Demond Blake

from Slackass

          We finished our beers just as we got to Pepito’s a former dive bar where all the old time lushes and aspiring whatevers used to drink until the weekends when they were pushed out for this crowd and the covers the bar could charge to hear some shitty bar bands doing Doors and Stones covers.   Now Pepito’s was trying to cater to the downtown crowd by having DJ nights during the week and local/out of town indie/punk bands play on the weekends.  Sometimes it worked sometimes it didn’t.  The downtown kids were a fickle bunch.  One week this was the place to be, the next week someplace else.  All they really wanted to do was party out in the city but gas prices, traffic and their simply being scared to take the subway at night anywhere usually kept them around here.
           I didn’t like how Pepito’s had changed. It used to be dark in here even in the daytime.  You could get a booth drink your beer munch on stale tortilla chips and greasy salsa and not be bothered.  Now there were no booths.  Just tables and chairs all spread out facing the stage that was now the centerpiece of the bar.  There were lights all over the place.  I put on my shades the moment I walked in.   The female bartenders were aggressively friendly and wore small tight tops pushing up shagging tits and showing off old cleavage.  The male barkeeps were young studly types, wore trucker caps and Atticus shirts.  They worked out and walked around like they could fuck any pussy and kick anyone’s ass.  They catered to their friends when they were at the bar and made strangers wait.  I didn’t like the scene very much.
           They weren’t charging so we walked right in.  Before anyone we knew could spot us I found a couple of empty pint mugs on a table.  Benny and I went to the restroom cleaned them out and filled them up with the other two tall boys.  We tossed the cans walked back out.  Bruce ran up us and hugged then drug us to his table we other people we knew were.  Benny went around high-fiving and smooching people.   I kept my distance and waved at everyone. Frantic had just finished a song and everyone was clapping.  The singer saw Benny and a grin came on his face.
           “Hey everybody it’s my favorite weed connect Benny-boy!”
           Everyone cheered.  Benny threw his arms up in the air and flashed his dead tooth.  Some beer spilled out of his mug.  Someone refilled it.
           “This song’s for you Ben” The singer said.  “because I forget what’s it’s originally supposed to be about.”
           The band kicked in, the singer started singing in Spanish.  For some reason they sounded like a Mexican version of Oasis to me.  Benny held his beer up as they played his song.  I was bored, I went to the front patio to have a smoke and watch the traffic.  Out there were some older smokers mixed with the younger ones.  The older ones smoked Marlboros and younger smoked generic brands like 1st Class cigarettes.  I smoked 1st Class cigs.  I saw my friend Marquis across the way talking to some girl.  She didn’t look too interested in what he had to say and kept waving away the smoke from his cancer stick.  The girl had on a blue Modest Mouse t-shirt just a little too small so she could show off her pierced belly button.  Her dyed black hair almost came down to her shoulders and her jeans had one well-placed hole at the knee.  Her chucks were spotless.  Marquis kept talking to her but he wasn’t really looking at her.  He kept staring at the ground brushing his hair behind his ears and hitting his cig.  I’m not even sure he noticed when she walked away and I walked up.
           He didn’t like being called Marquis because he thought it sounded gay. He told everyone called him Marc.  He was right it did sound gay but his name had a melody to it that most names like ‘Jim’ don’t so I called him Marquis.  I was one of the few non-females he let get away with that.  Kinda why I thought he was a decent guy, well that and he always had pills.
           “Hey Marquis the girl’s gone”
           “I know Jim I was just…I don’t even know.”
           Marquis was from Hemet, a city known for two things: it’s retirement community and it’s meth.  All of kids down there lived with their grandparents who were oblivious to damn near everything while the kids started meth labs and sold the shit and did the shit.  Marquis told me he didn’t tweak but his eyes were always bugged out.  He wasn’t twitchy or anything so I couldn’t tell one way or the other.
           “What were you guys talking about?”
           “I don’t know the band,  people we had in common shit like that.  I wanted to take the conversation in a different um direction you know, to find out whether she had a boy or a girl or if she was interested in doing some shit but she always found a way to steer it back to shitty small talk.”
           “You should’ve put the cig out.”
           “Why?”
           “She was waving the smoke away the whole time you two were talking.”
           “Shit Jim how did I miss it?”
           “You have to stop looking down when you talk to girls, hell to people in general.”
           “But if I don’t look down then I end up staring them right in the eyes and you know how my eyes look.”
           “Have you ever tried not staring period?”
           “Yeah but if I’m not staring right at them or at the ground I have a hard time listening to them.”
           “Okay well you could always stare at some other part of a person.”
           “What part?”
           “Um…stare at the shoulders.  It’s not too obvious and you’re not looking at anyone directly.”
           “But then I’m staring at their shoulders and that’s weird.”
           “Don’t just stare at the shoulders!  In fact don’t stare at any part in particular.  Act like you’re connecting dots.  Go from  foot to foot, elbow to elbow, shoulder to shoulder and glance at the eyes.  It’ll be some cute thing that you do.  Some girl will find it interesting.  Then you’ll date her and after a while she’ll find it annoying.  In between though you’ll be getting laid so who cares right?”
           “Yeah.”
           “There you go.”
           “And if it doesn’t work?”
           “Try talking to blind people.”
           “Jim I can never tell if you’re bullshitting or not.”
           “Me neither.”
           “You just get here?”
           “A little bit ago.  How long you been here?”
           “A few minutes.  I was across the street.  There’s bands playing at Rob’s Vintique”
           “A lot of people there?”
           “A lot of teenage girls.  I was just going back you should come too.”
           “I don’t like teenage girls.  I didn’t even like them when I was a teenager.”
           “None of them will talk to me cause I look too old.”
           “You are too old.”
           “But you look you just graduated last year or something.  They see me with you it won’t be like I’m some gross older guy.”
           “Yeah it’ll be like we’re both some gross older guy.”
           “Just come on.”
           “Got any vics?”
           “Like ten or fifteen.”
           “You should give me a few.”
           “You should come to Rob’s with me.”
           “Bastard.”
           Marquis grinned and gave me a couple.  I chased them down with the rest of my beer then we went across the street to Rob’s.
          Rob’s Vintique was a clothing store specializing in vintage clothes and knickknacks that the indie kids around town were into.  Noticing that a lot of these kids were underage and couldn’t see their fave bands at the bars Rob started having shows at his store every week.  In between Rob would get in on mic and encourage everyone to browse, announce sales and the next week’s show.  There was never a cover but the kids always bought a lot of shit.  I had known Rob for a year or so.  He was a shrewd business man as they say.  It was between sets and Rob had just got off the mic when Marquis and I walked in.
           “Jimmy jazz what’s up” Rob said bear hugging me.
           His breath smelled of wine.  He was probably drunk.  People liked me a lot more when they were drunk.  I’m not sure whether I liked them that way but at least they laugh more.  What I really wanted to know was if Rob had anymore wine.
           “Robby-Rob how’s business?”
           “Kick fucking ass Jim!  Marc didn’t tell me you’d be wanderin’ over here otherwise I would’ve saved you some wine.”
           “You mean you don’t have an extra bottle?”
           “Ah look at this fuckin kid” Rob said putting his arm around my shoulder and squeezing me.
           “Biggest wino I know.  He could be stuck in the Sahara and given a choose of wine or water this fucker would choose wine.”
           “If I’m stuck in the Sahara and can’t get any food, might as well get drunk.”
           “Fucking Jim.  Come on I got some more wine in the back.  You want some Marc?”
           “Nah I’m going wait around for the next band.”
           “Fuckin liar!  I see you scopin those teenie boppers.  Better watch it Marky-boy they’re twice as hard as they look.”
           “That’s why I brought Jim over to break the ice and make me look less creepy.”
           “You don’t need this asshole around.  He’ll open his mouth and fuck all your game up.”
          Marc nodded then drifted outside to smoke a cig. Once out he started a conversation with a little white girl in a black hoodie.  She looked like she was fifteen, but she was smoking so they had that in common.  I kinda wanted to see if Marquis was going to do that connect the dots thing. But I really wanted some wine so I followed Rob through the crowd and  into the storage area where he had the Chucky Shaw Merlot $1.99.  Some people do have class.  He gave me a paper cup topped me off.  I took a sip.  The vics were starting to kick in and I felt tingly.  Everything got a bit more tolerable until Rob starting talking.  He was having trouble with his girl and was thinking about breaking up with her before she broke up with him.  He wasn’t sure what to do.  On one hand he thought if he broke up with her then he’d look like ‘THE MAN’ throwing a bitch to  the curb.  He’d look great to the fellas but not so much to the females which means he’d have to work for rebound sex.  Now he thought if she broke up with him then he’d look pathetic in front of the guys but it would make getting rebound sex easy as pie.  Such a dilemma.  I didn’t know what to tell Rob.  Didn’t really care either.  I just kept refilling my cup and nodding.  Most people don’t want advice, they simply want someone to throw words at who’ll agree with whatever they say.
           Rob shut up once the next band started playing.  I finished my drink and followed  him back up front.  We worked our way to the front of the crowd.  I recognized the band.  They were called Child Pornography.  Most people called them Child P for short.  It sort of rolled off the tongue.  The group had a sort of disco punk sound that was popular right now.  They were a three piece group.  The guitarist Natalie (Natty for short) who was on the methadone plan trying to kick heroin, Aaron on keys who was straight-edge and seemed to be concentrating way too much on his simple keyboard parts and the singer Jamie was dressed in a diaper, chucks and horn rim glasses.  He was skinny but for some reason had a big ass.  When he wasn’t shaking it in someone’s face he ran around in circles and sang off key.  Some of the kids moved along absent mindedly to the beat.  Others stood around.  If you weren’t moving (or if he knew you) Jamie ran up to you and started dry humping.  If it was a friend then there was laughter and everyone stared.  If it wasn’t then the humpee looked around nervously, didn’t laugh and everyone still stared.
          He spotted me.  I wasn’t in the groove.  He ran up knocked me down and started humping my leg while singing ‘Jimmy-Jim why won’t you sleep on my couch.  Jimmy-Jim gay sex on my couch.’  I didn’t laugh, I didn’t look around nervously, I didn’t know if people were staring, I just felt stupid and wanted another drink.  He humped me for a minute for so longer then got up and started running in circles again.  Then the song was over.  There was applause.  I clapped too.  It was most action my left leg had gotten in months.  My right leg felt jealous.  I felt bad for my right leg.  It never got any action.  I walked outside.  Marquis was still out there smoking.  The girl in the black hoodie was gone.
           “You headin’ back to Pepito’s?”
           “Yeah I need a drink.”
           “I’ll come too.  You want another vic?”
           “I’m good.  What happened to the girl in the hoodie.”
           “I sold her a couple of vics for five bucks.”
           “That’s all you did?”
           “Yeah she wasn’t my type.”
           “Too young?”
           “No I don’t like girls who wear hoodies.  Makes me nervous.”
           “That doesn’t begin to make any sense.”
           “Does it have to?”
           “Guess not.”
           “Sure you don’t want another?”
           “Is it free?”
           “Of course.”
           “I’ll take a couple more.”
          He dropped two in my hand.  I put them in my pocket for later.

Kathleen Alcalá

La Otra

     She had never thought of herself as “la otra,” the Other Woman. All she knew was that she had loved him better, and it was only natural that he should leave his fiance and marry her.

     “But that was a long time ago,” she would laugh when telling this story to Sirena, who seemed fascinated by her abuela’s past. “Back when the animals could talk.”

     Anita had not been looking for a husband in those days. She already had too many men in her life – five brothers and a widowed father. She cooked and washed from dawn to night, then got up and did it all over again. When the house burned down along with half of the town, it was a relief – there was nothing to wash and nothing to cook. They had no choice but to join up with all the other refugees and walk north.

     Some of the men stayed to fight. Her oldest brother, Manuel, stayed with his sweetheart’s family to defend what was left of the town. But the soldiers did not want the town. They wanted more soldiers. Both sides. Men and boys were compelled, forced, conscripted and dragooned, so that brother ended up fighting brother, father fighting son, uncles fighting nephews. It was all mixed up. The crops were deliberately destroyed three years in a row, and finally they had eaten all the seed corn. Better to walk north, where the Americanos were paying good wages.

     “Bring extra money, and bring extra shoes,” was the advise Celso, who led the travellers out of town, gave to them. People brought a lot more than that, but most of it was lost along the way.

     The first place of any size the family came to was Guanajuato. Los Guanejuatensos were not know for their friendliness to outsiders. In fact, the last time people had come to try to make themselves at home, they were herded into the granary and set on fire. This was in colonial times, when the Spanish rule had become unbearable. But the worker who had carried a stone on his back to deflect the bullets so he could set fire to the door of the granary was still a hero, El Pípila. No one remembered his name, just his pock-marked face.

     Introspective people, used to the darkness of the mines and the insulated feel of their valley, they did not speak unless spoken to, offer information or help unless asked directly. It was here that the bedraggled Don Barcielego dragged his exhausted sons and daughter. By then one of Anita’s brothers had developed an infection. He had cut his foot on the walk, and the laceration refused to close and had begun to smell. The other members of the group said to leave him, that he would die of gangrene. Out of desperation, as she saw her brother get sicker and sicker, and her father begin to despair, Anita inquired if there was a curandera who could help him. A gnarled old woman, for Anita was at the age when she assumed gnarled people were old, came and cleaned the wound and wrapped it in a poultice made of local herbs. Then she suggested that the family pray to el Señor de Villa Seca for intervention on behalf of the ailing brother. No one in the family had heard of this Señor, but they prayed, nevertheless.

     Whether it was the prayers or the poultice, the brother got well. Her father would not allow Anita to go to the church of Villa Seca to give thanks, but when he understood that it was in the mountains going north, he agreed that they could all stop on their way. The brother who had been cured, who had a gift, painted a retablo of thanks on a broken piece of wood and left it there.

