
the counter. When he saw the girl, he puckered his thick lips at her. She shrugged.

She lowered her glass to the bar and turned to Eddie, who sat staring into his cupped
hands. Izzy reached over and took his left into both of hers. She rubbed a thumb
over his ring finger. “You’re not married, sweetie?”

Eddie didn’t answer.

“Divorced?”

When he still did not answer, Izzy reached up and jostled his shoulder. “Hey, anybody
home?”

Eddie shook his head.

“I hope you’re not queer. One wonders in every now and again. Why I don’t know.”
She squinted at him with one eye. “You don’t look like a pillow biter.”

Eddie lifted his fishbowl. “No. Not yet, leastwise.”

She ran her fingertips through his hair above his ear. “Good looking guy like you
never been married?”

“Yeah. I was.”

“Long ago?”

“Long enough.”

Izzy raised her glass to the barman again who this time saw her. They sat. When the
orchestra began an adagio, Izzy asked if he cared to slow dance, and Eddie told her
about his gimpy leg.

“You sure you just don’t know how? I can teach you.”

Eddie lifted his boot and rested its heel on his knee. He loosened the laces and pulled
his foot part way out and rolled down his sock. She bent forward and ran her finger
from the outside ball of his anklebone to the inside ball along the jagged scar that
sliced his Achilles tendon.

“Nice,” she said.

“Not as nice as yours.”

“At least I can dance. Girl who can’t dance doesn’t stand a chance in her life.”

“Her life,” Eddie repeated.

“What about it?”

He looked at the girl’s neck. Her breasts. Her eyes. “You know what a Y-scar is?”
“It’s what you get when you’ve been autopsied.”

Eddie pulled his sock up. As he re-laced his boot, a kid came in, his black Stetson
cocked back a little, grinning crookedly as though to the punch line of a randy joke he
didn’t quite get. When he spotted the two women who had been eyeing Eddie, he
walked over to their table and said something. He waved to the barman and made a
circling motion around the table with his finger, and told the barman to bring him a
Coors.

The bar had been filling, and a girl who didn’t look old enough to drive was waiting the
tables. After the barman poured the drinks the kid had ordered, he placed them on a
tray and pushed it toward the girl, who carried the tray over to the table. As she bent
to serve the drinks, the girl knocked over the kid’s beer. The kid grinned all the more
and said something. The women laughed, and the girl hurried back to the bar.

“What is it, Sylvia?” the bartender said.

The girl’s eyes were wet. “He said my tits were too big.”

“He said what?”

“That hick sonofabitch said the reason I knocked over his stupid beer was on account
of my tits being too big.”

The barman tried not to smile. He walked to the end of the bar. He seemed to be
studying the tall jar holding the rattlesnake. When he came back, the barman told
Sylvia to see if any of the girls needed help getting dressed. “I can handle the tables
for a while until you collect yourself.”

“All right.”

“Don’t be too long.”

After the girl left, Izzy said that Sylvia had just gotten into town. “Hitchhiked in from
Montana. Sheep ranch twenty miles outside of Billings. Been here not quite a week.

Hasn’t got used to the guys having their fun. Teasing her and such.”

“Who’s the cowboy?”

Izzy looked over at the table. “Oh, that’s Hanky.”

“Hanky?”

“My Sunday sweetie.”

Eddie grinned. “You got one for every day of the week?”

“Not yet. He’s one of my regulars, though. Comes in to see me after his wife’s gone
off to prayer meeting.”

“Kindly taking his life into his own hands, ain’t he?”

Izzy shook her head. “Closest Baptist church holding Sunday evening services is the
one way over in Reno. Be close to midnight before she’s home. Later, if she stops to
play the slots. It’s early, and he’s a bit quick on the draw so he’ll be home and tucked
in long before she’s back.”

“I thought maybe he was interested in one of them two at the table,” Eddie said.

“No, he’s just flirting with Delores and Sweet Sally, trying to get me jealous, see if I’ll
give him a Sunday special. He’ll be over directly.”

The orchestra began again.

“Bach,” Izzy said, and smiled. Joy.

They listened. When the barman came by, he picked up her empty glass, leaving
behind on the wood a circle of damp breath. She watched as it waned inward from the
edges until it disappeared altogether. “You know, sweetie, you’re not going to find
her in here.”

Eddie fingered the threads fraying from a sleeve of the shirt she had bought for him
on his last birthday, his and her interlinked initials sewn into the cuffs.

“You don’t seem like the type to even try to.”

“Didn’t know where I was until I came in.”

Izzy grinned. “I’ll bet you stopped at the Shell station.”

“How’d you know?”

“Sanderson’s brats are always sending some unsuspecting soul this way. They must
have got wind about Debbie’s thing for preachers because a month back they sent
one over, him wearing a white collar. He and his wife and a half dozen, snot-nosed-
bastard brats. The oldest even pinched my butt while Debbie was trying to talk his
parents into a threesome.”

The musicians played. As the bar filled with men, women came in by the back door.
Some wore little more than fancy underwear beneath see-throughs. Others could
have been Cinderella stopping by on her way to the ball. One woman wore a black
satin blouse and a tight, blue leather skirt with a whip looped around her belt and
boots that reached halfway up her thighs. There was no formality about them, and
they and the men seemed as well acquainted as Elks at a lodge meeting.

The bartender came up to Izzy. “I hate to ask you this, darlin’, but you being the
newbie and all.”

“That’s ok.”

“We’ve gotten too busy for me both to be waiting tables and working the bar.”

Izzy got down from the stool.

“It’ll just be for another minute ‘til Sylvia collects herself.” He looked at Eddie. “Let me
get you another on the house until she comes back on.”

Eddie raised his hand.

Izzy smiled. “I think my friend might be finished for the night.”

Eddie nodded. He reached for his wallet and lay a ten-dollar bill on top of the change
pile and twisted his stool around toward the door. As he started to rise, Izzy placed
two fingers on the inside of his wrist. “Thank you for not asking me why I became a
whore.” Her eyes swept the room. “For some men, my loving isn’t enough. They have
to have my soul too.”

He took her fingers from his wrist, and holding both her hands in his looked into the
girl’s eyes where he saw his reflected self dropping down a well with no bottom to it.

“Didn’t see the need.”

He gave her hands a squeeze. “You take care, sweetie.”

“You too.”

Eddie started for the door. He stopped and turned back. “I hope you get what you’re
after. Whatever it is.”

Izzy looked over to the table where the kid still stood. She looked at Eddie. “When
you get back, go see my mom. Let her know where I ended up. Maybe then I’ll be
ready to move on.” She gave him a wink. “And you never know who it might be with.”

Eddie smiled. “Couldn’t get that lucky.”

“You better sleep off the beers and shots in your truck before you head out. I’d let
you use my trailer out back, but you know . . . .”

“Gotta take care of business.”

“Girl’s got to pay the rent.”

Eddie raised his hand and turned and limped out into the night. Izzy went to where
the bartender had a tray waiting. “Got away from you, did he?” the bartender said.

“Had me confused with somebody else.”

* * *

When Eddie woke in the early morning dark, he pushed himself up from the truck seat
and looked out his windshield. Dust clouds boiling off the desert rolled across the
parking lot, distorting the air so that the world looked as though he were seeing it
through the bottom of a beer glass. A black-clothed woman may have gone out the
back door and into a trailer. He lay back down. When Eddie woke again, he was
shivering from the cold and his mouth tasted of barf. He slowly sat up and looked at
his watch.

“Ought to be a place opening up soon where I can get some breakfast.”

He started up the truck and followed the drive out to the road and stopped. From the
glove box he took a roadmap. He reached up and switched on the dome light and
unfolded the map and studied it. “Maybe I should stick to the back roads and stay out
of the fast lane.”

Eddie put his truck in gear and turned the other way from the Interstate. He drove
for about an hour until he pulled off the road and limped out into the desert.

When he came back to his truck, he walked up to the fender by the front tire. He
listened. No coming traffic. Nothing, not even a bird cackle. He unzipped, and when he
finished urinating he wiped his hands on the thighs of his jeans and climbed back into
the truck and continued on up U.S. 95.