     Sirena’s abuela claimed not to remember much more of the trip. She said she remembered going into towns and begging people for water. She remembered falling asleep while walking, she was so tired. She remembered hiding for hours in the ruins of buildings, all of them trying not to make a sound, while armed men – soldiers or policemen, were around. She remembered a town up north that seemed almost deserted, until they found an old woman who showed them a fountain with water. How good it felt to wash her hands and face, her hair, let the water run down the front of her dress. Thirty-eight people started the trek, and thirty-two finished it. Anita remembered that one person died in his sleep, and they found him cold the next morning. Another began to panic during a time of needed silence, and was held down until he no longer moved. She does not remember what happened to the others. Maybe they stayed in some of the towns along the way, or died, or were carried away by a flock of birds.

     Sirena watched her grandmother intently when she told these stories, trying to glean from her grandmother’s face and hands what she did not understand in words. When Anita got to the part where she described the missing as possibly being carried away to heaven by a flock of birds, the little girl’s mouth would go slack with amazement. When she got older, that expression was replaced by a sorrowful smile, the trademark expression of the Diamantes.

     By the time they crossed the border, they were all as thin as could be – puro hueso – all bone, Anita would say, holding her fingers a quarter inch apart to show how thin they were. Not like I am now, she would add, patting her comfortable belly fat.

     Sirena would just laugh at her tiny grandmother. Next to her, Sirena felt large and awkward. It was hard to imagine her abuela surviving the long walk, the hunger and thirst, the uncertainty of death waiting for them at every crossroads. But Anita Diamante greeted every dawn with the cautious optimism of a survivor, throwing water on her front steps and sweeping her walkway down to the sidewalk. Let the day bring what it will, she seemed to say – God willing, it will find me here.

     As hard as it was to get her grandmother to tell the story of their migration to the United States, it was even harder to get her to tell about how she met her husband, and took him away from his intended. She did not tell this story to Sirena until she was older – old enough to know better, old enough to have gained the sorrowful smile.

     After all their travails, and several false starts, Anita’s family went to work picking oranges in Southern California. They settled with other refugees on ground too high and rocky to cultivate, but close enough to meet the foreman at dawn in the orange groves. Anita’s father and brothers built a one room stone house with a cooking shed on the back. Anita asked for one window on the wall facing the street that was a little larger than the small, high windows on the other walls. This had a piece of tin that fitted inside of it to close, fastened by a piece of wire. In summer, Anita took down this shutter and sold aguas frescas to people walking by. Later, she began to sell a few canned goods, and after a year she had a small store where the orange pickers and farmworkers could obtain a few goods near their homes from someone who spoke Spanish. By extending a little credit until payday, “Anita’s Tiendita” became popular in the neighborhood.

     At first, her father was nervous about Anita being home alone all day with cash in the house, but she assured him that she knew how to handle things. He got her a dog they named Flojo, after the mayor of their town in Mexico. When her father saw how much she was able to make, enough to save, he allowed her to handle all of the finances for the family. Anita was the only one who could make change and count to ten in English. On Fridays, she was accompanied to the bank by her four brothers, where the American clerk nervously counted the small bills and wrote out a receipt under their watchful eyes.

     With all of this brotherly love and attention, Anita despaired that she would ever marry and start a household of her own.

     Whenever her grandmother got to this part, Sirena grew pensive, staring deep into the pattern on the carpet to hide the feelings she knew would show in her eyes.

     “Pero ya, mira,” her abuela would say, drawing Sirena’s attention back to the story. “One day a car drove up and parked across the road. A Model A. A man was driving, and he got out to help a girl from the other side. She was well-dressed, but she acted completely helpless in climbing out of the car.”

     Here her grandmother would flop her arms, like a rag doll. “But once she got on her feet, she grabbed the man’s arm like he was the big prize. I could tell that he was embarrassed by her, and I knew then that I would make a better life mate than she!”
Abuela would cackle in remembrance at this point, and Sirena would smile in anticipation of the rest of the story.

     “It turns out that they had come to our place in the woods to tell us about hygiene. Hygiene! As though, just because we were poor, we didn’t know how to take baths. She talked to the women, and he talked to the men. But she was so embarrassed, and used such funny language, that no one knew what she was talking about!”

     “You went to the talk?”

     “Seguro que si! Of course! I had to find out what was going on.”

     Sirena squirmed in delight. Anita was fully animated now.

     “Afterwards, I went up to that man – and I could see that he was handsome, too – and I told him that I could do a better job than that girl.

     “He gave me this look – the way you look at something to see if it has more value than it appears to have.

     “You think so? He said. All right then. Here is the address of the next talk. It is right next door here, in Corona. And here are some of the brochures that we give people. Take them home and read them, and if you still think you can do a better job, come to the next talk.

     “And so I started going around with him, giving the talks. I was from the people, so I knew how to talk to them in their own language. And then we got married.”
Sirena knew there had to be more to the story than that. Like how her father let her go. And what happened to the store, and all her brothers. But she also knew that was all she was going to get out of her grandmother today.

     “Bueno,” said her grandmother. “Let’s go to Pancha’s for lunch.” Pancha’s Comida Mexicana was about two blocks away, on a busy commercial street, but they could walk. And her grandmother could order anything she wanted, on the menu or not, and get it. Sirena never turned down a chance to go to Pancha’s with her grandmother. Pancha’s offered tamales and hope.

     The scuffed linoleum floor, a fake brick design, held six small tables and a counter. Sirena’s grandmother favored a table by the window, not too far from the kitchen. Settled with sugary hot teas, Sirena ventured another question.

     “What was he like?”

     “Your abuelo?”

     “Yes.”

     Anita looked outside to the parking lot, as though she could see the Model A on the hot pavement. “Like I said, he was very handsome. You have seen his pictures. But he was handsome enough that people admired him when we passed.”

     “They weren’t admiring you, too?” Sirena teased.

     “No, of course not. You see how I am. Maybe they admired me for having him.”  Anita held up her hand as though she had something important to say.

     “But he was also kind. He was very good to me, not like some other men were to their wives.”  She stirred her tea for a minute. “In those days, no one said anything if a man hit his wife. It was his right.”

     “Some people still think so,” said Sirena.

     “I know. But it is not right. At least now, women can ask for help, can get protection if they need to. Then, if a woman had children to protect, her parents might take her back, at least for awhile.”

     “Otherwise?”

     Anita looked at her sharply. “Otherwise, she put up with it, or had to survive on her own.”

     Panchita came out from behind the counter to greet her grandmother.

     “Como estas, Anita?”

     “Bien, bien gracias. Recuerdas mi nieta, Sirena?”

     Sirena nodded and smiled. “Hola,” she said.

     The older ladies had a ritual they had to go through each time, no matter how many times Sirena had been introduced. They would continue to discuss her as though she was not present.

     “Ay si, La Sirena! Que guapa esta! Como movie star!”

     “Si como no. Y su hermano tambien.”

     “De veras que si? Y donde viva?”

     “En otro estado, muy lejos. Ya tiene esposa.”

     “Y Sirena? ya tiene novio?”

     “No, todavia no,” said Sirena, jumping into the conversation before her grandmother could say anything.

     “Bueno,” said Panchita. “No se importa. No te preocupas.”

     After taking their order, Panchita left the table, and Anita could see that Sirena was, nevertheless, distressed.

     “Take your time,” she said, patting her hand. “You will know when the right one comes along.”

     “I hope so,” said Sirena.

     “In the meantime, enjoy being young. Don’t let viejas tell you what to do.”

     Sirena smiled, her first genuine smile all day. “I won’t,” she said, “except for you.”

     “Andale,” said her grandmother, laughing, as their steaming bowls of menudo arrived. Both stopped talking to eat.

     When she had her fill, Sirena’s grandmother sat back in her chair, patting her mouth with her paper napkin. “She tried to have me killed, you know.”

     “Who?”

     “La muchacha. La otra.”

     “The fiancé? The one you took him away from?”

     “Yes. But that is another story.”

Jacqueline Mantz Rodriguez

The Three Little Girls

A Sea of Brassy Day

    There was a chlorinated sea once upon a time. A turquoise pool infused with slants of golden sunlight. The strokes of a little girl’s browned flesh flapped against the water, lap after lap; a foamy background to the day. Her curly head moved to the left to breathe, to the right to breathe, and to the left again, like some nursery rhyme yet unwritten. Another little girl almost a mirror replica of the first one except a little chubbier, lay buried in bubbles, battling in the Jacuzzi against dragons of steam. The little girl’s toes sworded through the water as she held onto the edge of the pool floating on her back. The third little girl, the youngest, floated across that same water making animals from clouds in a bubble above her head.  Her long dark hair fanned out, an ode to Ophelia in her watery grave.

    Their father, dear father, sizzled thick steaks on the grill, a cigarette in one hand a spatula in the other, smoke filling the air.  The florescent yellow potato salad and  
rolls sat quietly on the scarred picnic table, paper plates and the plastic tub of  
margarine keeping them company. The three little girls, for some reason, at the same moment, all took a deep breath and inhaled Kool menthol cigarettes mixed with charred flesh, a deeply satisfying dysfunctional potion.

    Just then their mother, dear mother suddenly appeared in a Chinese red smock soiled with bits of greasy foo young and shrimp.  Her eyes tabulated magically, with one look, the empty Budweiser cans. The mother frowned then her eyes moved to the three little girls. Ordering them out of their sea of fun; to lie one after the other on blue and white faded striped bath towels; lying, drying baking. Three little girls with waiting tummies growling for rib eyes steaks and mustardy onion infested potato salad that even now they taste and savor.

    Once upon a time this azul rectangular sea would hold the middle girl, the chubby twin, during the day and soothe her at night. Just knowing it lay outside her window gave the little girl; all the three little girls most likely, courage to face the dawning night. This simple body of water gave the girls the strength to survive the nights of shadows making puppet monsters on the ceiling and closet door, nights reeking of rising words in a Holly Hobby oven of hate.

    The three little girls never knew when their slumber would be transformed into dense forests of fear, when their father, dear father, would wander away from home into bars. Then, only then, would those three little girls be thrown into a nightmare of hiding on the roof or running underneath tears of stars. Sometimes, more than once, they would flee to the park, but a block away… Yet this land could not be the same as the one they lived in during the day; it could not be. They were somewhere else, a Nightmare Never Neverland.     The girls would stay in the pool in the glittering day as long as they could. Under the covers in the darkening night they would try to do the same; trying to remember the pool was out there. Trying to remember, that tomorrow no matter what happened, they would all be there in the land of turquoise sea, in the sun, alive and well. 


Dawning Night

    
John Wayne’s last film The Shootist was on the television.  The three little girls played Monopoly in the living room as their dear father watched television smoking cigarette after cigarette as “The Duke” played a dying man with cancer.  If the three little girls could time travel they would see their father ironically playing that same story out in thirty years, wheezing out his last breath, the dark magician of death waving the wand of pancreatic cancer to seal their father’s fate, two months after diagnosis. Maybe, if the wife had access to this crystal ball she would have been kinder, more loving and less sharp with words to her dear husband.  Maybe if the mother would have gazed back into that crystal ball she might have seen the damage she would cause the three little girls with her fits of chaotic rage.

nbsp;   Maybe is a hideous word, ugly in its hope.  There were no maybes as the night dawned dark and heavy with tension curtaining the house with every throw of the dice.  The twins fought over a move in the game. The older twin cheated, the younger twin threw the board.  The youngest sat there calmly as the two bickered, made up, and the game resumed.  It was Saturday night and cleaning time for their dear mother.  She washed clothes, picked up the mess left by cyclones of childhood, and cussed the entire time.  The three little girls paid it no mind, they knew danger, but it had not yet appeared. The father’s show ended.  Now it was night.  Darkness settled over the land as did the flight in the father’s soul.

     “I’ll be right back girls,” the father slurred, “I need cigarettes and more Budweiser. I’ll bring you each back a present. I shall get you a Payday, you a Big Hunk and you a Twix.” He patted each girl’s head as he walked slowly out the door.

     “Daddy hurry home ok,” said the youngest. The father walked out into the night.  The night filled with plenty of maybes. Maybe I’ll just stop for one drink at The Palomino, one game of pool. The mother heard the blue Ford pick up truck’s engine as she moved the clothes into the dryer. She walked into the house with a plastic basket filled with clothes. 

     “Stop playing that game.  Help me fold these clothes,” the mom ordered.  The girls silently began folding the clothes their sibling bickering done. They were one now. A climate of fear pervaded the house.

     “Where did your dad go,” the mother asked. She was already different, the metamorphosis had begun. 


     “He went to go get beer and cigarettes,” the eldest answered, “and he will be right back, he said so.” There was no answer from the mom. The minutes ticked by each longer than the last.  Five minutes turned into ten minutes, ten minutes to eleven, to twelve, to thirty.  The Monopoly game was put away as were the clothes.  The three girls took their baths.  Still the father did not reappear.  Thirty minutes became an hour.  The hand of the clock shoved and pushed the mom’s rage higher, now cuss words were dangerous blows.  They fled from them, from the TV, into the middle twin’s room as it was the furthest away from their once dear mother who changed, with warning even, into the darkest of witches.  One whose wild curly hair and words made them cringe.
They sat in the middle girl’s room and looked at the pool reflecting on the day. 

     “We had so much fun today. We should go to sleep,” the eldest girl said. The words made sense logically but words of logic did not rule this dark land.


     “I want to look at the pool,” said the youngest, I don’t want to go to sleep.  We might have to get up.” They sat on the bed quietly, the door closed against the spells of rage and the curses against them and their dear father…Then, the roar of the witch’s car.  How long did they have? How many minutes would it take the witch to drive from their home to the bar and back?  What if he was at a different bar? How long to the next bar? Experts they were at grabbing blankets, pillows and jackets.  Out into the night they went hoping no one would see their shame. What fairytale law had they broken to take away their kingdom and transport them to this one? Their footsteps were almost silent.  They knew way to the park.  They knew their way back it was only over the corner to the right.  The park was their night fortress. The park was their mother now that the witch had taken oven their dear mother’s form.

    They made it in five minutes, and lay inside the stinky pee king of cheese. They lay together, feet in sneakers, with their pajama bottoms poking out of their jackets. The twins had Wonder Woman pajamas on. They loved The Justice League.  The youngest girl’s Snow White long nightgown shone in the moonlight. A long time they slept, awakened by the calls of the witch out the car screaming for them. 

     “Not yet, he’s not home yet. I can tell by the sound of her voice,” whispered the youngest. The three little girls fell back into a non-deep sleep for what seemed like days, the longest of nights. The middle girl, the chubby twin, dreamt of the sea outside her window. In her dream she and her sisters swam in slants of golden sunlight surrounded by the azul waves created by the strokes of their arms in unison stroke after stroke.

The Darkest Night Fled Suddenly As Did The Witch. 

     “Girls come home. Girls come home. Girls come home,” called a voice. The dear mother returned with the retrieval of the drunken father found finally in the bar of The Palomino 

     “Come get him. He was fast asleep on the toilet, good thing I clean the restrooms before locking up.” The owner had called the house at 2 am just when the witch was throwing out all of the father’s clothes on the front lawn.

     “Girls come home. Girls come home…” No more words best left to the devil. The three little girls were no longer hated.  They were loved and even though it was night they could once again feel the sun’s rays upon them. They came willingly into the car. They walked like puppets, strings pulled by the mother’s fingers; into the house where on the table lay a Payday, a Big Hunk and a Twix.



liz gonzález

Sparkling

Tonight, at the ten-kegger, Antonio is mine. I don’t know how I’m going to make it happen, but I’m finally going to be with him. And by the big Halloween party in a few weeks, we’ll be a couple. I just know it.

    Antonio Gutierrrrrrez is a super-foxy guy with copper-flecked, wavy Breck-girl hair and hazel eyes rimmed by long lashes. I daydream a lot about those lashes brushing my neck. He lives in San Berdoo, the next city over, in the Westside, an old barrio, where teenage boys are either Mama-whooped pew warmers, choloed out gun-slingers, slur-tongued porcupine-arm junkies, or enlightened militant or mellow Chicanos. Antonio is a mellow Chicano who likes to read Ché, Malcolm X, Neruda, and Chicano poetry and listen to Hendrix. Coolest of all is that he calls me Raquel instead of Rachel. I wish I had the guts to tell him, “Move over rover, let Raquel take over. Let me stand next your fire.”

    Ever since I met Antonio at a party two months ago, I’ve had a crush on him. I only get to talk to him at parties on the weekends, but I know he’s the one for me. Whenever I see him or think about him, the slow wah wah guitar in Bloodstone’s “Natural High” starts playing in my head and my guts twirl like a pinwheel.

Why do I feel this way
thinking about you every day?
And I don’t even know you

* * *

Chris pulls up to the front of my place and honks the horn. Lucky Chris. She turned 16 last January, so she already has a driver’s license. Her older brother is letting her drive one of the beat up cars he bought to fix up and sell, a primered ‘70 Cougar.

    I shake my hips and stick out my chichis as I strut down the front walk to her car. The unusually hot weather is perfect for my outfit: a brown spaghetti strap dress with a turquoise and teal geometric print. Except, I had to wear my two-inch chocolate platform sandals instead of my cuter four-inch Carmen Miranda wedgies because Antonio isn’t much taller than me.

    “Antonio’s gonna fall in love for sure!” Chris’s Southern drawl is just as thick as it was a year ago, when she first moved to town.

    Sliding into the passenger bucket seat, I purr like Eartha Kitt, “He won’t be able to resist me.” I flutter my eyelashes, coated with five coats of navy blue mascara to make my ebony eyes stand out.

    “Too bad Minerva can’t see us all purday,” Chris says, checking her make-up in the visor mirror as she pulls away from the curb.

    “She’ll see us after the party. We’ll be wilted, but we’ll still look pretty.”

    Although Minerva is the one who got her brothers to take us to these parties all summer long, once school started, she got all about the books and getting a high score on her SAT’s. Boring.

    “It’s sad that Minerva doesn’t go out with us anymore,” Chris says. “I miss us three Mousesketeers.”

    “I don’t want to sound mean, but I’m glad Minerva isn’t going. She’d bring us down with her feminist talk, saying that we don’t have to doll up like Barbie to get a guy. And I’m tired of her geek lectures about how partying is a waste of time. What a hypocrite.”

    “Oh my, I didn’t realize you were mad at her.”

    “Just shut-up Chris.” I squint my eyes at her, letting her know that I’m not mad, but she’ll get me there. “Crank up KCAL. I need some rock.”

    “I love that we bicker like sisters.” Chris says, turning on the radio.

    “Ramblin’ Man!” We both scream and start singing with the Allman Brothers band.

Chris and I have everything planned out. Since it’s Sunday and we’re not allowed to go out on a school night, we told our Mamas that we need to stay the night at Minerva’s to get help with a big algebra test tomorrow. It’s not a whole lie. We do need help, and we are going to Minerva’s: after the party.

    Mama doesn’t care anyway. She took my baby sister Nat the Brat to stay at Grandma and Grandpa’s, so “she won’t be home alone.” Mama usually spends Saturday and Sunday evenings with her boyfriend Tom, dubbed Too-Good-Tom by Nat and me, and comes home real late, but tonight she’s going to stay over at his house. She thinks I don’t know, but I saw her put her overnight bag in a grocery bag and sneak it in the trunk of her car before she left.

    Mama met Too-Good-Tom at Sears five months ago when he went up to her at the customer convenience counter to ask for directions to the bathroom. Romantic. It’s bad enough that my mother has a boyfriend, but he’s a jerk. Nat and I only met him once: the first and last time he picked up Mama for a date. He barely smiled when Mama introduced us, like we annoyed him or something. Mama thinks he looks like Lloyd Bridges in the reruns of Sea Hunt, which gets her all creamy. To me and Nat, he’s pale, skinny, and snooty. His nose is even turned up. We think he hates kids. But we do like having the house to ourselves on weekend nights.

    Chris parks across the street from the party. She turns off the car and checks her watch. “5:45. Right on time.”

    We planned to get here after the party started, when some people have already arrived so we’re not the first ones, but early enough to find parking. The street is steep and unpaved, and we didn’t want to hike in our heels.

    The party is at a small ranch in Devore that belongs to the family of the Salazar boys: seven brothers and cousins who are in their twenties and popular in this party scene. After we pay the $5 cover at the gate to the backyard, we head across the dirt yard, straight for the kegs.

    “We should have worn our overalls and farmin’ boots,” Chris says, looking down at the dust on her shoes. “I’m sweatin’ like a pig ‘n heat as it is.”

    “I thought it would be fancy, like Bonanza, but this place looks like it’s been here since the 1800s,” I say, looking around the rustic and rusted ranchito. A rain and sun warped wooden fence, high enough that I’d need a stepstool to see over it, surrounds the yard. Red, fuchsia, and orange bougainvillea that looks like it’s never been trimmed is exploding from different sections of the fence. On one side of the yard, two goats and a kid stand beside each other in their pen, oblivious to the people, chewing on a pile of dry grass. At the other end, a patch of corn stalks, tomatoes, and other vegetables swollen and ready to pick are fenced off with chicken wire and wooden stakes. Cactus, the kind Grandma uses to make nopal scrambled eggs and nopal salad, fans out fat and tall against the back fence. The band is set up in front of the cactus and they start jamming Earth, Wind, and Fire’s “Mighty, Mighty.”

    Standing in the beer line, Chris and I dance to the beat, singing, “In our heart lies all the answers to the truth you can’t run from.” About 30 people are here, standing in line and clustered in little groups around the yard, drinking and getting high. We scope out the crowd for Antonio and Elias, Chris’s crush, or anyone else we know. Nobody. Not even Minerva’s brothers, who always come early to help set-up. Most everyone in this party scene is from San Berdoo and Colton, in high school or older, Chicano and Chicana. Some are white or black. Not many are from our town although it’s just fifteen minutes away. I guess they’re just not as cool as us.

    The sun baking the ground makes the hay and animal stink rise from the dirt. Good thing the guys in front of us in the beer line light up: automatic incense.

    I spot Antonio walking in with his buddies. He’s got on my favorite outfit: a white v-neck t under an unbuttoned blue and green plaid western shirt with the sleeves folded up to his elbows, showing his tanned push-up-muscle forearms, brown Levi cords, and brand-new wallabies. Bloodstone starts crooning in my ears and my stomach somersaults so fast I can’t breathe.
    “You’re wearing matching colors, just like an old couple,” Chris teases. “But I don’t get why he’s wearing cords. His you-know-whats must be melting. Y’all won’t be able to have babies.”

    “Get your mind out of his pants,” I push my side into hers. “He came prepared for the cold after it gets dark.”

    Just then, the band finishes the song, and Chris and I clap and howl. Charles Montero, the lead singer and guitarist, is a good friend of Minerva’s brothers, so he’s become our friend, too. I love Charles’ band. They have horn and percussion sections and sound as good, sometimes better, than the bands they cover. The musicians are brown, black, Chinese, and white, so they named their band “Colours of Funk.” Terry, the sax player with a beach ball sized afro, picks up his flute and starts playing Tower of Power’s “Sparkling in the Sand.” Charles winks at me and announces, “This one is for Rachel.” I give him my big Bozo smile and mouth thank you.

    “Ask Antonio to dance with you.” Chris nudges me with her elbow. A bunch of people walk into the party, and she straightens up and poses like a Seventeen model, scanning the crowd for Elias. She’s too dressed up for him, in a silver-blue satin halter-dress and four-inch matching suede wedgies that she bought with money her grandma in Mississippi sent her, money she’s supposed to put in her college savings account.

    “But he hasn’t even noticed me, yet,” I whisper so the people around us can’t hear. Out of the corner of my eye, I see Antonio and his friends stop by a eucalyptus tree across the yard and light up.

    “Tell him you have to dance because the song was dedicated to you.”

    We reach the front of the line and each hand two bucks to the scruffy faced biker guy serving the beer. He pours cold Coors from a pitcher into two large waxed paper cups.

    “Why do y’all put a slice of white bread in the pitcher?” Chris asks, using her slow, sweet drawl.

    He gives her the funny look that everyone makes the first time they hear her southern accent. Then his face turns into a growl. “It keeps the froth down.”

    We step aside, and Chris talks loud enough for him to hear. “It’s bad enough this beer looks and smells like piss; I have to taste wonder-why-it-doesn’t-kill-you-bread, too?”

    “Mellow out,” I whisper without moving my lips, smiling at the biker guy. “You sound like Minerva.”

    Antonio sees me and waves. His eyes squint the cute way they do when he smiles. I wave back, all excited, trying not to drop my purse and beer.

    “Okay, I’m going to do it.” I turn my back to Antonio, chug my beer, grab Chris’s cup, chug it, and hand her my purse and the empty cups. “How’s my lipstick?”

    Chris dabs the corners of my mouth with her fingertips. “Fine. Now get!” She gently smacks my butt.

    I don’t know if it’s the beer or the way Antonio watches me cross the uneven dirt yard or that I’m scared he might turn me down and scared he might accept, but my platforms get heavy and wobbly with each step I take, and my head is ready to flap away, like a startled crow. I hope I don’t trip on a rock and fall and give a show of my panties to everyone.

    “Hey, Rrrraquel.” He hands me a roach on the end of a feather clip.

    I love the way he says my name. It’s all I can do to keep my stomach from shooting out of my belly. “No, thanks.” I take a deep breath. “Would you like to dance?”

    “Sure,” he says. Just like that. So easy. He hands his beer and the roach to one of his buddies, takes my hand, and walks me past the two couples on the dirt dance floor, to the front of the band.

    Lucky for me, the song is long, with flute and trumpet solos, and is still playing. Charles winks at me. I wink back and smile big because I finally have my man. Antonio twines his arms around my waist, and I wrap my arms around his neck, as though we slow dance all the time. I lay my head on his shoulder and inhale deep, finding comfort in the scents of pot and detergent in his Mama-washed clothes. His chest is hard against mine. Hermano works out. I wish I could check my pits. I get bad b.o. when I’m hot and nervous.

    “You look really good in that dress.” His breath tickles my ear. “Did you go to a fancy party or something?”

    I’m dressed up for you, I want to say. “Chris and I were at her aunt’s birthday dinner close by, so we stopped by to check out the band.” I manage to get the words out smoothly, like Chris and I had rehearsed on our way to the party.

    “That guy your boyfriend?” Antonio points his chin toward Charles. His voice sharpens. “That why he dedicated a song to you?”

    “You sound jealous. I like it.” I can’t believe I said that. My face feels hot. I hope it’s not turning red. I explain that Charles is a friend. “And he dedicated the song to me because he knows I love Tower of Power.”

    “Okay then.” Antonio pulls me closer. We slowly rock back and forth, like a baby’s cradle. Charles sings the final, “You’re a diamond sparkling in the sand,” and the music stops. But Antonio doesn’t let me go.

    “Want to see what the next song is?” He looks directly in my eyes.

    I must have a beer buzz because I feel calm and can hold eye contact. “Sure.”

    The keyboard player starts playing Chicago’s “Colour My World.” Antonio and I hug tight. I shut my eyes and thank Our Lady of Guadalupe for such a slow song.

    “I’m glad you’re not dating that guy, or I’d have to kick his ass,” he chuckles.