 

 

Scott Kauffman graduated summa cum laude from Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, and in the upper ten percent of his class from the Lewis & Clark Law School in Portland, Oregon, where he was a member of the Environmental Law Review. Following graduation, Scott tried dozens of criminal cases, first as an assistant state prosecutor and then as an assistant public defender in a rural Ohio community. His first novel, In Deepest Consequences, was published by Medallion Press in 2006. Scott resides in Newport Beach, California where he maintains an active law practice. He is currently at work on a second novel and a collection of short stories. When not working or writing, Scott gardens, reads, and listens to baroque music.

“Mother’s Keeper” by Thea Zimmer


“Portrait of the Artist’s Mother” by Camille Pissaro

Emerging from the gate, her smile was like a seven-year-old kid’s, gone to Six Flags, all adventuresome and free, meeting up with her best buds. Just to have someone to talk to, somewhere to go besides her bedroom, was a great thrill for her, though she always claimed, when asked, that it didn’t bother her to be alone, to lack a reason to get up, while family members were off at work.

I met her at the gate, a gentle surge of mother-love in her eyes, or at least a greatly weathered sweetness. I whisked her away, relieved that we’d avoided some terrific hassle like her getting lost along the way, or a security breech—the plane making an emergent stop to expel a dangerously disoriented old lady. Jaunty and lightweight, she practically skipped down the concourse, tra-la-la-ing past the security station. When we met up with my husband Luke, his face reflected, in his more patient manner, my own apprehension.

“Three weeks?” Luke and I asked each other after we’d brought her back to our temporary and tiny one-bedroom apartment. “How many more days?” we then asked at least once every day of Mom’s visit, our eyes rolling in that oh-my-God manner, neither of us ever even having children to contend with. “What’ll I do if Mom throws up?” I asked. Luke promised to clean it up, though he reminded me that the idea for the visit had been mine. My sister Mary, with whom my mom lived, had greatly welcomed it, agreeing to give me a little money from Mom’s account for my loss of work time.

Despite our efforts to explain otherwise, Mom had it all figured out: we were staying in her apartment—not the other way around. In Mom’s mind, our two cats were hers, which we were graciously feeding. Though she didn’t know precisely who we were, this was of no concern to her; she just kept thanking us for being such nice people in that kind, chipper manner that seemed to have only intensified with the loss of so much else.

“Who is Mary?” Mom asked when I announced I was calling Mary. Exasperated by her relentless questions, which seemed to have become even more ridiculous, I ignored her.

“Why didn’t you warn me of Mom’s deterioration,” I asked Mary on the phone.

“She’ll get better, more oriented as the weeks go by; you’ll see,” Mary answered, ignoring my question.

With Mom having gone to the little girl’s room, I felt free to complain. “If it wasn’t for her neurotic personality, the selfish narcissism she’s always had, she wouldn’t be near so difficult.” Mary agreed heartily. “Have fun dear,” she said with sisterly sarcasm. But I wasn’t laughing—awash as I was with all the old feelings: the guilt, oh yes, but also the anger, resentment, and pain. Why!—why had she never encouraged in me the greatness I’d so desperately wanted to see in myself? Why had she not sent me, as a girl, to therapy after my father left. She’d had to work full-time, and I’d felt she’d neglected me in particular. My father having been out of the picture, I had only her to blame for my teenage depressions, the deadening apathy that completely took hold, leaving me to feel only a few blips of pleasure or happiness over the years. I was sure I’d never felt real love, not even for my lovely and tolerant husband.

“I’ll just go to my room now and be quiet,” Mom said, as I set about to make dinner. Mom had always been a good girl, a daddy’s girl (her own mother dying when she was nine).

“Nooo Mom. That room’s for Luke. He has to get up and work in the morning. We’ll sleep out here in the living room, you on that futon, me on that one.”

“Okay, dear,” she answered, not seeming to mind the cramped quarters—the fact that her futon and mine were almost touching with just a few steps from hers to the bathroom and a few steps from mine to the front door. “We’ll have a good time,” she said.

“Yeah,” I said, remembering she snored loudly. Mary also mentioned that Mom talked, muttered, incessantly in her sleep.

Because Mom liked to rearrange things, I’d gone to great lengths to hide things that she might rearrange or mistake for trash or things she might eat. Once, I caught her, gritting her teeth with effort, attempting to pull a rigorously glued-on decoration—a fake piece of peppermint candy—from my antique candy jar. All pills, of course, had to be hidden so she wouldn’t assume they were hers, which, left to her own attempts at dosing, might kill her. Various tapes and bells were placed on drawers, stove knobs, freezer and fridge handles. She giggled, seeming not to understand their purpose, asking if it was Christmas (not a clue it was April). Since she thought our beloved indoor-only cats were hers, there was no telling how she might rearrange them. Triple sets of bells had been placed on windows and doors. I felt, with such armaments, there was no way she’d wander out in the middle of the night, setting our fluffy babies free. “Maybe we should let them out,” mom would say.

“No mom, they never go out.”

Little did I anticipate that all her undiagnosed OCD tendencies of the past had greatly intensified. Before going to bed, she spent hours rearranging the bedding on her futon. Of particular concern to her was the crackly plastic shower curtain underneath the fitted sheet. I’d put it there to protect the futon, though I really had no reason to believe she pee-pee’d in her sleep. I kept it there, feeling it best not to try and explain its purpose, even as she spent hours circling the futon, smoothing out the crackles and wrinkles, clearly confused by their origin. She’d take exasperated breaks, only to start folding and refolding the bedding, deciding and un-deciding on the arrangement of pillows and covers.

Finally, late one night, with Luke and me even more exhausted than the night before, my “interventions” reached that perfect parental pitch. “Stop it. The bed is fine. Pleeease go brush your teeth.” With effort, I pushed the futon frame against the wall, thwarting her circles. “Please put your pajamas on,” I commanded, pleaded.

“Shut up,” she snapped, hands on hips, her tone drippingly sarcastic, uncharacteristic at least in recent memory. With super-human strength, she yanked the futon away from the wall and resumed circling and smoothing.

“Pajamas, pleeease,” I begged.

“Shut up!” she shrieked. She’d amazingly morphed into me as a teenager, yet also with the innocence that her complete obliviousness to time and place afforded. “What’s it to you if I want to fix my bed, stay up late?”

“Pajamas pleeease.” I surged with anger, sure she was waking the neighbors.

“Shut the hell up,” mom ranted. “It’s my house,” she raged. “I can do what I want!”

“No,” Luke intervened, “it’s our house,” his calm authority making Mom stop, something flickering across her face, and then the rage bursting over her again.

“Here!” Spittle flying. “Is THIS want you want?” she screamed, pulling her shirt and her bra up over her head, flashing her fallen breasts.

Luke, in shock, turned away just in time. Miraculously, I managed to sit her down, distract her, and she cheerfully put her PJs on and went to bed. Interestingly enough—although she claimed to not remember the incident even minutes after it—from this night on, she ceased the rearranging whenever I asked, going to bed thereafter as complacently as a lamb.

“The child becomes the mother; the mother becomes the child,” Mom had become fond of saying. “What’s this? What’s that?”

“That’s soap Mom, that’s shampoo.”

“Do I wash my hair with this?”

“No, mom, that’s toothpaste. Get in the shower now.” Although my brusqueness tended to sadden and discourage me, there was nothing I could do to stop its guilty flow.

“It’s too cold, too hot, too cold,” she’d say with a little whine, wanting me to spend a good five minutes adjusting the shower’s temperature.

“Mom…it’s fine,” I’d exclaim. “You’re being ridiculous, like a little child.” (I refrained from saying, like you’re retarded.) I gladly left her to dry herself, a task which took over thirty minutes, instructing herself the entire time, indicating to herself where to dry real good. Coming back to dress her, facing her in her most naked and vulnerable, I’d sometimes try to explain: “Mom, I never asked, never wanted, to be a mom…that’s why I never had kids.” I didn’t come right out and say it sickened me that she wanted me to be her mom, when she’d never been a proper mom to me, never instilled in me the mother-love.

As the weeks passed, I became filled with irritation at her joy as she sat across from Luke and me, hanging on our every word as we talked and ate, apparently her favorite “big folks” in all the world. It was hard to tell with whom she was more captivated. Luke was wonderful with her. He’d talk to her of art and science, eventually coming back to God or the existence of space aliens (her two favorite subjects) proving that, if someone tried enough, a real conversation could still be had. After dinner, they’d settle in front of the Internet, looking up childhood songs that Luke noticed she was always humming: “Rachel, Rachel, Reuben, Reuben” and the one about “giving babies away for a half a pound of tea.”

“I was brilliant, you know,” Mom interjected into many conversations. It dawned on me during this visit that it’d become like a broken record, an obvious badge of self-defense. She’d been telling friends and family about her magnificent brain for as long as I could remember—how she’d skipped grades in school, entered college when she was 15; how she was one of the few women in her era to earn a graduate degree in chemistry, from Vanderbilt no less. Although the details had become lost to her, she continued to speak of her past brilliance. In fact, she seemed to be bringing it up more in recent days, making me realize, in a rare objective moment, that some part of her must’ve known her repetitive questions, her abject helplessness, were aggravating to others.

My objectivity, however, was fleeting, considering my need to confront her yet again: Why hadn’t she motivated her children to be academic successes? Why hadn’t she told us we were brilliant? I cross-examined her as I always had, though it ate me up a little. Why hadn’t she been concerned about my apathy? I pushed on in the manner we’d always jabbed at each other—she, perhaps inadvertently, even when fully cognizant.

“Mom,” I asked, “why is your brilliance the only thing you can remember?”

“I was a great student,” she insisted quite moodily, jauntily, “my children never did well in school. It’s the grades, the grades.” Actually, there was one other thing she persistently remembered. “Men are jerks,” she remained quick to conclude. Although she’d ultimately forgotten who my father was or that she’d been abandoned by him, her jokes and jibes remained full of admonitions regarding men and, more recently, hubbies. “Be nice to him, honey, or he’ll find himself a little chickie,” giggle, giggle.

“Mom, they’re not all like that.” I’d been rather desperately trying to convince her since I was a girl. I gave up, though, by the third week. Any attempt at sustained conversation had just become too much.

By the third week, the world was dropping out from under me. “God dammit! Mom’s pooping in her pants.” I called Luke at work. “I can’t believe it,” I lamented, “a little even got on the futon.” I called big sis. She said it’d never happened at home, and the CNA who’d started helping with mom had never mentioned it. “Ooohhh freakin gross,” I bellowed, but I set about then, with amazing resolve, bleaching the sheets after herding mom off to the shower, scolding her. I resigned myself to the inevitable: Diapers. I made plans to restrict her foods: smaller quantities, less veggies, spice, and grease. I could only pray her sphincter wouldn’t completely give out. Or my last nerve. I was beyond exhaustion. I continued to be woken up several times a night by Mom’s babbling, snippets of which seemed to pertain to longstanding issues between us, making them impossible to ignore.

“I did the best I could,” she’d say, far more convincing than I’d ever heard her in any waking, lucid state. “He tried to come back…,” babble, gurgle, babble, cough.

“Mom, pleeease,” I’d say, turning up the TV; it never seeming to wake her. I wasn’t sure what bothered me more, the genuine remorse in any recognizable statements, or the raw, saliva-filled mutters, the braying of the very old, the demented.

“Mary…Maaary…” By the third week, her sleep babble intensified in the form of calling out for big sis. I’d gotten up early, defeated, a virtual zombie, perhaps long-tired of shouldering my rebellious front, of justifying my reasons for being the selfish daughter as she’d so long-ago implied. “Mary…Mary…where?”

The raw need in her voice was impossible to ignore, even as I turned on my computer, trying to grab some rare work time. I sat there with my coffee, watching her toss and turn, listening to her increasingly bewildered muttering. Her dark turmoil seemed to confirm what I’d sensed we shared in waking hours—the stubborn regret, the mutual disappointment, clouding up the air between us, denser and blacker than ever. I turned back to my computer, fighting tears.

“Mary…MAAAry!” She screamed—“MAAAryyy!”—the sound of it ear-splitting, blood-curdling, the sound of a woman on a precipice, facing death itself. Her terror so lancing, it cut through me, curiously engendering a symbiosis, so rich and pure. “MARY!”

Rushing to her, rousing her from sleep, my words flowed out: “I love you; I love you so much.” I sat her up, hugged her hard.

“I was on a boat,” she said, still trembling, “falling off.”

Three days later, Mom flew home. I called to make sure she’d arrived okay. “Who are you?” she said with her little chuckle, “you know I can’t remember.” “Don’t worry,” I told her. It didn’t really matter so much anymore. I was just glad to hear her voice again. I was still glowing from the night before when she’d been rolling around in her sleep, babbling, still working things out. “I did the best I could.” “Yes mom, I know you did,” I’d responded. Surprisingly, my words stirred her. She’d sleep-moved closer, down to the end of the bed. I did all I knew how,” she said. “You are a wonderful mother,” I’d said, fighting easy tears. She smiled, that peaceful, knowing smile she’d always had in our best moments.

Hanging up the phone, I turned to Luke. “I miss Mom …” that little ache in my voice. “Me, too,” he said emphatically.

 

 

Thea Zimmer’s fiction appears in Fringe and Infinity’s Kitchen, both featuring her interactive narrative “Cake it!”  Thea’s more “traditional” short stories appears in such publications as New Dead Families, Unlikely Stories of the Third Kind, Hackwriters, Weirdyear, Infective Ink, and Dial Magazine. She was a finalist in the Summer Literary Seminars contest. She wrote the libretto for a multimedia opera, funded by a major arts foundation, to be performed in Miami Beach.

“Loves Me Loves Me Not” (Author Unknown)

Ray climbed the stairs and walked down the hallway toward our bedroom. He opened one side of the French doors and sat next to me on the bed.

“What are you doing, Hon?” he asked, trying to sound cheerful.

“Nothing,” I said, looking up at his thick six-foot frame. “Just sitting.”

He gently placed his hand on my leg. I must have winced, because he asked, “Are you okay?”

“Yeah, I’m okay,” I said, thinking, no, no, no, I’m not okay.

There was something shocking about Ray’s hand on my thigh, muscular from his hands-on management style at a fiberglass manufacturing plant.  Tonight it was swollen and bruised.  I put my hand over his, tenderly.  I was going to ask what had happened, how he’d injured himself when it hit me.  The impact of his fist on my leg injured him too. It looked painful. A wave of sympathy washed over me.

“Oh, Ray,” I said and started to cry. The memory of the night before was too fresh.

He put his arm around me. “I’m sorry, honey,” he said. “I’m so sorry.” Then, quietly, “I won’t
do it again. I promise. I don’t know why I do it.”

“I know,” I said. “I know.” And, like so many times before, I comforted him. And once again I
believed him.

*        *        *

Five years passed between that night and New Year’s Eve of 1976.  We’d argued about
something too small to remember but large enough to ignite Ray’s anger.

In the dining room, he pushed me from behind before knocking my feet out from under me
with his leg. I tucked into a fetal position, steeling myself for the blows I knew would come.

“Please, Ray,” I pleaded.  “Please don’t.” He kicked the small of my back over and over again before bending over to put his hand over my face.  And punching it. This was a “technique” he’d explained to me once as we saw it demonstrated in a movie by the actors.  It was supposed to prevent telltale face bruising.

He screamed, “You’ll never be anything without me. You’re nothing! Nothing. I don’t need
you.” I covered by head with my arms, waiting for it to end.

His yelling awakened our son who stood, frightened, in the entrance to the living room, crying and stomping his feet, “Mommy, Mommy!” Then to his father. “No, Daddy, no! You’re hurting her.” And to me again, “Mom-meee!!” He looked so helpless, like the “Little Ray” everybody called him. I wasn’t able to go to him. I lay on the floor as still as possible, waiting for the beating to end. I knew from experience that if I tried to get up, Ray would throw me against the furniture. Or against a wall.