    “You’re kidding, right?” My stupid voice is high pitched and girly.

    “About kicking his ass. But I’m glad you’re single. You are single, right?”

    “Yeah,” I say, trying to sound cool, like I’m not about to break out singing: “And I’ll take to the sky on a natural high.”

    “Because I’ve been wanting to ask you out for a while.” He gently lifts my chin with his fingertips; his lips are less than an inch from mine. His beer-pot breath wafts up my nose, like a love potion. “What do you think about that?”

    “I like it.”

    Our lips squish together and we start making out. Hermano knows what he’s doing. He doesn’t swab my teeth and the inside of my cheeks, like Arthur Cantu, my first kiss, or shove his tongue down my throat and smash his teeth into my lips, tearing my skin, like Johnny Montoya, my second kiss. Antonio’s kiss is smooth as tripe in a fresh bowl of menudo.

    We turn round and round, like a 33 on the record player, through two more long slow songs, our mouths connected suction cups. I’m glad the Santa Anas aren’t blowing and bothering my allergies, clogging my nose.

    The sun is almost finished slipping out of the sky when the band starts jamming Led Zepplin’s, “Heartbreaker.” Some spastic guy bumps into us and jabs us loose with his elbow. I feel like I just woke up, and it’s gotten cold. The backyard is packed now. We decide to get another beer and head for the line, where I find Chris looking like she’s ready to cry.

    “He’s with O-livia.” Chris shakes her head. “She’s so pretty!”

    Olivia is one of the prettiest white girls that come to these parties. She looks like a real Seventeen model with waist length yellow hair and seafoam green eyes.

    “I’ll get the beers,” Antonio says and moves up with the line.

    The next thing I know, Chris lurches her head forward and splashes a gallon of throw up onto the ground in front of us. I can’t help myself and look. It’s a mess of chunks of food they’re serving here—salad, refried beans, and barbecued goat—doused with some pink-orange liquid that smells like rotting oranges.

    “Eeew,” the crowd cries and steps back.

    Antonio rushes over with a hand full of napkins. “Is she alright?”

    “I better take her home.” I wrap my arm in hers. “Will you help me take her to the car?”

    He puts his arm in her free arm and we walk Chris out of the party.

    “How’d you get so sick?” I ask.

    “Tommy brought in a big bottle of tequila sunrise. When I saw Elias and Olivia walking in holding hands, I grabbed the bottle and chugged it all.”

    We pass Patsy Rodriguez and her rough-edged girls, paying to get in at the gate. Patsy hollers, “Bitch!”

    Patsy, or Queen Kong as everyone calls her behind her back, is diesel truck wide, skyscraper high, and angry. For no reason, she’ll decide she doesn’t like a pretty girl at a party and will drag the girl by her hair to the street and slam her head on the asphalt. Irene, the chola who was after me last year at school, is like a baby duck compared to Patsy. Even guys won’t mess with her. About a month ago, Patsy decided that she doesn’t like Chris. So far we’ve been able to ditch her.

    “Get me out of here.” Chris swallows hard to keep from throwing up. The three of us pick up speed and are almost running.

    Patsy yells behind us, “You better leave. I’ll tear your ass up!” Her girls laugh that we-can-snap-you-in-half laugh.

    “She won’t jump you. Your vomit is a weapon,” I joke, but goose bumps are shooting up all over my body.

Chris splashes another gallon of throw up in the gutter beside the Cougar. Good thing her brother hasn’t painted it yet. I open the passenger door and Antonio helps her in.

    “I can’t be in a moving car right now.” Chris gasps. “Let me sleep a while.”

    “Are you sure?” I wipe her mouth with a tissue from my purse. I don’t know what to do. She’s never gotten sick before, let alone at a party.

    “Yes, and get out of my face. Your beer breath makes me want to puke.”

    We give her a large Jack in the Box cup Antonio found in the bushes to throw up in. She takes a whiff, says she likes the cola smell, and closes the car door.

    I don’t feel comfortable leaving Chris alone in the car, so Antonio goes back inside to get us some beers and the keys to his buddy’s cherry sky blue ‘68 Camaro SS parked across the street from the Cougar. We’re going to sit inside until Chris is ready to go. A hot car and my man: my dreams have come true.

    Now that it’s almost dark, the air is giving me a chill, so I get my jacket out of the trunk and put it on. Then, I start thinking too much and get nervous. I’ve never been alone with a guy before. Arthur kissed me in the Convention Center lobby during a dance. And Johnny surprised me. He grabbed me at the Swing Auditorium while I was rocking out to Robin Trower playing “Too Rolling Stoned.” Those kisses ended fast, and then I shined on the guys.

    What if I burp in Antonio’s mouth or fart on accident? What if he thinks I want to do it and gets nasty? I’m ready to get in the Cougar and take off when Antonio comes walking up the street, holding a beer in each hand. My stomach starts twirling, and I can’t wait to kiss him again.

    “Sorry it took so long,” Antonio says.

    “No problem. Can I have one?” I reach out and he hands me a cup. I take a big chug.

    “Hey, save some for later.”

    “I’m so thirsty,” I say and take another big chug.

    We check on Chris through the passenger window and laugh. She’s passed out with her mouth open wide, snoring.

After pushing in the Isley Brothers eight-track and adjusting the volume, Antonio climbs between the bucket front seats and slides across the tuck and roll leather backseat, into my arms. I’m feeling woozy and warm and take off my jacket. My stomach must be happy, too, because it stays still. Ronald Isley croons “I wanna be living for the love of you,” and we tangle together like weeds in an open field on a spring day. Antonio rubs his hands up and down my sides, on the outside of my dress. I’m ready to push him away if his hands get too close to my chichis or butt, or if they try to slip under my dress, but they don’t. Nice. I can trust him not to go too far. He wraps my legs around him, and we rub our crotches together, hard. I’m out of breath. I’m sparkling from the inside out. The inside of the car is sparkling, even the music. Antonio pulls my hair back and sucks a chain of hickeys around my neck. It hurts bad, but I clench my fists and take the pain because I want his mark, happy that I’m his girlfriend now.

It’s 11:46 when I pull the Cougar up to the front of Minerva’s house, and I hope she’s still up. Chris turns her face from the opened passenger window and says she feels better. She takes a swig of the mouthwash we keep in the glove compartment in case the cops stop us, spits it out in the gutter, and sips the last of ginger ale I stopped and bought her. Carrying our backpacks heavy with our books and clothes, we tap on Minerva’s bedroom door on the side of the house. I’m shivering it’s so cold now.

    Minerva’s wearing her favorite old flannel shirt opened over an extra large t-shirt from her dad’s business. “AzTech Electric Company: Serving So Cali since 1965” is printed across the front in big black letters. Her hair is especially wild tonight, like when the Santa Anas gush through it.

    “You guys are late.” She snaps, turns her back to us, and walks to her desk. Pages of notebook paper filled with algebra symbols are scattered on her desktop. Minerva is in calculus. If it weren’t for her, Chris and I wouldn’t be passing Algebra II. “What the fuck happened to you two? You said you’d be here by ten?”

    “Sorry,” we both say and mumble.

    “You stink like mouthwash and throw-up Chris,” Minerva shakes her head at us. “Man, I’m only awake because I was worried about you.” She picks up two packets of stapled notebook paper.

    “Here’s your study sheet for your test. A lot of good it’ll do you now.”

    “Sorry, we just…” I say, but Minerva cuts me off.

    “Spare me the lies. I’m not your mom.” Minerva goes to her desk and starts picking up.

    I haven’t been here since that night before school started and she announced that she was giving up partying to focus on her future. Her room looks the same. The Janis Joplin posters are still tacked on every wall. The purple glass bong I got her at the swap meet is still on her night stand. It’s filled with fresh white and peach roses from her garden, and an orange-haired troll is stuck on the bowl. The macramé roach clips she made dangle from her curtain. She wears them as hair decorations, now. Minerva doesn’t throw anything away. That’s the hippie recycler in her.

    I flop into the purple bean bag loveseat beside her record player, where a Lola Beltran album is spinning. Minerva thinks that listening to her mom’s old records brings her spirit back. Last summer, whenever “Cucurrucucú Paloma” played, Minerva and I would jump up and sing loud and act dramatic, like we were nightclub singers in a Mexican movie. Minerva said her mother would love our show. Too bad those days are over.

    “Vampires at the party?” Minerva gets up to take a closer look at my neck.

    “I didn’t see those before. They must hurt.” Chris flinches.

    They both lean over me and inspect my neck like doctors. I get up, pushing them out of the way, and step in front of Minerva’s full length mirror on the back of her door. My neck has a chain of purple robin-egg-sized hickeys. That’s why it felt so sore.

    They both walk over and stand on either side of me.

    “You didn’t do it did you?” Minerva talks to my reflection.

    “No. She wouldn’t,” Chris says to Minerva’s reflection, and then she gawks at my reflection.

    “Would you?”

    “I’m not a slut.” I turn and say it to Chris’s face.

    Minerva reaches out to touch my neck. I smack her hand away and head to her bunk bed.

    “Who did that to you?” Minerva scolds.

    “Damn. You sound like a mother now.” I sit on the bottom bunk bed, ignoring their stares, and change into my t-shirt and boxers. “Antonio. And no, I…we didn’t do anything. He’s a perfect gentleman. You should have seen how good he took care of Chris.”

    “I hate to tell you,” Chris says, “but gentlemen don’t give hickeys.”

    “You’re just jealous because Elias likes Olivia instead of you.”

    “You’re a bitch.” Chris stomps into the bathroom and slams the door behind her.

    Minerva raises her arms. “Shshshsh! You’ll wake up my dad.” Then, she sits beside me and softens her voice. “Chris is right. Dudes don’t give girls they respect hickeys.”

    “Dudes? What are you? Dirty Harry?”

    “Rachel…”

    “I thought that with all your feminist bullshit you’d be cool about it.”

    “I’m trying to protect you. I hear what my brothers and their friends say about girls.”

    “Well, I don’t need your protection.” I climb up to the top bunk and pull the sheet over my head.

    Chris opens the bathroom door. “Rachel, tell me you’re sorry.”

    “Let her sleep,” Minerva says. “Maybe it’ll bring some sense in her head.”

The next morning, I leave before they wake up and take the city bus to school. No way I’m letting them ruin my happiness.

    The whole day, I proudly parade my octopus-bruise necklace down the halls of my high school, telling anyone who asks that they’re from my boyfriend Antonio.

Later that evening, I come to the table wearing my only turtleneck: an itchy wool sweater that Mama got me for trips to the snow. I hope I can pull it off, but it’s still hot inside and Mama’s baking pigs in a blanket in the oven.

    “We’re not at the north pole.” Nat-the-brat rolls her eyes at me from across the table.

    Luckily, Mama doesn’t hear her. She’s got the fan on over the stove and is busy stirring her green beans and onion dish in a pan with a spatula in one hand and sipping from her glass of generic 7-Up and cheap wine cocktail in the other.

    “That barrette is cute,” I say, hoping to shut her up. “Did you get it at Kmart?”

    “Mama, please tell her to change.” Nat shouts and fans herself with her paper napkin. “I’m getting hot just looking at her.”

    “I have a sore throat,” I say and cough, “and Grandma always says to avoid getting a chill.”

    Suddenly, without saying a word, Mama sets down the spatula and her glass on the kitchen counter and walks toward me, glaring at me. I usually tease her about how she looks like a Mexican-housewife-super hero in the big blue Mexican muumuu she changes into after work, with her hairspray-plastered “Wonder-Woman” do, cinnamon support hose thick as tights, and black ballet style slippers. But tonight I just sit quietly in my chair, watching her, my blood pumping so hard my veins feel like they’re going to burst.

    When she reaches me, she yanks the fabric back from my neck, and shrieks. Next thing I know, she’s pulling me by the ear up the stairs.

    “You’re hurting me.” I try to peel her fingers off my ear, and she digs her nails into my skin, so I let go.

    Mama shoves me inside my bedroom and runs to the nightstand and unplugs the handset to the Princess phone she gave me for my last birthday. She waves it in my face.

    “What the hell have you been doing?”

    “Nothing, Mama. I promise.” My teeth are chattering I’m so scared.

    Nat is standing in the doorway, her eyes and mouth opened wide, like when she watches a scary movie.

    “Go eat your dinner.” Mama slams the door in her face. She turns to me, points the handset at my neck like it’s a knife, and pushes me against the wall. Her eyes are red and spit bubbles in the corners of her mouth.

    “It was an accident. It’ll never happen again.”

    She puts her face so close to mine that I can smell the wine going sour on her breath. “You’re damn right it’ll never happen again. You’re on restriction for a month.” She unplugs my box record player, puts it under her arm, stuffs the handset in her armpit, and heads for the door.

    I remember that Antonio and I planned to meet at the Fleetwood Mac concert next Saturday. I’ll die if I can’t go. “But Mama.” I swallow to stop from sounding whiney. “I already paid $4.75 for that ticket. You said I could go. Remember?” Then I come up with a lie, fast. “I’m writing an essay on it for my English class.”

    “You should have thought of that before you let a boy ring your neck like a chicken.” She slams the door behind her so hard the walls rattle.

* * *

Are you talking to me? I write on notebook paper. Mr. Martin, our cool, blonde surfer-dude science teacher has his back to the class as he goes over the periodic table. I fold the note into a triangle and pass it to Chris, sitting in the desk beside me. We haven’t spoken to each other since the other night at Minerva’s.

    Moments later, Chris hands the triangle to me under the desk. Are you sorry for what you said?

    I nod yes.

    When the bell rings we leave class together.

    “Your mom called my house last night. She and my mom talked for an hour.” Chris sighs as we walk toward the PE building. “I’m grounded until after Halloween.”

    “I’m sorry,” I say, “for what I said about Elias and for getting you into trouble.”

    “It’s okay.” Chris hangs her head. “You’re lucky your dad isn’t around.”

    “I can’t believe you said that.” My family hasn’t heard from my father since last Christmas when he called to tell us he was living in Missouri. Mama has to work overtime because he still hasn’t sent her money for us girls.

    “I didn’t mean it that way.” Chris rubs my back. “You know how ornery my dad is. He’s talking about sending me to live with my grandma in Mississippi until I graduate. She’s ornerier than him, real strict, and particular.”

    Minerva passes us without saying hi.

    “What’s her problem?” I ask.

    “Your mom called her dad, too.”

    “So, she can still talk to us at school.”

    “I think she’s sick of us, Rachel.”

    “Forget about her. She’ll get over it.” I wave my hand in her direction. “Help me figure out how to get a hold of Antonio to tell him I won’t be at the concert.”

    “I’m staying out of it. I’m in enough trouble.”

    “C’mon, best friends are there for each other.” I put my arm around her and smile my Bozo smile. That always gets her.

    “Let things calm down. Your mom’s really upset. She told my mom she’s afraid you’re having sex.”

    “Ugh! Why do you all think that?” I stomp off.

    Mama’s been driving me to school every morning and having Grandpa pick me up in front of the administration building the minute school lets out and take me to his house. I thought she wanted to make sure I didn’t have fun. I can’t believe it’s to keep me from having sex. My eyes start to blur with tears, but I can’t deal with that now; I have to figure out how to get to Antonio.

After dinner, I’m in my bedroom, sitting in front of my vanity mirror, admiring my hickeys, replaying my night with Antonio in my mind. I hear the phone ring downstairs and crack open my door.

    “Hello.” Mama answers it downstairs. “Who’s this?” she says in her angry voice. “Well, Antonio, are you the boy who disgraced my daughter?”

    I sprint down the stairs to the kitchen and grab the phone out of Mama’s hand. She shoves me against the wall, and I freeze. Nat jumps up from where she’s lying in front of the TV and runs over to us.

    “Go to your room,” Mama yells at her. Mama yanks the phone from my hand and slams it on the receiver. Then, she presses her hands into my chest and pins me to the wall.

    “Are you having sex with this boy?” She spits in my face. Her breath smells like sour wine again.

    “No. No,” I sob. I want her to believe me, but she glares at me with that disgusted look she gets when she sees women in the mall, showing too much leg or chi chi. Her left eye is twitching, and she’s breathing heavy out of her mouth. I can’t stand her looking at me this way, so I turn my eyes down to her hands.

    “Damnit, Rachel. Tell me!” She pushes me harder against the wall.

    Then it hits me that I’m fed up with her and everyone else thinking so lowly of me. “Yeah, I’m a big slut.”

    She slaps my face hard. This just makes me madder.

    “Why don’t you leave Nat and me alone again to go have sex with your stuck up boyfriend?”

    “Shut up! Shut up! Shut up!” She grabs my shoulders and shakes me.

    I jerk sideways, break free of her, and run toward the front door.

    “Come back here.” Mama runs after me.

    I glance at Nat, watching us from the top of the stairs, fling open the door, and run outside.
    “Rachel. You better get back here.” Mama chases me. “Rachel.”

    There aren’t many streetlights on my street. It’s dark and hard to see. I don’t know where I’m going. I just run as fast as I can, until I can’t hear Mama anymore. When I reach Baseline Avenue, I wonder if I should call Antonio from a pay phone at my high school across the street. Then I realize I don’t have my wallet. I don’t have anything but what I’m wearing. Without thinking, I stick my thumb out in the direction of Antonio’s.

    A dirty station wagon pulls over. A gray, creepy white man offers me a ride, and I tell him my mom is picking me up. Next, a lady in a flimsy yellow mailman-like jeep pulls over. She looks mid-thirties, about Mama’s age and has plain bobbed hair and librarian glasses. She seems safe.

    “Where are you going?” She says in flat tone. No friendly smile.

    “To the Westside. Fifth and Pico.”

    “I’m going to the train station and can drop you off on the way,” she says without any personality.

    I take a quick check of the inside of her jeep. It’s bare except for her purse sitting beside her. There isn’t even a backseat. I decide she’s okay and get in.

    We head east down Baseline. I scan the street for Mama’s Charger, ready to duck. The jeep rattles, breaking up the silence. I’m ready for her to ask my name, ask me what I’m doing hitchhiking, but she doesn’t even look my way. So, I keep my eyes on the street, thinking about what I’ll say to Antonio when I get to his house. I don’t even know his address; I only know that he lives on Pico, three blocks north of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church. That’s what he told me the night he gave me the hickeys.

    The lady drops me off in front of the church and drives off before I can thank her.

    The church bells ring nine times as I walk up Pico. The street is dark, empty. Only a thin slice of moon shines from the black sky. It’s cooler now, too. I suddenly remember that this is a rough neighborhood. Cholos and druggies roam here like rats. Goosebumps rise on my bare legs and arms. I wish I were wearing more than tennis, a t-shirt, and jeans.

    I stand beneath a flickering streetlamp, in the middle of what I think is Antonio’s block, trying to tell which house is his. That night in the car, he said he liked to sit on his porch beneath the light at night and read. So far, the light is out on every front porch. Headlights turn onto Pico and slowly move toward me. As it gets closer, I can tell that it’s an Impala lowrider. I hope Antonio is inside.

Maureen Foley

Tuesday

     Door slams, I’m walking.  Loss a kind of insanity. Lee left out a glass of lime juice. Still sitting on the counter by the sink. I can’t wash it.

     Last week, my husband Lee squeezed a bowl full of limes from off our tree. Said they were about to rot. Said freeze the juice for future margaritas. Futures. But I left out the juice, overslept, he drove off to New Mexico with no goodbye. 80 percent of catastrophes are weather-related.

     But let’s not confuse facts with statistics. Here’s an alternative to the facts:

     I drive to Santa Cruz to search for Lee.

     I find him smoking out with his college bros.

     I confront him with the facts.

     He says he loves me.

     I say it’s not enough.

     He begs to drive home with me.

     I throw everything, his bong, writing papers, screenplay drafts, worn-in Levis, avocado green Karmann Ghia, his affair and Queen Charlotta, all of it, I toss them into the Pacific.

     I move to Italy and marry a dashing ex-pat jeweler named James.
Or maybe Lee’s in Mexico. Definitely an affair. He took the high road. Who is irrelevant. Or one day he’ll walk into my punk rock club, Elevator, while that night’s band is warming up and we’ll have a scene and call it quits.

     I sipped the lime juice right when I woke up. Fizzy. Fermented. I failed miserably. Whatever. Another jet plane, another con trail.

     In the Grinder, no one says a word, they all know. Roxy, feisty barista with large Mexican jewelry, foams me up my usual and I’m out of there before I get caught in those endless returns.

     Another sip of my latte hold in the only hand I have left after the accident, looking for a place to sit. Outside I can see the ranch where my California pioneer ancestor James Blood was an apricot grower on fertile land here in Carpinteria, California. My grandfather farmed the same land until he died. Along the foothilss, above The Grinder’s sign. Blue silhouettes and stalks of trees. Hey there’s Queen Charlotta. She’s fingering a napkin out front. Sit by her. Best not to be alone at the moment.

     Charlotta’s balancing the weekly newspaper, a cup of coffee, a cigarette and lighter in one hand, while she picks a rock out of the bottom of her flip-flop. Four inches of brown roots grown into flyaway dyed blonde. Her crowning scalp, tilting up. Hello girl with the face. Strange.

     “Hey,” I say.

     “Hey Olive, my pumpkin chicken noodle, boss extroidinairre. What’s up?” Queen Charlotta says, English accent lilting.

     “It’s my birthday,” I say.

     “You look like shit,” she says.

     “Thanks. Just found out you’re engaged to Jan,” I say.

     “Oh. Insanity, right?” she says.

     “Totally. Jan and I go way back. You know we dated in high school?” I say.

     “No,” she says.

     “A million years ago,” I say.

     I stare into dissolving milk foam and look up. She’s wearing a pink cardigan sweater over a tank top, jeans. Pink cardigan. Pink cardigan that I found in the trunk of the Lee’s Ghia two weeks ago, forgot about. Maroon lipstick stain on inside of collar. Wondered whose sweater. Left it there and forgot. Let’s see how this one plays out, just for fun.

     “You’ve heard the latest with me, right?” I ask.

     “No,” she says.

     “Lee’s gone,” I say.

     “What do you mean gone,” she says.

     “Missing. Got a call from the sheriffs this morning. He never got back from New Mexico. Found a car, no body. Out in the California desert,” I say.

     “Shit,” and her face says it all. Even her blush pales. “I mean, you must be totally disturbed–”

     “Some prick cop from Needles told me at four this morning. Lee called from a pay phone at one last night, said he’d be back by this morning.” Tears. Easy to get lost in it. “Charlotte. It’s like– they. They. They don’t just disappear. People. They don’t just poof. You know?”

     “That’s fucking insane– He– I just talked to him. And. And I dreamt about him last night. Lee. I woke up and–” Staring off into space. She fingers the buttons on her pink sweater. Pink sweater, fucking pink cutsie-tootsy sweater with little fucking pearlite buttons.

     “How long have you and he been-” My elbow knocks over my latte. Dive under table to grab fallen cup. Take a last swig as I stand, hurl the cup at Charlotte’s head. She ducks, cup misses, rolls into gutter. I collapse into a chair. “You left that sweater in the trunk. What a fucking–”

     “Olive- He was just giving me a ride home from work-” she says.

     “Don’t even. No. Don’t. Not today,” I yell.

     “He told me you knew. That things were open between you,” she says.

     “They were. Are,” I say.

     “Is he dead?” she asks.

     “Don’t know,” I say.

     Hey over there. I know that skinny guy walking up the street. Six years later and nothing changes. Not really. Jan wears huge retro sunglasses pushed back on his head, a button-up white linen shirt, green shark skin slacks. Dark circles under eyes, so skinny its like he’s losing himself behind ribs. Or could be heroin. Skinnier than last time I saw him, even.

     Charlotte smiles. “Hey Jan.”

     But he ignores her, wraps me into a hug and says, “Hey stranger. So good to see you.”

     “You, too.” I close my eyes.

     “How are you holding up?” he asks.

     I look up at him, on the verge of bawling,“Okay?”

     “I want to hear all about it. But, hey, on a happier note I’ve got some news, too. I just got engaged.”

     “To who?” We’re staring intensely now.

     “Queen Charlotta?”

     “Her?” I look over. She’s smiling. Does he know about her and Lee? “How long.” I can’t stand it.

     “Together? Just a month. Engaged two days ago,” he says.

     “And how long have you been back?” I ask.

     “A month,” he says.

     “Shit,” I whisper.

     And in one breath we lose our shit. Right there. On Linden Ave. Make a scene that gristles through the local rumor mill for weeks. I tear out landscaping. I yell. Jump the fountain. Stop cars. Screams. Charlotte’s crying and Jan is bellowing at her to shut up. And there. That’s me. That’s my girl.

     Screaming, eyes closed, I see my amputated arm floating. No, dancing. Salsa moves across the floor with Lee. Missing husband, stolen arm. What’s that one song about being lost and loving it? Birds navigate the earth by reading electric currents.

     Open eyes. Insults. Incantations. Apologies. Threats spill out so loudly I dull the sound of Raymond playing mariachi rifts on his trumpet at the barber shop up the street. Flailing body, cursing like a sailor.

E.J. Jones

Cheating


          It was early Saturday and my son, Wesley was already at the park with his friends.  Like everyone around Blythe, he started his October mornings when it was still cool, before the desert heat set in.  Tanya, my wife, was in her garden doing the same.  The house was all mine.  I picked up the paper grinning about having the morning to myself.  No honey-do’s, just me and twenty-four hours till the next football game.

          Yesterday’s mail was on the counter next to the coffee machine.  Under a refinancing mortgage flyer, there was a letter with Georgia on the return address.  I didn’t dare touch it, but nudged the flyer away with my coffee cup.  I hoped the letter was either a mistake or a bad joke because up until then I was having a good day.

It’s weird how things jump in my head.  A bad pass interference call will make me remember I left a fountain pen in my favorite shirt.  My home address written in my mother’s hand reminded me I’d hid a bottle of good bourbon in the garage two years ago.  It was a gift from my boss, and I could give a million reasons why I’d kept it, but the truth was that Ten High was good liquor.  I was taught to never throw things like that away.

Staring at the envelope made me sweat, so I dumped my coffee and poured me some of Tanya’s grapefruit juice.  I didn’t want to touch the letter, but poked at it with a spatula like it was something that might bite.  After flipping it like a pancake, I saw red lipstick where the ‘V’ sealed it shut.  I knew those lips; I’d wiped the same imprint from my forehead and cheek a hundred times as a kid.  Momma was big on kisses before school.

The juice didn’t help my sweat or the cotton in my mouth, and I figured I better do something before Tanya came in asking questions.  It was dumb, I know, but I went to get the bourbon.  Tanya nodded as I walked by.  I hadn’t had a drink without her for more than fifteen years.

The bottle was in my tool box, somewhere Wes would never be without me, and somewhere Tanya’d only be if I died.  It was a bonus from winning the company football pool, close to six-hundred dollars that went mostly to a BMX bike and pearl earrings.  I bought socks and underwear for myself because you can never really have enough.  My regional manager, Keith had tossed a lump of rubber-banded twenties on my desk and put the bourbon down next to the money.  Enjoy it, you lucky bastard was written on a post-it stuck to the bottle.  Keith was a good guy, but he was the dummy that bet Seattle every year.  Him giving me the bottle made me realize no one at work really knew me.  I thought about giving it away, but only real friends deserve quality and Tanya was my best friend.