Gritting his teeth, Ray kicked my back one last time, then yelled at Raymond to “Get in your room. Now!”

Raymond, looking much younger than twelve, ran crying down the hallway and closed his
door. He was tall for his age, slim, and he hadn’t yet entered puberty.  When we moved from our townhouse into a new home in Diamond Bar, California, I made sure we transformed his room from a child’s to a boy’s. We picked up two wood-framed twin beds, and we replaced his colorful plastic toy boxes with a book case.  Raymond himself picked out a dark plaid bedspread to replace his car-motif bed cover.  He was growing up. But this night, he looked like a little boy once again. It isn’t right he has to see this, I thought. This isn’t fair. Nothing was right or fair.

Ray stomped away to the back of the house, toward our bedroom. When I couldn’t hear him anymore, I slowly got up, assessing the damage. Every part of me hurt, so it was difficult to tell how bad it was this time. I was exhausted and emotionally spent.

I walked through the living room and down the hallway. I quietly opened Raymond’s door to
peak in. He was lying awake in his bed. I kissed him on the forehead and told him good night. He wrapped his arms tightly around my neck and didn’t let go. “It’s okay, sweetie,” I told him. “It’s okay.” As I walked out of Raymond’s room and into the hallway, Ray appeared before me, as if materializing out of thin air.

“Where do you think you’re going?” he asked.

“To the bathroom,” I said quietly.

“No, you’re not!” With that, he grabbed my hair and dragged me to the entryway. What I
remember most is that I moaned, not because my hair – long at the time — was being pulled, but because my body ached. He opened the front door and shoved me outside, all 120 pounds of me. “Leave!” he yelled as he slammed the door behind him. Then I heard him turn the lock.

I sat down, gingerly, on the concrete step, then whispered, more into the night than anything else, “Happy New Year.” Raymond was in his bedroom, frightened by what he’d just witnessed, his dad inside with him, full of anger, and me locked outside, not knowing what to do.

I don’t know how long I sat out there. It could have been an hour. Or two. Or it could have
been ten minutes. The brand-new neighborhood of mostly large houses was quiet. I was
barefoot, wearing slacks and a light sweater Ray had given me for Christmas. Across the
street, I looked past the houses to the golf course greens behind them. It was a sea of
darkness. The calmness helped me think. I knew the abuse was getting worse with each
instance. It was almost 1977, before there were women’s centers, before there was an
understanding about battered spouses, before I understood it myself.

I put my hand on the wall of our house, braced myself, and pulled myself up. I walked to the front door and knocked. After about thirty seconds, Ray opened the door, he didn’t say
anything, and then he turned and walked away.

It was at that moment that something inside me clicked. It had taken me years to reach that point, but I finally got it. I knew there wasn’t anything I could do or say to change it. I knew he couldn’t help himself, because he didn’t accept that something wasn’t quite right with him. Instead, he blamed me.

At the same time, I knew that no matter how contorted and red with rage his normally
handsome face was, he didn’t mean to hurt me. I knew he couldn’t will away his anger. It was borne years earlier, from a childhood of hurt, of dejection, rejection, and neglect, from a too-busy mother and her cruel boyfriends and multiple husbands, and a father who gave him up, at age five, with his four-year-old sister, to a Colorado orphanage for a year, telling him his mother was dead. That manifested into an out-of-control anger that was unpredictable. Ray was damaged.

It was at that moment when I finally knew what I had to do. The more time that passed, the
worse it had gotten. When Ray lost control, there was no stopping him, no reasoning with
him. I had a sinking feeling that one day he would go too far, hit or kick me too hard, or throw me one too many times.

In the front bathroom, I rinsed off my face. My nose was swollen. The skin on my back tingled, as if from a bad sunburn. But that was it. Nothing is broken, I reassured myself. But I knew at a deeper level that everything was broken. In the past, Ray had given me cracked ribs, a blood clot, and black eyes so severe that my eyes were swollen shut for a week. Tonight, I thought, I was lucky. This time. But I was also sad.

I knew what I had to do. With that new-found realization, the tears began to flow, almost
uncontrollably. I cried for our son for him having to see the violence, but more profoundly, for having to live it, and for his future for having to overcome it. I cried for Ray for whatever was broken inside him. I cried because I couldn’t fix what was wrong with him and with us. I cried for the love that could no longer be and could no longer grow. I cried for every bad thing that ever happened to me, to him and to Raymond. I cried for what was about to happen to our marriage, for the future I knew we wouldn’t have together. I wept for the us that was no more.

Within a week, a moving van was at the house and I was gone.  I’ve never looked back.

 

Author Unknown. If you are the author of this piece or know who is, please let us know at r.kv.r.y.editor(at)gmail(dot)com. We lost records when the old website imploded, and would like to fully credit all authors who have generously shared their work with us. Thank you.

“Goat Men” by Jesse Scaccia

 

Image result for wellingtons

‘It’s time, Jesse,’ he says, and I know just what he means.

Wellingtons. Blue bucket red bucket bottles. The metal
contraption that holds four bottles at once because lord
knows we can’t very well ask the goats to form an orderly
line. The Lassie dogs look up with hope, see the equipment,
and bow their heads. We climb the hill. The herd charges
the gates.

The oldest one’s tats hang heavy, one shorter than the
other, the nub done in by a case of gangrene that nearly
killed her last year. The five kids, all white as clouds, nuzzle
together by the latch. They learn quickly, these. The one
spotted like a brown cow watches us with one eye. The
farmer swears- no, he thinks- that the brown one can
watch the hill with the one eye and us with the other.

‘They get mad when we’re late,’ he grumbles at me.

Over coffee at the restaurant in the hippie town on the way
to the farm I told him that I like goats. ‘They’re ornery,
have a real mind of their own, and I like that,’ I said.

‘We’ll get along just fine then,’ he returned, earnestly.

We do the high knee dance through the gates to keep the
girls from barging through to the two boys next door.

‘What will happen if we let them through?’

‘They’ll fuck, and it’s not time for that.’ It’s not season and
plus, they haven’t consumed enough of the apple cider
vinegar the farmer has been mixing into their feed to
produce more (profitable) female offspring. Apparently, the
Y sperm hate acid, they shudder from the taste of it.

But now: it’s time. The farmer drags the old one into the
barn by the ears. They hate having their ears pulled. The
young ones don’t like it when you mess with  the
pubescent pile of bones spilling out between their eyes.

‘What’s a rookie mistake?’ I ask as the farmer settles down
for the evening milking.

‘Pulling.’

The goat’s neck is strapped with a leather dog collar to the
post. The farmer squeezes and I’m shocked by the force
with which the milk shoots out. Tsssssss! It is foamy and
warm. Thick grey cobwebs that look as strong as uneven
bars hang between the rafters. I dip the plastic cup I snuck
out from the kitchen into the blue bucket. It tastes good.
Goat milk is the healthiest for babies, country doctors say.
Both to get babies to grow and to get them to sleep. Milk
just like this: unpasteurized, unfiltered, not from an animal
to a tank to a truck to a refrigerator to a back seat to a
smaller refrigerator to a bottle.

Like this: Tsssssssss! From pink flesh to pink lips.

Parker and I feed the kids first. They bully and fight. We
keep the bottles waist high to emulate their mothers’ tats. I
swear that Number 26 looks at me with genuine longing as
I feed him.

Later. It’s so dark I can’t see the road and for reasons
uncrystallized, ungraspable at the moment I want to cry.

I am running and something of the darkness overtakes me.
Thoughts spill out ungoverned. Most pass. One sticks:
eternal sunshine of my spotty mind.

My lungs beat their desperate cadence against my ribs. Still
here, motherfucker. We’re not going to let you die,
motherfucker.

I still dream about my dad every night and I want to cry.

I had to leave my boys in Cape Town before I was ready.
Days after my best friend told me he was Positive and I
promised I would be there for him but my sister, when I
told her I was going to miss the funeral she wouldn’t stop
crying, she could barely get the words out:

‘Dad needs you,’ she said. Even though dad was dead she
said it again in the thin space between heaves.