I sat on my tool box and rested the bottle horizontal across my knee, whacking it on the ass a few times.  I’d never liked the smell of liquor and took a swig without putting it to my nose.  The heat in my stomach gave me courage I didn’t really have, and I went back for the letter.

Tanya barely looked up at me on my way back inside, so I hid behind a bush to watch her.  Turning over top soil and clearing weeds was what she loved most next to me.  She dug into the ground hard, stabbing into it like she’d been wronged.  And then real gentle she spread fresh soil around her marigolds like she was putting on a band aid.

Her braided hair was away from her face and wrapped inside my old UC Riverside cap.  We always joked that her two years there plus my two made us an educated couple.  Standing there with the bottle in my hand was stupid because if Tanya saw me peeking around the bush at her, she’d have known something was wrong, even at a glance.  I loved watching her though, especially if she didn’t know I was looking.  Whenever she felt she was alone, her beauty was effortless, coincidental.  Hell, maybe even accidental.  I was never smooth with women, but when I saw her at The Getaway, the campus bar, nursing a Jack and coke with that all alone look, I had to talk to her.  We both had a few more drinks, and I asked if we could do it again sometime.  She leaned towards me and put her hand over mine, her smooth dark skin covering my pale knuckles.  “I don’t think that would be a very good idea.”  I couldn’t accept her saying no; I was hooked.  Tanya claims she didn’t know it, but I’m sure she did.

It was hard a first:  black guys looked at her like, ‘What the hell are you doing?’  White girls glaring at me asking, “Why would you even do that?”  Not Georgia bad, but it did start fights.  We’d worked through a lot.

Seeing Tanya in her garden made me want to get on my knees beside her, bury the letter unopened, spray it with weed killer and wait to see if something beautiful would grow.  If I’d had the courage to pick up the letter earlier, I might have done just that.  But she’d smell the bourbon now.  Her nose was a good as mine.  There was a fight coming, but I didn’t want to have it just then.

Our house was a modest three bedroom, most in Blythe are.  Wes’ room is closest to the front door, but he’d never seen me take a drink and I aimed for him to never have to.  The master bedroom was at the end of the hall, but it seemed a long ways off.  The office was in between and the coolest anyway.  His and her desks were pushed up against the walls.  I sat the bottle on the floor next to mine in case I decided to try and hide it if Tanya came in.  When the silver blade slit the crease in the envelope, I saw sweat beads racing down my temple in the reflection.

The letter was only one page.  I turned it over and the back was white, blank.  If there were words that could make up for sixteen years of silence, I knew damn well they couldn’t fit on a single page.  The very first word was, Son, and it was the worst word to start with.  I dropped the letter in my lap and took a good swig.

My parents never called me, Son.  Hey You, maybe.  Boy, I heard several times, but not a word that tied us together as family.  Not since I showed up with Tanya and a wedding ring on my finger.

The third line said my father was alive, but doctors couldn’t say for how long.  I don’t understand why, but I sympathized, a lot.  I knew he was afraid to die.  And neither one of us faced our fears very well.

There was a big ink splotch in the L of We Love You.  The pen bled ink while they wondered whether love was the right word.  Momma wrote it, but I knew my father was looking over her shoulder, dictating.  She’d stopped, and then looked at him for approval.  Who knows how long before he answered.  I took my time, too, had a few drinks before reading on.

If you want to see him, it will have to be soon.  The words were supposed to be an invitation. Leaving the front door open was as far as he was willing to go.  I wasn’t sure how far I’d go.  I put the letter and the bourbon in my lap.  Looking at them, I couldn’t tell which was worse.

*

          “Hun?”  Tanya’s voice was still outside, but close.  “You didn’t turn on the AC.”
One of the things I’d hated most about drinking heavy was that time slipped.  Heat had invaded the house, and I was sure it was almost afternoon, but it felt like only minutes had passed.  I hadn’t moved except to lift the bottle to my mouth. She was beating the dirt off her sneakers before coming inside, something neither one of us could get Wes to do regularly.  I didn’t run, but I wanted to.

“You in there, Babe?”

I took one more good swig and capped the bottle; not much could have made the situation better and nothing could have made it any worse.  Tanya stared at me from the doorway, her arms pressed against the arches like she was bracing for an earthquake.

“What happened?”

She was asking whether she should hug or kill me.  I blinked and she’d covered the ten feet from the doorway to my side.  She snatched the bottle when I didn’t answer.

“My fathers dying,” I said, pointing to the letter.  “Wants to see me.”

“We’ll send a card.”

Tanya had a way of closing herself off when things got bad.  It was how she coped with her father’s drinking.  Everything about her became rigid, stone.  Nothing could penetrate and hurt her then.  She’s a good cop because of it, but I swear I don’t know her when she gets like that.  She knew she was hurting me.

“I’m going.”

“Bye.”

There was no hesitation in her response, just a reaction, concrete bouncing back a rubber ball.  She walked out with the bottle, and I heard her pour the rest in the toilet, flushing it twice, and then running water inside and pouring that out.  Without the liquor, it was just a bottle.  We both knew that.

“He’s my father,” I said when she came back.

“I’m your wife.”

I couldn’t explain what I was feeling.  She saw the confusion in my face, sighed and left.  I didn’t tell her that I was thinking about taking Wes with me.  That was for the best; she’d have handcuffed him to the frame of the house.

Looking out the office window, across Seventh Street to the hard and hilly dirt where Wes practices his bike jumps, I saw the melon fields, honey-dew.  I tried to think about something else, but couldn’t get away from the smell of alcohol on my own breath.  The tiny skeleton-like trees beyond the melon fields made me think about sitting on my porch in Georgia, listening to my father.  Funny how things pop up, huh?

You know that Nigra round over there got a piano in his house?  People nowadays rather pay a monkey a quarter what they should pay a real man to do for fifty cents.  My father was never happier than when he had someone to blame for something he’d done.  He never kept any job very long, and the reason was always the same:  Niggers.  I loved him, but he was an average man.  He couldn’t accept it and spent half his time pretending he was rich, and the other half making damn sure everyone knew he wasn’t as poor as a nigger.  It made him drink.  And drinking made him mean.  I’d never told Tanya, but until high school when I got a job and saw how easy is was to keep it, I blamed them, too.

When I walked into the kitchen, there was an empty Jack Daniels bottle on the counter, probably a gift to Tanya from someone who didn’t know any better.  I couldn’t imagine where she’d hid it, but I knew she’d been faithful and hadn’t drunk hers.

“What are you thinking?” Tanya said softly, rolling a baby tomato around the salad in front of her.  She didn’t look at me, and I knew that meant she was giving me a chance to apologize for breaking our sacred vow.

“No brain cells left?”

I tried to walk out, but something hit me in my back.  Not a big something, but an attention getter.  If it wasn’t her wedding ring, it was a hell of a bluff.  I stopped dead in my tracks.

“You don’t like it, I know, but I’ve got an obligation to–”

“You made a promise!” she screamed.  “And you have an obligation to me, to Wes!”

I couldn’t get past not seeing my father before he died.  I saw how much it hurt him when his father passed, saw how hard he drank and how it never helped.  I owed him that much.

“I just wanna see him, okay?”

“Not okay.  No drinking without one another,” Tanya said.  “No Georgia…remember?”

“I know what I said, but try and understand.”

“Every mile of that three-thousand on the way back, I cried, and you promised.  You swore.”

My father’d called Tanya things we never repeated.  Tanya’d never been to the South, and I’d convinced her it wouldn’t be that bad; she believed me and wasn’t ready for it.  The trip back from Georgia was rough.  We didn’t really talk until the car overheated near Blythe, eight miles into California.  In the seventy-two hours we waited for a new radiator, we went from being a zebra-couple to just Warren and Tanya:  steak eaters, iced tea drinkers, good tippers, two polite and quiet people, that’s all.  People stopped staring and started waving.  The Gas Company and the city police were both hiring.  We dropped out after the semester ended and moved.  Blythe seemed like a good place, and we both needed someplace good.

I wasn’t sure what else to say, so I told her what I thought was the truth. “He’s still my Daddy.  I love him.”

“He’s not worth it!”

For some reason, probably the alcohol, hopefully the alcohol, I turned and looked at her, hard.  Everyone in my family knew how to look down at black people.  The Hughes glare, my father called it; he said I had it better than most.  I leaned my head back, so she had to look up into my nose, gave her an ugly sideways frown.  Her eyes grew wide with pain.

“Don’t…look at me like that.”

I was wrong, but I was mad.  And drunk.  “Look at you how?”

“Like you just noticed what color I am.”

I’d broken through the wall her father and the hoodlums she arrested couldn’t get through.  I’d hurt her with her defense up.  My backbone went limp and all I saw was the floor.  Tanya disappeared.  It didn’t matter if I’d looked how she said.  I’d hurt her.  If I could have, I would have swallowed a match and burned from the inside out.  Shame hurts, and I was as ashamed as I’d ever been from what I’d done.  But I still wanted to believe that my father felt my kind of shame, not the shame forced onto you by other people, the shame that makes you sorry, makes you change.

Blythe isn’t an easy place to hide.  Anybody can be found with a few phone calls and a description of what they drive, so I made the forty mile drive to Parker, Arizona.  Keith sent me there two years ago to oversee the construction of a gas line.  The crew always talked about a local bar called Bruce’s, and that regulars could bring in their own bottle.  It was down the street from Quicker Liquor on the corner of Choctaw and Main.  Funny how things come back.

The clerk at Quicker Liquor was a fat bald man, the kind you see buying alcohol, not selling it.  I found what I was looking for and put it on the counter.

“Good choice,” he said.  He held up the bottle like he was asking for an invite then slipped it into a brown bag.  “Occasion?”

“Reunion of sorts.”

“Ahhh, catching up on old times, huh?  Good memories, good times.”  His voice was scratchy from smoking, but I could tell he loved to talk.  I grabbed the bottle and walked out.

Bruce’s wouldn’t let me in with the bottle, but someone at the bar gestured to go around back.  Five people, three old couches, one big cactus and a steel barrel bonfire was all it was.  But it looked like a place cops tolerated rather than disturbed.  I sat down on an empty couch and made the mistake of pulling my expensive bottle from the brown bag.  It drew the attention of an old Indian woman, a mustache above her lip and what looked like a five-O’clock shadow.

“White man,” she said, pointing.  “Give Crazy Lucy some.  You drink on my land, you pay tax!”  Drinkers like to talk, but drunks like to be left alone.  I was surprised this drunk didn’t know the rules.  “All of this,” Lucy said holding her arms up and spinning around, “is mine.  Mine!”  She held out a Styrofoam cup.  I looked at a man and a woman sharing a cigarette for what to do, but they minded their business.  After I poured her about three fingers, she gave a toothless grin and danced away.  It reminded me of my father’s drunken dance and how at times, he was good.

*

          I don’t remember driving home, but I woke up parked in front of my house.  It scared me to think that driving drunk was something I couldn’t unlearn, a stain.  The moon’s glow lit a brown-bearded face peeking into my car window.

“You okay?”  It was Juan from next door.  He had a dog leash in one hand and a cigarillo in the other, an average night for him.  “Want me to get Tanya?”

I shook no, and he walked away.  The alcohol was wearing off, and my back was killing me.  I couldn’t have gone back to sleep in the car, not without another bottle.  I had to face Tanya.

The porch light was out, and I got the feeling I wasn’t welcome because at night it always glows.  The house was pitch-black, but Tanya wasn’t asleep.  She snores something awful, and the only sound was the big oscillating fan rattling the blinds in the living room.

I checked on Wes.  He was asleep, but he’d left his TV on again.  I’d told him about the electric bill as many times as Tanya’d told him about washing and not just rinsing the dishes, but I smiled turning it off.  He was a good kid.  I tip-toed in the bedroom.

“If you start drinking heavy, I’ll divorce you.  I swear to God!”

Tanya’s father was Jack Daniels man before he died.  She hated being close to him.  Even in the hospital right before the end, she said she could still smell it on him.  In the dark, Tanya probably saw her father, not me.  Since we’d been together we only drank with one another, and never too much, wine at a friend’s party, a beer a piece watching the Super-bowl.  It kept both of us sober.  We called it ‘really small group therapy’.

I sat on the bed and used my feet to peel my shoes off, hoping the silence would last.  But cheating’s cheating.  I didn’t blame her for being mad.

“Say something.”

I was facing the wall, and she came up behind me and hugged me tight.  The shame I was carrying was too heavy, and I had to let it go.

“In junior high I was suspended for throwing a rock.”

“What?”

“Her name was Kenya.”  Tanya didn’t stop hugging when she heard the name, but I felt her grip loosen.  “I didn’t know it was a girl.  I just saw black.  Daddy’d been saying all week how it wasn’t right…integrating my school…”

“Why are you telling me this?”

“Walking home I couldn’t think about anything else but how I’d done wrong.  Mama always told me to never hit a girl.  But Daddy was so happy.  Waited for me on the steps with a bottle in one hand and two small Dixie cups in the other.  Held out the bottle to me and said, ‘Well, spank that som’ bitch.  You drinking wit’ me or not.’  I hit the bottle; he laughed.  I hit it again, and he laughed harder.  We sat on paint cans by the garage and got drunk.”

“Warren, I’m not sure this–”

“And then he was good…for a while.  Kept a job almost a year.  We played catch in front of the house.  He kissed Mama before breakfast and after dinner.  He told me he loved me all the time.  ‘Proud’ he said, ‘damn proud.’  It ain’t right, but a lot of stuff ain’t right.”

Tanya was still hugging, but I could tell she didn’t know what to do.  I turned around, looked her in the eye and rubbed her cheek with my hand.  “I know I made a promise,” I said.  “But I’m making another one right now.  Two days and I’m coming back.”

She kissed me soft, and I felt her relax in my arms.  “You better.”

“I will, Darling.  This city, this house…this is home.”

Valerie Henderson

Fall Back

          Moira unrolls a crocheted yellow square and levels it with a steady palm, ridding it of bumps, lint, impurities. She removes the baby from its walker adorned with dangling plastic stars and lays it on its bare back. Moira is in charge of the baby. Though, it isn’t quite a baby. Moira’s sister’s daughter is old enough to piece words together like “fishy” and “good.” It is strong enough to drag a rusted saucepan out of the bottom cupboard. But, since Page still wears diapers, Moira calls her the baby.

          It is nap time and though Moira could have the baby sleep in its crib and simply listen to the monitor, she prefers it this way: the baby in sight. Moira leans against the foot of a corduroy recliner and stretches her legs out in front of her like a V.  She lifts the magnified mirror to her face and, with metal in hand, she tends to her eyebrows. Her eyebrows do not require much maintenance, minimal weeding below the meager arch. Moira’s brows are strong. Masculine. Dark. And in pictures, they are the first thing to get noticed. They add stability to the rest of her face which is otherwise delicate, breakable like porcelain. She pulls, producing reddened skin that throbs. She holds a single finger to the altered area until the pain is gone. She continues the pattern. Pull and hold.

          The baby is restless. It turns and stretches its arms out in stubbornness. When the baby can’t sleep, Moira resorts to Tubs, a wind up pig with a corkscrew tail that marches on demand. The ticking helps the baby, helps Moira.  Once when the baby was out with its parents, Moira wound up Tubs and set him atop the island in the kitchen while she sat on a bar stool eating her sister’s leftover meatloaf for dinner. His stomping feet and painted-on smile hadn’t provided company so much as a distraction—nevertheless she had taken her fingers to his knob four times before her plate was empty.

          After nap time, it is time to eat. Moira inserts the baby in its highchair. To distract it while she prepares its meal, she jingles a ring of keys in front of it before handing them off altogether. The baby lifts and drops them seemingly fascinated by the clink and in between lifting and dropping it pounds chubby fists against its plastic tray.  Moira takes a cup from the pantry and sets it in the microwave which is splattered with sauces and stickiness. It needs to be cleaned. She sets the timer for one minute. One minute should fly by, but it drags. It is the only time of day Moira is aware of seconds passing by as she watches the glowing red numbers descend. 45 seconds left. 30. Then, because she is impatient, when the clock says 1, she opens the microwave so she doesn’t have to hear the beep.

          Over a bright orange baby-proof plate, Moira spreads a scoop of tomato paste and fat pasta and last but not least: one meatball.  Moira mashes the meat with her fork, breaking it into bites for the baby. For herself, Moira splits an avocado. She recently read in a women’s magazine that an avocado a day proves for a flat stomach because of the good fat. When it comes to the mound of her stomach, she figures the good fat can’t hurt.

          The baby digs into the spaghetti. With its first bite, red has already smeared over its paunchy cheeks and chin.  Moira likes to have the baby fed and cleaned before its parents get home.

          Moira moved in with her sister, Pauline, after Pauline gave birth. Pauline and her husband, Andrew, couldn’t afford daycare and insisted on Moira moving in—an offer she couldn’t refuse. Moira had been living with a woman near Fresno State while she finished up her degree in Biology. But, before graduation, her roommate had announced she was moving in with her longtime boyfriend and after months of struggling to pay the rent by herself and find a new place, Moira opted to move in with Pauline after graduation, until she found a job. But, the job was never found. Never whole-heartedly looked for. Once Moira moved in, she fell into the routine of Pauline, Andrew, the baby. She was comfortable—a bird roosting deep in its suspended nest.

          It has just gotten dark outside and the baby’s parents are home. Pauline pushes through the swinging screen door of their one-story bearing paper grocery bags. She peeks over them to find her way. Moira offers her assistance and takes a bag from Pauline, looking inside to find stacks of lemons.

          “Why didn’t you just have me pick these up? You didn’t have to stop.”
Pauline removes her sweat jacket and hangs it over a barstool. “A woman from the restaurant brought them from her tree. They were free. We can do something with them.”

          Moira nods and begins unloading them into the fridge.

          “You know, I’m really starting to like that new cut of yours.” Pauline takes a finger to the hair that hangs just below Moira’s chin. “Maybe I should cut mine.”

          In their teens, Pauline praised Moira for her effortlessly straight hair, expressing her frustration with the inheritance of their father’s unruly locks. Pauline even purchased a chemical relaxer which after processing fully only left her with slightly smoother curls and an itchy scalp. She asked Moira how she had gotten so lucky.

          Pauline walks over to the baby. It’s plopped in front of the television with several stuffed creatures available for its entertainment as it watches enthusiastic adults dressed in neon hats singing the ABCs. Pauline joins the baby.

          Andrew enters with a loose tie over an untucked white collared shirt. He works as a manager at a car rental office and since he is manager, he has the liberty of synchronizing his schedule with Pauline’s waitressing hours since they only own one car between them. Though Moira often tried to lend them her car, they refused, acknowledging her need to run errands for them during the day, for the baby, and they insisted she have her car at constant availability in case, God forbid, there was a baby emergency.

          Andrew’s eyes are red with exhaustion but he offers a warm hello to Moira before joining the rest of his family.

          “Andrew, what do you think of Moira’s new cut? I’m thinking of chopping mine off. That way it will be so short, I won’t even be able to put it into this pony tail.”

          “I like the pony.” Andrew strokes the tail with a closed fist. “I get to see your face.”  He leans across the blanket and gives his wife a kiss.

          Moira takes this as her cue. She makes her way to her room in the back of the house to give her sister some time alone with her husband. Moira spends most nights surfing the internet. She starts out responding to emails from old college friends, passively attempting to search for jobs. Recently, she has taken a mild interest in biotechnology. She likes the idea of working with synthetic hormones and livestock. But, after scrolling over job descriptions and demands, she ends up watching video tutorials on how to potty train a baby with chocolate candies or how to organize a baby’s toys to save space. Her bed needs to me made, the lavender sheets balled at the foot of the mattress. They are the same lavender as the walls of her teenage bedroom. Once, when no one was home, Moira broke the household rule and allowed a boy into her bedroom who told her the color reminded him of an Easter egg. He said it must have felt like spring all year long.
Just as she finishes entering the word “baby” into the website’s search engine, there’s a knock at her door. She closes the screen and before she can say “come in”, Pauline’s head has popped through. Pauline scans the room as if to make sure that no one else is there, even though no one else ever is.

          Pauline shuts the door behind her.  “I need a favor.”

          “What’s wrong?”

          “Who said anything was wrong?”

          “I know you like I know the nutrition facts on a pint of Half Baked,” Moira says. “Something’s off.”

          “I’m late.”

          Moira smiles. “Really?” Her eyes move to Pauline’s stomach.

          “Why are you smiling like it’s a good thing?  Is it a good thing?”

          “They’d be two years apart, like us!”

          “Since when is it like you to instantly find the silver lining?

          Moira sighs. “What’s the favor?”

          “I need you to pick me up a test tomorrow when you do the marketing.” She hands her a ten. “Put it on a separate receipt.”

          “No wonder you reacted to my hairspray yesterday. Your smell is heightened. Just go to the store now. When you thought you might be pregnant with Page, you couldn’t take the test fast enough.”

          “There’s no rush,” Pauline says. “I don’t want to tell Andrew until I know for sure. He’s been wanting another one but it’s not the time. We can’t afford it. Besides,” Pauline says, “if I am pregnant again, you’ll never be able to leave.”

          Moira thinks about the day that the baby will be ready for Kindergarten and though Moira might still be needed for a couple hours after school, her caretaking responsibilities will change. She will no longer be in charge of the baby morning, noon and night. Instead, her duties will become less interactive and she will still spend her days organizing laundry and mopping up messes but, she will be alone.

          “I’m just saying.” Moira says. “It wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world.”

          This is the day Moira has been waiting for. The wooden trunk that used to house fashion magazines and the gel breast inserts she used to hide from her mother, now contains used onesies, stuffed elephants and bears missing eyes and limbs—almost everything yellow, unisex. Still, Moira thinks it will be a boy. That’s usually how things work: couples are blessed with one. Then the other. Every Saturday, when the baby’s parents sleep in, Moira takes the car to yard sales, only stopping when a section of pastels pops out at her, signifying baby gear, baby toys, baby furniture. Moira sifts through the clothes and toys. Is it enough? She knew she would need these one day and she is glad she put them away for safe keeping. Moira not only inherited the love of yard sales from her mother but also the need to hold onto things. When the girls were little, her mother tied each of their first shoes to her rearview mirror. She said it was a daily reminder that, at one point, each of their feet had fit in the palm of her hand. Moira followed suit keeping not only the baby’s first shoe but its first pacifier, old nasal aspirator and hospital identification bracelet.

          Moira stacks the toys and clothes back into the trunk, excited Saturday is only two days away. At her computer, she begins a new search: newborns.

***

          Moira straps the baby in its car seat. She gives the straps an extra two tugs to make sure the baby is secure. Once she is certain all is safe, Moira gets in the car and drives to the market.

          She heads down the produce aisle, list in hand, and wonders what new fruit she can dice up for the baby.  Recently, she discovered the baby’s intolerance to apples. She warmed them up with sprinkled cinnamon and though they smelt like fresh apple pie, the baby spit them out, leaving patches of cinnamon on its lower lip before dumping them over its tray. Moira didn’t know a baby could be so hard to please but, now, she is determined to find something to its liking, no matter how long it takes.

          Moira makes her way to the meat department. She pulls her cart alongside the counter and waits for service.  When it is her turn, Mitchell, the normal weekday butcher, says hello and asks what he can do for her. She points to the un-marinated, boned chicken and asks for three pounds. It is the cheapest and once cooked it will last their family of four a whole week.

          Mitchell pulls at the filmy, bluish poultry and rolls it into white paper. He hands her the wrap. “Is that all?”

          Mitchell is smiling and waving an enthusiastic, gloved finger up and down at the baby. The baby stretches its arm toward him.

          “You know, she’s starting to look more like you every week.”

          Moira doesn’t mind when people assume the baby is hers.  It makes her feel as though she’s doing something worthwhile. Raising her young. And so, she lets Mitchell and others alike think she has her own family instead of letting them know she is just part of someone else’s.

          Moira looks down and tucks her hair behind her ears. “Let’s hope not.”

          “I’m digging the new look. It makes you look more grown up.”

          Moira shakes her head. “It’s too short.”

          “Well, I like it.”

          Moira knows she doesn’t take compliments well and a large part of her feels embarrassed with the attention, as though he is just saying so out of rehearsed kindness and perhaps the compliment is unwarranted.

          Moira rounds her cart into the hygiene aisle. To her left are bars of soap and bottles of creams promising to make women smell like rainforests. Moira grabs a compacted stack of generic soap and tosses it into the cart. The baby’s fists cling to the handle from which she steers. She is surprised it hasn’t become fussy. Instead, it seems comforted by the soft loaf of bread Moira has positioned by the baby. To her right, Moira finds vitamins. Vitamins for hair growth. Vitamins for energy. Vitamins for health of heart. Next to the vitamins are feminine wipes and above those, the pregnancy tests. Moira looks for the store brand test. Its box is the only one that isn’t pink and though it is cheapest, it still comes with two tests. Just in case.

          According to the name tag, Moira’s cashier’s name is Brenda and she has been serving customers since 1998. Brenda wears a short perm and caked, gummy lashes. The baby has finally become squirmy. It starts to reach for jars of jam on the conveyer belt and when it can’t quite touch them, it cries out in panic. It tries again, still unsuccessful. Moira shushes the baby and strokes its hand as she continues to unload the gallons of milk at the bottom of the basket. The baby is hysterical and Brenda and patrons are starting to stare. Moira reaches for the loaf of bread but the baby clenches it furiously while tears roll down its blushed cheeks. Moira digs through her purse for her keys and shakes them in front of the baby. The baby takes them only to throw them to the ground. Moira drops to her knees to pick them up. Facing the line of customers behind her, Moira makes eye contact with an elderly woman in a jogging suit. Moira says sorry. The woman just stares and smiles a smile of irritation, insincere. Once again, the baby grabs at the conveyer belt, this time succeeding in tilting a glass jar of olives off the counter.  It smashes onto the floor. Muddy green washes over the tile. Brenda is on the loudspeaker calling for a cleanup.  Moira looks to Brenda and offers another apology. It isn’t the first time she has caused a scene and, by the looks of things, it won’t be her last. While a teenage boy sponges the spill, Moira sets the pregnancy test on the counter with a heavy bar between it and the rest of her groceries. The baby has quieted some and it struggles to catch its breath from crying with occasional hiccups.

          Moments like this don’t cause Moira embarrassment. Instead, they make her question her skills as a caretaker. She wonders why she isn’t able to keep the baby content at all times. Once, Pauline told her “Babies will cry. People will stare. It’s all part of the gig.” But Moira refused to pass these situations off as anything other than a testament to her lack of motherly instincts.

          After Moira swipes her sister’s bank card for one hundred and twenty nine dollars worth of groceries, the cashier scans the pregnancy test. Brenda looks at the test. Brenda looks at the baby. Brenda smiles a smile the same as the elderly woman’s. “I assume you want a separate bag,” Brenda says.
“Please.”

          Instead of handing the test to the bag boy and even though Moira asked for plastic, Brenda slides the test in a small, paper bag, seemingly for confidentiality.