‘Dad needs you.’

We don’t talk anymore, my sister and I, and I don’t know
why.

I speak more to my dad, in my dreams, than I did the six
months before he died. In my dreams I hold him every
chance I get. I hold his hands, I rest my head on his
shoulder. I tell him I’m sorry so many times and I grip him
so hard that I wake myself up.

I’m on a ship on the lake that spills from the North Sea. I’m
on a train past the sheep fields with my mouth wide open.
I’m in Amsterdam on the floor of a hotel, tucked between
the bed and the wall, stoned and shaking. I am nowhere. I
am in bed with a Hungarian whose boyfriend is in Barcelona.
I fall asleep next to a Swede and she snores against my
neck and she must be lonely, she’s holding me so.

I am nowhere and he is everywhere.

I like the second one better and I believe the second one.

‘Where should I run?’ I asked the farmer.

‘Run the lights,’ he said.

So I do. Down the dark dirt road. Past the grocery store
that has no blueberries and the bar next door and the
bridge that is the end of the farmer’s world. I run until
there are no more lights and it is no longer safe.

Finally- and if I said this before I was lying- but I am finally
falling. The buried me is rising from eggshells and compost
and fresh dirt and is meeting the me to whom the gift of
gravity has been returned. The zombie me, the version
you’ve known of me since February (or long before? since
we met? since the beginning?) cannot fight both fronts. I
am forced to love myself and I do.

While the farmer was still milking I dropped to my knees on
the flakes of red sandstone. One-two-threefourfive the kids
formed a semi-circle around me. I lifted my hood and I
butted their heads. I could feel their back legs straining as
they pressed. None of us moved- the balance of opposing
forces- and I knew that, some day, I would be a goat man
too.

 

 

Jesse Scaccia is a columnist for the Norfolk Compass. He also is the editor of AltDaily.com. This essay is excerpted from a book in progress, All That Will Remain We Shall Tear From The Ground With Our Fists. The writer can be reached at jessescaccia@gmail.com.

“Pssssssst” by Carol Kanter

Image result for unripe banana

It is a secret what happened
once and more than once
when I was small
much smaller than my cousin

who taught me how to feel
helpless and afraid
for doing what I knew
was wrong

only because he made me promise
not to tell, NEVER
to tell. He would hiss at me
“Or Else”

and twist my skinny arm
behind my back
to show he could and would
make me suffer worse.

He did not explain how
he had the power
or what worse might be
just left me

to imagine—
how in the night dark
mom and dad would leave
Forever.

I try to keep the secret
buried deep
but it leaks out in bad dreams
I cannot shake

because they grip me
the way a not-quite-ripe banana
holds tight its peel.
But already I can smell

how delicious it will be
to strip off fear
when I get big enough
to tell.

 

 

Carol Kanter‘s poetry has been published in Ariel, Blue Unicorn, ByLine, Common Ground, Explorations, Hammers, Iowa Woman, Kaleidoscope Ink, The Madison Review, The Mid-America Poetry Review, Pudding Magazine, River Oak Review, Sendero, Sweet Annie Press, Thema, Universities West Press, and a number of anthologies. Korone named her the Illinois Winner of its 2001 writing project. Atlanta Review gave her an International Merit Award in poetry in 2003 and 2005. Finishing Line Press published her first chapbook, “Out of Southern Africa,” in 2005, and her second, “Chronicle of Dog,” in 2006

“To Love Again” by Steve Cushman

 

Pulling onto I-4, heading out of Orlando, Fay told herself to relax.
On the seat next to her was her purse and an overnight bag stuffed
with a couple days worth of clean clothes, suntan lotion, a romance
novel, and a manila envelope with the divorce papers.  She was going
to Cocoa Beach for the weekend, just long enough to clear her mind
and sign the divorce papers Dale, her soon to be ex, had the nerve to
send certified mail to Dr. Hasell’s office where she worked as a dental
hygienist

Fay concentrated on staying between the white lines of the highway.
Driving had gotten somewhat easier in the last month.  More than
once, in those first few weeks after the separation, she’d had to fight
the urge to jerk the steering wheel hard to the right and plow into the
pine trees lining the highway.  She wasn’t sure she wanted to die as
much as go to sleep for a while, perhaps long enough to make it
through the grieving process, however long that might be, maybe wake
up on the other side, ready for life again.

She’d reserved a room at the Ocean Shore Suites.  The front of the
motel faced US 1 and the back faced the beach.  While her first floor
room didn’t offer a view of the ocean, only sand dunes, she could smell
and taste the salt in the air.

Hungry from the drive, Fay walked across the street to Sonny’s Pit
Bar-B-Q.  She ordered a pulled pork sandwich and watched a baby boy,
maybe a year old, at the table across from her, gobble up a plateful of
baked beans.  His face and hands were covered in the red-brown
sauce.  The parents, a scruffy looking pair of nineteen or twenty year
olds, didn’t seem to notice when the baby started running his dirty
hands through his blonde hair.  Fay had to fight the desire to reach
over and stop him, to fling one of her French fries into the back of that
worthless father’s head.

She could not help but think of Dale and her son Owen, who was a
high school senior and still living with his father.  Dale had come to her
that Sunday morning on his way out the door to go fishing.  He had on
that stupid hat with the hooks and lures fastened to the brim.  She
was reading the paper without much concentration, thinking that what
she really needed to do was get out there and tidy up the garden, get
it ready for winter.

“With Owen graduating this year I think we should consider splitting
up,” Dale said as easy as could be, as if it were something he’d
practiced hundreds of times before and were no bigger deal than
suggesting they plant a new crepe myrtle in the front yard.

At first she didn’t quite understand what he’d said; she didn’t listen
to half of what he said.  He was always talking.  Plans for expanding his
landscaping business, plans for buying a new work truck.  Talk, talk,
talk.  Always something she didn’t really care about.  Lowering the
newspaper, she noticed a cartoon was on the TV behind him.  This
seemed strange to her, because weren’t cartoons for Saturday
mornings?

“What do you mean?” she asked.

“Split up, divorce.”

“But why?”  Other questions occurred to her: Is it another woman?
Have you felt this way a long time?  Is it me?  Am I fat?  Am I not
attractive?  But the words to these questions, thankfully, she would
think later, didn’t come out of her mouth.

“You know neither of us are happy,” he said.

And it was true.  She hadn’t been particularly happy with the
marriage for years.  But half the people she knew weren’t happy with
their marriages.  Were you even supposed to be married and happy?
She didn’t know.  They had a decent life—minus romance and
excitement and shared secrets—but it hadn’t been awful.  He had never
slapped her around or come home drunk wanting rough second-hand
sex after a night at the strip clubs like some of her friend’s husbands.
He had never, as far as she knew, cheated on her.

“I’ve got to go,” he said.  “I’m already late.”  And then he walked out
the door.

Fay spent the rest of day shopping, buying flowers and a new
blouse, some shoes.  Anything at all but to think about the fact she
would have to start living alone.  What upset her most was that she
would probably have to move out.  Dale hadn’t yet said he wanted to
stay in the house, but he’d built a three-car garage out back the year
before so he could store his lawn equipment and they’d converted the
back bedroom into his office.

*
She leaned back in the motel bed, her head and neck up against the
strange headboard.  The old, green comforter was on the floor at the
foot of the bed.  Julie, Dr. Hasell’s wife and the other hygienist in the
office, had told her to never touch those things.  She said they were
only washed once a month and you never know what type of bodily
fluids might be on them.

This weekend trip had actually been Julie’s idea: get away, she’d said,
it’ll help you clear your mind and make plans for your future.  To Fay,
this sounded like a good idea at the time.

Fay took two big mouthfuls of the beer she’d bought at 7-Eleven on
the way back from the restaurant, then pulled the papers out of the
manila envelope.  His name Dale Ray Brown was above hers, Fay Alice
Brown.  The details of the divorce were what they’d already discussed
and decided: he’d get the house and pay her half its value over the
next ten years.  They would split the cost of Owen’s college education
and she’d cover his insurance.  There were no surprises here.

All she had to do was sign, slide her pen across those three lines
with the red X beside them and the marriage would officially be over.
But she couldn’t sign them just yet.  While she knew the marriage was
over and that she didn’t love Dale, the movement from one person, a
married woman, to the next, a divorcee, was more difficult than she’d
imagined.  She slid the pen back into her purse and turned the bedside
light off.  The beer and her breathing exercises helped ease her toward
sleep in only a matter of minutes.

*

Fay was at the beach by ten the next morning.  She’d bought the
bathing suit Tuesday night, after work, at Target.  It was a little loose
in the hips.  Without trying, she had lost fifteen pounds since moving
out.  The only time she bothered cooking dinner was when Owen came
over on the weekends.  Most nights she was in bed by eight, a half-
eaten bowl of cereal on her bedside table.

The beach was not crowded yet, but it was April and a Saturday—
temperatures in the mid-80’s—so Fay was sure it would fill up
eventually.  She found a spot twenty yards from the water, set her
towel down and her bag with the change of clothes, her lotion and
sunglasses, and the romance novel, To Love Again, Julie had given her
for the trip.

Fay had woken an hour ago, but the water and sun and sand made
her sleepy again, so she closed her eyes and drifted off.  The crashing
of the waves against the beach was calming and easy.

*
She had met Dale twenty-two years ago.  He’d come in to have a
tooth pulled.  He was well-built and attractive, but she was not
available.  Two days before, a man she’d been dating for over a year,
and whom she didn’t truly love, had asked her to marry him.

As she prepped Dale’s tooth for the extraction, she began telling him
about this other man—a man whose name she could no longer pull
from her memory—and about how he was a nice enough guy.  He wore
suits and argyle socks to work and had a yellow canary named Finch.

“Sounds like a fag,” Dale said.

“He’s a good man.”

“You know what you need?”

“No,” she said.  “What?”

“You need to go out to dinner with me, tonight.  I’ll show you a good
time.”  Dale reached over and ran his hand against her naked calf.  And
while she knew she should have been offended, she was not.  She
slapped his hand away, but took him up on his offer for dinner.  Four
months later they were married.

It was the sound of children that pulled her back to the beach.  Two
boys, no older than ten or eleven, were running in and out of the
water, screaming.  Fay sat up and pulled To Love Again from her bag.
On the cover, a couple stood arm-in-arm facing the sea.  In the right
corner of the book was a round sticker with 25 cents scribbled in black
pen.  It was not a new book.  Julie had told her to read it, said it would
show her there were more men out there.

The first chapter introduced the reader to Marie, a woman whose
husband was leaving her for another woman after twelve years of
marriage.  Chapter two and three went through the next couple
months of Marie trying to understand what to do with her life now that
she was alone.  A woman in her forties who had not worked in years.
There were obvious similarities to Fay’s life and she knew Julie had
given it to her for that reason.  She could imagine what was going to
happen; Marie would meet a man and they would fall in love and she’d
be happier than she’d ever been with that old cow of a husband.

Fay had read forty pages of the three-hundred page book when she
felt the need to pee.  Her motel room was only fifty yards behind her
but she didn’t want to leave her things out here unattended and she
didn’t want to lose this prime spot, so she headed to the water.  It was
cooler than she thought it would be.  It was only April.

In waist-deep water, she could see the crowd of people on the
beach.  White-fleshed tourists from places she’d never been:
Minnesota, New York, and Iowa.  She squatted and felt the warm rush
against her thigh, swimming around her knees, her ankles, and then it
was gone.  She was embarrassed as she walked out of the water, sure
that everyone knew exactly what she’d done.  But she told herself it
didn’t matter.  She would never see these people again.  Anything she
did this weekend would stay here, away from her other life back in
Orlando.

On her stomach now, propped up on her elbows, Fay continued to
read the novel.  Marie had started working the counter at a flower shop
where a customer named John came in every Friday and bought a
dozen tulips.  He didn’t wear a ring, so Marie assumed they must be for
his girlfriend.  After his fourth visit, she asked him who the flowers
were for and he’d smiled and said shyly that they were for his mother’s
room at a nearby nursing home.

When she told him how sweet that was, John invited her to come
with him and meet his mother and to have dinner afterwards.  Marie
accepted his offer.  What harm, she wondered, could happen to her in
a nursing home?  Or from a man who was kind enough to bring his
mother fresh flowers every week?

Fay smiled and shook her head.  Of course, it was ridiculous and
predictable, but still she read on, turning to on one side when she felt
her back starting to burn.  Over the course of the next few weeks,
Marie learned that John was an investment banker.  His wife had died a
dozen years earlier in a boating accident.

Through the next hundred pages, the couple began kissing, holding
hands, taking long walks on an unnamed, empty beach.  There were
long passages where they gave each other massages, would not have
sex, but would lie side by side, running their hands across each other’s
excited, naked bodies.  Marie would ask John to make love to her, but
he said he didn’t think he could move on to that stage of the
relationship while his mother was still alive.  She had loved his ex-wife
as if she were her own daughter.

In the parts of the book which detailed these massages, and oiled
hands gliding over  foreign flesh, Fay could feel a stirring inside of
herself.  She ignored it, pushing forward, wanting to know what was
going to happen and how they would finally consummate their love.

But for the next fifty pages, they continued to visit John’s ailing
mother and to explore each other’s bodies with their hands and to tell
secrets of their previous lives: the time John kissed a man in college,
Marie’s admitting she once watered her backyard naked.

With thirty-five pages left to go, Fay’s back and shoulders felt
officially sunburned.  She walked back to her room.  She’d been out
here long enough.  She closed the curtains and took a cool shower and
instead of putting her clothes back on climbed into bed naked.  Her skin
tickled.  The fan swirled overhead.

Fay leaned against the headboard and continued to read.  John’s
mother died.  Her heart simply gave out.  The night of the funeral, after
all the guests had left, Marie stripped John naked and made love to
him.  The book ended with them waking up the next morning with sun
streaming through tall, white curtains.

By the time Fay turned the final page, and dropped the book, her
right hand was stroking herself, pressing and pushing, and that was all
it took.  The force of the orgasm surprised her.  All alone in this
strange motel room with her hand moist, resting on her stomach, Fay
felt a little dirty, a little embarrassed and sore, but, all in all, she felt
pretty damn good.

After a nap, she took another quick shower and got dressed for
dinner.  A mile up US 1, there was a bar named Conchy Joe’s.  She’d
eaten there years ago with Dale.  She decided to go there tonight, have
a beer or two, some oysters and a plate of conch fritters.  Then she
would come back and sign those damn divorce papers, be done with it
once and for all.

Conchy Joe’s was hopping and Fay took a seat on the balcony bar
under a faux straw-mat roof. Behind her was the Intercoastal Waterway
and she watched as a pair of sailboats cruised under the bridge. It was a
fine evening. The heat of the day, though mild, had burned her shoulders
and her neck. She could feel the fabric of the shirt touching her skin and
this, she thought, was not completely unpleasant. She hadn’t worn a bra
and her nipples felt firm, reacting to the soft cotton of her top.

The bartender was tall and young and cute and he winked at her. But
she knew he probably winked at every woman who came in here. His tips
counted on it. There were a couple men, both older than her, sitting at
one corner of the bar and a married couple sitting to her right.

Just relax, she told herself again. The beer tasted good. The oysters
felt soft and soggy on her tongue but she didn’t care. She was miles
away from her home and that apartment, from her son who had
disappointed her by choosing to stay with his father, from her all-but-final
divorce. She was a woman alone at the beach enjoying herself. This, in
itself, was a new life for her, one she couldn’t have imagined a year ago.

She thought about that little apartment she’d lived in for almost five
months. The only personal decoration she’d added was a pair of framed
photos atop the entertainment center: one of her and Owen at the state
fair and Owen’s senior photo. The apartment had come furnished and she
was grateful that she had not had to go out and purchase furniture that
would be hers, and not theirs, for the first time in twenty-one years.

Maybe she shouldn’t sign those divorce papers as they were written.
Originally she’d agreed to leave Dale the house because it was set up for
his business, but now with the conviction of beer and distance she
wondered why in the hell he should get it. Sure he would be paying her,
but she deserved it as much as him, if not more. She’d painted almost
every room, had picked out the carpet and appliances and she’d hung the
borders. Plus, she had been the main breadwinner for almost all of their
marriage. If she had to move out and start over, maybe he should have
to do the same thing. They could sell the house and split the profits. But
she knew it would be easier to just let him stay in the house. Plus, Owen
would have that little bit of consistency when he came home from college
on summer breaks.

“May I buy you another?”

It took Fay a moment to realize someone was talking to her. She
turned. He was a thick man, a couple years older than her, with gray hair
and a deeply tanned face. His pale blue button-up shirt was not tucked
into his linen slacks.

Fay smiled, lifted her bottle to finish it and said, “Sure.”

“Chuck,” he said, extending his hands. “Chuck Mulhauser.” The only
jewelry he wore was a gold band on his pinky.

“Fay,” she said, shaking his rough, calloused hand.

“Another beer for the lady and a Jack and Coke for me,” he said to the
bartender. He turned back to Fay. “So the obvious question is what is a
beautiful lady like you doing alone in a place like this?”

She could see tufts of his grey chest hair at the top of his shirt. Dale
was practically hairless. She could see a slight shaving nick by his right
ear. Dale wore a beard. This man’s lips were full. Dale’s lips were almost
non-existent. Chuck Mulhauser was the physical opposite of Dale and this
alone was enough to make him attractive to Fay.

“A little vacation from life,” she said. She considered telling him why she
was really here, the divorce papers and whatnot, but did not want to seem
like easy prey.

“We all need one of those sometimes.”

She knew this was playful banter. For twenty-four years now, she’d
done that, leaning over patients and talking, saying words that didn’t add
up to anything. “And you, what are you doing in a place like this?”

Fay was well on her way to being drunk. She’d had two beers before he’
d approached her, and she knew she was a certifiable lightweight when it
came to alcohol. What was she doing talking, even flirting, with this
strange man? For all she knew he could have been a murderer, a
rapist.

“I was hungry,” he said and smiled.

He ordered another dozen oysters and eventually each of them another
drink. Fay felt herself leaning into him. He ran his hand along her knee, an
inch or two up her thigh. A respectable distance, she thought, confident
but not too aggressive. As they ate and drank, he told her that he was in
the import/export business over at the docks. Boring stuff, he said,
except plenty of money to be made.

“I’m not sure why I’m even talking to you. Women, I’ve discovered, are
the enemy. My wife, Sheila, married twenty-nine years—two sons—built
her the fancy house she wanted. You name it, I gave it to her. Well, she
runs off and leaves me for some pansy-ass out of work physicist. I
should have beat the shit out of both of them. But what are you going to
do? Am I happier now without her? Hell, no. Would I take her back in a
minute if she called me? Hell, yes.

“I don’t even understand how these things happen. You think
everything is going along at whatever rate it’s supposed to and then
bamb, you’re blindsided. Hell, I just don’t know.”

Fay saw the tears in the corner of his eyes and she reached out and took
his hand in hers. Why couldn’t Dale be more like this man? Huh, why
not? Because, she knew, life is not fair and never would be.

“Let’s go back to your hotel,” he whispered. She looked into his eyes
and nodded.

*

Inside the hotel room, they went at each other’s clothes before the door
was even shut. He was thicker around the middle than she’d imagined,
but this Chuck Mulhauser was a sure and confident lover. She closed her
eyes and held on and enjoyed herself. Although he was not particularly
big, maybe even smaller than Dale down there, it hurt a little at first. But
she liked his smell and the way his rough hands gripped her waist and
squeezed her breasts. And then as quickly as it had begun it was over.

She rested her head against his hairy chest, could feel his heart
thumping wildly. “Was it good?” she asked, embarrassed as soon as the
words left her lips.

“Amazing,” he said in a low, satisfied voice.

“Tomorrow we’ll go for breakfast,” she said.

“I’ll serve you fresh eggs and fruit,” he said. “Orange Juice. We’ll take
my boat out.”

Fay closed her eyes, thought that sounded damn good. Maybe Julie had
been right after all. Just let yourself go and you’ll find happiness, you’ll
find something. Chuck started to snore and she slid away from him,
listening to his even breathing.

When Fay woke early in the morning, he was still sleeping and snoring
on his side of the bed. She thought about what he’d promised, about
breakfast in bed, a day out on his sailboat. That sounded good to her,
the way something like this should begin. She wanted to do that, but
knew she couldn’t, not yet. She’d come here, met a man and discovered
that she just might be able to love again. While she knew two people
meeting at a bar for a one-night stand wasn’t exactly love, it was a start,
perhaps a sign that her life could be filled with a sort of intimacy she’d
forgotten she was capable of.

Fay got dressed quietly. She wrote him a quick note on motel
stationary: thanks & take care, Fay. After writing the first three numbers
of her phone number, she scribbled through them. Walking outside, the
bright sun almost took her breath away. Fay blinked a couple times and
headed to her car, climbed in.

Instinctively, as she always had in times of crisis, Fay dialed her old
phone number. It rang two, three times. She could see Dale standing
there with his mug of coffee, one hand scratching his fat ass. Then his
voice was in her ear: “Hello.” When she didn’t say anything, he said it
again, annoyed this time, “Hello.”

She turned the phone off and dropped it on the seat beside her, pulled
the divorce papers from the envelope. After signing all three required
lines, she slid the papers back inside and sealed it shut. Then Fay climbed
out of the car and walked back to the motel room and knocked on the
door. When Chuck answered, he had a towel around his waist, his eyes
cloudy with sleep. “I thought you left,” he said.

“Not yet,” Fay said, taking him by the hand and leading him back to bed
and those still warm comfortable sheets.

 

 

Steve Cushman has worked as an X-ray Technologist for the last fifteen years. He is the author of the novel, Portisville, and a forthcoming short story collection,
Fracture City.

“Desecration” by Mike Bove

https://thecatholicirishman.files.wordpress.com/2015/05/broken-crucifix.jpg

Father Tooley woke to a terrible sound. It was gone in an instant, and he wondered briefly if it had been some trick of the mind. As silence reassembled, he pushed back the blanket and went for his robe. Pulling the folds tight around his waist he reached for the door, but the shuffling at his back made him pause. Behind him, the woman in the sheets lifted her head.

“Stay there,” he said.

The sound, a crash, had come from outside the rectory, and he made his way in the faint-light dawn to the double doors that served as gateway. On the other side the darkened nave yawned, vast and empty, and he paused as the door closed to listen. Silence. He walked slowly to the center aisle and looked down between the rows of pews at the front entrance. The carpet scraped his naked soles, the fibers near threadbare from decades of hosting the faithful. Turning to face the altar, he signed the cross and genuflected, whispering an apology for appearing in his bedclothes. Then he saw the face of Christ.

It was above the altar, on the altar, smooth and pained, monochromatic in the dim light. Up the marble steps and closer, recognition dawned. The bare wall behind the altar: the mighty crucifix had fallen.

Ten feet by six and forged from steel, the gold plated cross held a pewter Messiah, massive in presence, hung emaciated by outstretched arms. Now, the head lying prone against the cracked marble alter, the figure looked even more helpless. Father Tooley trembled to see the battered face of the Savior surrounded by broken bits of marble. He felt dizzy, nauseated, but breathed slowly and collected himself in time to follow the base of the cross down to the floor behind, badly scraped and encircled with shards of marble and- something else, pale wedges and bits of ivory moon-spilled communion wafers.

He breathed, he buckled, he fell to his knees. The crucifix had somehow detached from its clasps, falling from the wall, the steel stem splitting the top of the tabernacle like an eggshell, dashing its contents to the floor as the weight of the cross above pitched forward and swung the face of Christ violently down to the altar. Why? Pieces of aftermath lay at Father Tooley’s knees, why, and the answer appeared.

“What happened?” Mrs. Bertrand was wrapped in his bed sheet, her bare shoulders visible even in the shadows. She padded slowly up the marble steps to his folded frame.

Father Tooley stiffened. “I asked you to stay in bed.”

Momentary silence and the two looked down at the wafers on the floor, sacred confetti mingled with terrestrial stone. Before mass, merely discs of unleavened bread purchased in bulk from a Catholic supplier, but during the ceremony of the Eucharist, when Father Tooley held them before the congregation in a gilded platter, they acquired hallowed form. Transsubstantiatio, the miraculous changing of the bread and wine into the flesh and blood of Christ.

“What a mess,” Mrs. Bertrand said, holding the sheet closed at her breast with one hand. She leaned forward with the other and started to sweep the debris into a small pile.

Father Tooley caught her wrist. “No.” He felt her shrink, but he would not have her further defile the holy pieces with common touch.

No one else could handle the wafers after their metamorphosis; if any were left over from mass they were stored in the tabernacle and used the following day. But it was his sole responsibility to convey them from their resting place on the platter to the hands or tongues of the parish. And if one should fall to the ground by clumsiness of a careless child or arthritic elder, he alone could bend down to retrieve it. It was his touch that preserved their sacred state, kept them free from sin.

Mrs. Bertrand shifted in the sheet. “What now?”

The sun was beginning to filter through the windows above, illuminating the faces of Aquinas, Augustine, and the Holy Virgin cast motionless in stained glass. The reds and golds, blues and purples of their static garments crept down to the pews onto the marble steps to touch gently the edges of the white bed sheet wound around Mrs. Bertrand’s shape. Father Tooley held a special fondness for the early morning light of the church, all color and silence, and he let his eyes fall on the mixed hues that skirted her waist, her thighs. To see her like this, bathed in these tones, was blasphemy, and he felt the bitter pangs of guilt resurface.

Mrs. Bertrand was a boxy woman of forty, a widow fifteen years his junior who had returned to the church of her childhood after losing her husband, her faith. Father Tooley was her console, although his contributions had expanded of late to include physical as well as spiritual sustenance. It was never his intention, but she sparked a forgotten longing not felt since the days before Seminary, a tension that waned during the years of prayer and silent obedience. She was swimming in sin, as was he now, and he longed to free himself from the sensual grip of a forbidden undertow.

She sensed his gaze and loosened her grip on the sheet. The fabric went slack at her chest, dropping just far enough to expose the top of a breast, pale and round.

“Cover up,” he said, looking away.

She reached for him and placed a hand on his robe, finding the fold and slipping her fingers in against his skin. Her touch warmed him, but when he closed his eyes he saw the broken visage of the fallen Christ. He stood up fast and loomed over her. She let the sheet fall full, both breasts burning now with the sacred fire of stained glass sun.

“Cover up.”

The spectacle of the crucifix- the broken alter, the shattered tabernacle and scattered wafers- was a warning he brought on himself. He’d allowed her to entice him and invited her into his bed. He knew well the price for such actions, the price for them both. Neither were innocent. He knew, too, that it was her inborn deceit that brought them to this place: of the woman came the beginning of sin, and through her we all die. It would be a death without honor, shameful in the eyes of Christ; he’d fallen victim to her charms. Serve only your God and fear him alone. You must destroy the false prophets who try to lead you astray. And so he did, most every night, until he could destroy her no more and collapsed in a heap at her side.

Mrs. Bertrand pulled the sheet up and stood. Father Tooley could not meet her eyes. Filled with such loathing, he couldn’t bear to look. “This isn’t right,” he whispered, “you know it.”

“It is right,” she said, “and you know it.”

It was not the only time he’d made a false claim of repentance. The first time, a winter storm wrought chaos on the roadways. He’d ended their counseling session early, but by then it was too late; the power was out and ice had frozen her car doors. He’d prepared the bed in the rectory’s guest chamber, but she never made it. Somewhere between lighting candles and building a fire in the hearth he yielded. The next morning he rose with the dew of her body still on him and wept in the shadows while she gathered her things. There was no explanation, no reason he could offer to God or himself; he’d tasted the fruit. When she left he purged her from his thoughts and adopted immediate resolve. Never again, and he would spend the rest of his life toiling for forgiveness in the service of the Lord.

But he slipped. Their sessions turned into more than talks about grief, and he found himself drawn farther away with each touch, each kiss, each night of empty pleasure. Weeks passed, months. She kept a toothbrush in his medicine cabinet. She cooked him meals and called him John. She insisted that he call her Lilian, she was no longer anyone’s Mrs., but it terrified him.

Standing in the Sanctuary with her now, he trembled to think what punishments awaited. God was angry. Sickened with lust, he’d enraged his Savior. “It’s sinful,” he said.

“Sinful?” she shook her head, “it’s love, John. There’s nothing sinful-”

“Stop it,” he said, and stepped to the crucifix.

The aftermath of the fall was overwhelming. The altar was ruined; he’d have to hire a mason. Some of the minor cracks in the base could be filled, but the main slab would have to be replaced, he was sure. He’d need to commission a new tabernacle. It had been in the church before he arrived; he’d have to call the Diocese office to inquire after the original records. The small door was gold, could it be salvaged? He looked at it now on the floor, unhinged and speckled with marble and dust. These were the pieces of his own desperation, the flotsam of weakness.

And suspended above it all, supported at each end by cracked stone, the crucifix. He went to it, touched the scraped face of Christ, and placed his hands firmly underneath the cold torso. It would not do to wait.

“What are you doing?”

Mrs. Bertrand was behind him, he could almost feel her breath at his neck. He closed his eyes and felt the muscles tighten.

“John, stop,” her voice again, “it’s too much.”

But he pressed the bare flesh of his fingers hard against the torn metal, feeling the skin open. The pain was mad but he kept on, wrenching, twisting, trying to lift the cross away from disgrace. He pulled with his body, with his being, and his breath went quick. The heat of the task rose in his face, his eyes, splotches of white coming and going like the apparitions of Elijah. He was reaching, stretching, cleansing himself with the burn of exertion, rinsing away sin with his own hot blood. And he reveled in it, rapt with holy subjection. This was atonement.

Paralyzed with strain and nearing exhaustion, there came a sudden jerk from behind. He groaned as his fingers tore loose from the steel and spun to see Mrs. Bertrand, upright and naked, her hands at his sides, the sheet at her heels. She was heaving, fear in her eyes. “Stop.”

He hit her. He swung a hand at her face and she cried out, reeling back into the soft light with blood on her cheek.

Neither spoke. Father Tooley stood with the crucifix at his back, looking into temptation. The tips of his fingers pulsed. His hands bled freely now; crimson globes falling onto the marble, spattering the debris. Mrs. Bertrand’s face was an enigma. In an instant he saw fear, true pain, a mix of the two that boiled in her eyes. He imagined a tear, a bevy of them brimming and falling to wash away the blood mark on her cheek. But she did not cry. As quick as they appeared, the hurt and fear were gone, wiped clean by an unseen hand. The face that remained was stone. Father Tooley shrank within himself but couldn’t look away.

You’re not an evil man, she had said. Three months into the affair: he was a wreck of shame. A wolf in sheep’s clothes, he led his flock into the sulfur and hadn’t the courage to admit it. This is bigger than God, she told him, and he cringed. Yet a small light flickered inside, call it doubt or truth, and he’d sobbed freely in her arms and told her he loved her.

Now Mrs. Bertrand didn’t speak. He watched as she pulled the sheet up around herself once more and stepped lightly from the altar down into the center aisle and away, past the pews and into the shadows.

Father Tooley heard the hollow click of the rectory door and knew she was gone. He spent a moment in stillness, watching the nave lighten, the windows burning with morning sun. Thoughtless, he turned back to the prostrate crucifix and worked his bloody hands beneath. In the emptiness of the cavernous church he heard his own whimpers against the distant ceilings. He tightened his grip and pulled, pulled with the fervor of sacred will, but the stone-cold Christ would not rise.

 

 

Mike Bove‘s fiction  has appeared in Mindprints and Eastoftheweb, his poetry in The Cafe Review and Off the Coast. He lives with his wife and son in Portland, Maine and is a member of the English faculty at Southern Maine Community College.