          It gets dark and Moira is anxious for Pauline to come home. For now, the test resides in Moira’s sock drawer, still in the paper bag. Moira sits with the baby and Tubs, and, together, they watch the pig perform. When Tubs is done, Moira starts him up again. She is always amazed at how much Tubs, and all of the toys smell like the baby. Powder and milk. She sniffs Tubs slowly before winding him up once more. Moira had never been fond of milk, not the smell, not the texture. But now that the drink is associated with the baby, it is Moira’s favorite scent. Often, when the baby naps, Moira stares at the crusted residue between the corners of its lips. She doesn’t wipe it off but instead lets it linger so that she may take in its smell when it awakes and she is able to hold the baby close.

          The baby’s parents are home.

          Pauline and Andrew come in laughing. Andrew is telling a story about a client who returned a rental car with a wadded up note left in the cup holder. Apparently, Andrew opened it to find a list of things the girl loved and hated about her boyfriend and to Andrew’s amusement some qualities made both lists. Things like the way he woke her up for sex in the middle of the night and how he insisted on paying for everything.

          “What’s the point of the list,” Andrew says. “Why did she need it to know how she felt?”

          “Some people need to see things laid out in front of them,” Pauline says.” Without a visual, a person’s emotions can just run around in their head.”

          “I’m just saying. I wouldn’t want to read your list.”

          “I doubt you’d find anything you didn’t already know.”

          The two walk over to Moira and the baby. Pauline gives the baby a quick kiss and asks Moira if her daughter already ate.

          “Fish crackers and spaghetti rings.”

          Pauline stands and walks to the hallway, motioning with her eyes for Moira to follow.

          In Moira’s bedroom, Moira pulls the bag from her sock drawer.

          “Good. Was there any change?”

          Moira shakes her head.  “No time like the present.”

          Pauline heads to the bathroom. “Wish me luck.”

          But, Moira isn’t sure what luck Pauline is hoping for. Pauline had a habit of requesting luck for unusual things. Like the time their childhood fish died and she lost a round of rock-paper-scissors that determined who would have to flush.

          Moira thinks she wants the test to be positive.  Raising Pauline’s baby has become a part of her life. The tantrums. The milk. The routine. She doesn’t want it to end. She decides to wait for Pauline in the living room, silently hopeful that a new chapter for Pauline might begin, allowing her to maintain the recent role she’s been entrusted with.

          In the living room, Andrew is on the couch with the baby propped up on his knee.  He sips root beer. He lifts his foot up and down and the baby bounces, catching air between its diaper and dad, each time giggling wildly at the bumpy ride. Once, she saw Andrew at his nephew’s birthday party, allowing all the kids of appropriate size to play his invention of “climb the man” in which the children could grasp on to his hands and climb up his legs with their feet, starting at his knees, to his stomach until they’d succeed in reaching the top at which point he’d throw them onto his shoulders and announce them as conquerors of the climb.

          Moira pours a glass of red wine and starts flipping through a family magazine. She looks at the pictures of Halloween costumes and flower arrangements and avoids the articles. She is distracted, constantly looking up at Andrew and the baby and relishing in their interaction. She sees the baby turn toward its father and while Andrew continues bouncing and the baby continues chuckling, it now wants something more. It sits both arms strained toward Andrew, reaching, longing.  It wants to be held. It wants contact. Andrew holds the baby and swings it back and forth, now loving and tender, offering a comfort that only the baby’s actual parent can provide. And in this moment, Moira sees what exemplifies everything she’s missing.

          Even though Moira wasn’t ready to raise a child when she found out she was pregnant, she was willing to give it a shot. But, when Moira told her boyfriend, Gary, he claimed their relationship wasn’t ready for such a big step. He said whatever she decided, he’d be on board but once he referred to it as a big step with weariness, she made up her mind. They’d been together two years, since her freshmen year in college. She’d loved him and had often assumed that one day they’d start a family and perhaps it would just be accomplished sooner. Still, she could never push his reaction out of her head and she knew she couldn’t live with herself knowing a man had stayed with her solely because of a child. She cared too much to have him live like that, unwilling and bound. She’d wanted him to stay for her.

          The operation was quick and the pain was tolerable as promised, a sterile, apathetic procedure. She preferred it that way. To not have her actual self associated with the act, just her body. Afterwards, Gary had taken her for coffee and a two egg breakfast, eating and conversing as though nothing had happened.  At first, Moira was game. She laughed at appropriate moments and tried to look at him the same, tried to look at her own self the same. But, eventually, her resentment for their decision took a toll on their relationship, as resentment often does, and the two parted ways.

          Moira feels lucky to still have a baby in her life. Though it is not hers, she learns a great deal about motherhood and feels as though caring and raising Pauline’s baby, in a sense, makes up for her loss. But, when she sees this: the baby reaching out for its kin, needing, she is faced with the reality  that she could not provide that for her own, that the baby is not hers, and that she will be lucky  if she gets a second chance.

          Moira sees Andrew holding the baby close but he gets up and distances the baby from himself, the baby’s legs dangling.

          “Yup. She’s wet. We’ve got a wet diaper.”

          Moira stands up ready to help. She holds out her hands.

          “I’ve got it. Pauline must be taking a shower.”

          And just as he walks to the hallway, towards the bedroom, Pauline marches down the hall, with the same collected image. Moira can’t read her. Pauline takes the baby from Andrew and rushes to change it into a fresh diaper.

          Andrew turns back to Moira. “See? Even when I try and help, she’s on it.”

          When Pauline comes out with the baby, she sits next to Andrew on the couch, positioning the baby between them. She licks her thumb and takes it to the baby’s blanched forehead to wipe a smudge. As Moira watches her sister and waits for some kind of clue, it appears as though she has been forgotten about for the moment. The baby has Pauline’s full attention. After Moira waits long enough, Andrew goes to the kitchen and while his back is turned, Pauline makes eye contact with Moira and shakes her head no—not with disappointment but with a shrug insinuating it isn’t the right time. That is life. Moira is surprised she doesn’t feel disappointed. She feels numb.

          Andrew removes a jug of maple pecan ice cream from the freezer. He scoops a few mounds into a glass bowl with a chipped rim. He pops a jar of kosher pickles and positions them atop the dessert. He carries the dish over to Pauline.

          Pauline adopted the craving of ice-cream and pickles during her pregnancy. After the birth, her palette hadn’t changed and maple pecan and kosher slices were still her snack of preference, which Andrew supplied her with on a regular basis, happily.

          She thanks him and lets herself fall into the couch. Andrew turns on the television and hands her the remote.

          “Watch your shows.”

          Again, Pauline thanks him and navigates through her list of recorded episodes of reality shows about housewives. Andrew is again springing the baby, switching his gaze from the baby to the television. He looks content.

          Moira often observes that Pauline and Andrew rarely take advantage of their Friday nights off by dressing up and embracing the town, whether it is due to their lack of money or their homebody nature. In Moira and Pauline’s adolescence, Moira had a date planned with different boys nearly every Friday night—she had her choice. And Pauline was left home to concentrate on homework or help their mother bake. Moira wondered how she handled it, the staying in, the loneliness, but now it doesn’t matter because in moments like this, Moira realizes Pauline and Andrew’s little efforts of consideration toward one another make for a moving, genuine love that causes Moira to yearn.

          Moira pours herself another glass of wine and takes it up to her room.

          She sits at her computer and opens her browser. While waiting for it to load, she looks at a picture frame decorated with seashells. Inside is a picture of her and the baby at the beach. They are huddled together under an umbrella, both wearing hats to further shield themselves from the sun. Moira examines their features. They baby’s eyes are almond shaped and its nose is rounded at the tip, begging to be pinched. She and the baby look nothing alike. Though they are cheek to cheek in the photo and her adoration and connection to the baby is clear, it is not the same as that of a mother and daughter. The baby is not Moira’s. And, one day, if Moira is lucky, she figures she will have her own house, her own hallway with her own decorative picture frames exposing moments shared between her and a child of her own. Moira will not go to tomorrow’s yard sale. The items she’s collected will remain in the trunk until she has a real need for them, her own need for them. And, for right now, they are enough.  When the girls were in middle school, their mother dragged them to yard sales, encouraging them to consider what others no longer wanted. Normally, they found practical things like a digital alarm clock for their room or resistance bands for exercise, but at one in particular, they found a magic 8 ball. Moira reaches into her desk drawer and takes out the black ball. It is scratched and Moira is unsure if it even works anymore. She’s been unable to throw away the very article that both she and her sister obsessed over and cherished. Many nights, they sat Indian style across from one another gazing into the 8 ball, taking turns asking a well thought out question before dramatically shaking it and awaiting their fortune. Would Pauline marry a millionaire? Would Moira hit her longed for growth spurt? Try again later. Yes! Outlook Not Good. Moira rubs the ball against her chair, ridding it of dust. And with no particular question in mind, she shakes it and waits for the blurriness to focus into results.

Samantha Lamph

Bougainvillea

 

     After he had done the thing, he threw the shovel down, spit out his cigarette, and walked away from the mound of dirt. He had already moved past it. The guilt was momentary, gone as quickly as her last muffled breath. Her wriggle and whine already somewhere distant in his consciousness. What could she have meant to the world at six or seven years old? Not even a pair of front teeth or a menstrual cycle to show for herself. The living would forget her soon enough, and then, it’d be a wonder that she had ever walked and breathed among them at all.

     Wayne stood and stared out at the night surrounding him. Only the stars still awake to blink back. It would be morning soon enough. For now, though, Wayne needed the silence, the sleep of everyone else around. He had watched them all swarming around the neighborhood, throughout their small town of Pilsky, looking for her. For the past three days, his neighbors had walked the streets in groups, taping the fliers on neon copy paper to any available surface. Her face stared out from each one. Light poles and car windows became mosaics of lime green, bright orange, bubblegum pink. Terribly inappropriate, Wayne knew. News vans and police cars took up all available parking on the street, as if nobody else could be expecting company. That pretty young anchor woman from Channel 4 had even broadcast a plea right from the asphalt of Lindora Avenue. Wayne watched her stern, serious gaze and her silent, moving lips from the bathroom window. They stayed all day and he could not finish the work he had started while under the watch of the sun.

     Wayne had waited until now, at three o’ clock on a Monday morning to cart her, or the sum of her parts, out to the backyard. To be as inconspicuous as he could be, he had dumped her into the old wheelbarrow. He threw a tarp over it as he rolled her out to the farthest corner of the yard, breathing loudly through his mouth, trying to avoid choking on the rancid stench emanating from the load he pushed. These extra efforts had proved to be unnecessary. Nobody had strolled by on a late night walk as he had feared. Even if they had, it really wouldn’t be so strange to see Wayne working in his garden at such an early hour. It’s all any of the neighbors ever saw him doing, at any other hour of any other day. Ninety-three minutes was all the time it took to lay her under the warm dirt of Arizona in the summertime, to discard the little girl forever.

     Wayne was not like her. He still moved about the earth as he pleased. When he had made it back to the sliding doors, he kicked off his boots and walked through his small house. Inside, the heat was almost intolerable. Even when the swamp cooler was working, it never seemed to cool Wayne, or his walls, down. As he made his way to his shower, he peeled himself out of his dirty clothes. The stench of dry sweat hung heavy around Wayne’s flannel shirt, the threadbare jeans. Once in the shower, Wayne’s tightened muscles began to relax. He let his head hang under the showerhead for a while, rinsing out as much of the dirt, sweat, blood and dandruff as could be expected without the aid of shampoo, which Wayne hadn‘t bothered to buy in weeks.

     As the hot water ran over him, Wayne thought about what he would say if the cops came later in the day, what story he should rehearse.  He could play dumb and pretend that he didn’t know about the missing girl from his own neighborhood. That he hadn’t been outside, read a newspaper, or turned on a television since Thursday night, when she was still safe and tucked into her frilly, lace comforter. That he’d been sick, barricaded in the bathroom for the better part of the week. They wouldn’t buy it, he knew. Maybe he should act disinterested. Like this shit happens every day. My kid brother was kidnapped in the sixties, he’d lie, but nobody made a big old carnival about those things back then.

     But Rosie was a little girl, Pilsky’s little princess. Being too insensitive regarding her case would not be smart. Wayne should pretend that he was one of those assholes who had taken it upon himself to find her, by walking through every empty field in the city and scouring it for clues. But, he knew that there was even greater risk in seeming too eager, too willing to help. He’d just have to play it by ear.

     After his shower, Wayne whistled his favorite song, a classic Neil Young tune about a cinnamon girl, as he strolled into the kitchen, ready to continue with the rituals that comprised his daily routine. He fried two eggs, started a pot of coffee, and opened up the newspaper from the day before. She grinned at him from the front of the local section. Even Wayne, who had never had children of his own, and had himself been out of school for some forty years, could tell that it was her class picture. Her auburn hair was intricately curled and pinned. Obviously the result of her mother’s loving labor. Wayne imagined the young mother towering over the living version of little Rosie Carpenter, curling iron in one hand, can of hairspray in the other. A routine of their own, he imagined.

     The headline was desperate, in bold letters. Futile. By the time they had printed it, she was already gone, just sitting in a pile in Wayne’s bedroom. Her violet sundress balled up in the corner next to her. Her plastic jewelry and barrettes tossed haphazardly on the carpet. He shook his head as he considered all the ink that had been wasted on her behalf. He read the article. It was really the least he could do, Wayne felt.  They didn‘t say anything Wayne hadn’t anticipated. Pleas from family, friends and estranged relatives who, in all likelihood, already knew in their hearts, without much doubt, that Rosie was already decaying in some dumpster, in some neighboring town. Still, they spoke their piece and hoped aloud for her safe return. Wayne expected nothing less−and nothing more− from them.

     Wayne hadn’t been a stranger to the Carpenter family. Every Halloween, Rosie would stand expectantly at his front door, as a bouncy, yellow bumblebee or a smiling little princess, a plastic bag, already full of candy, wide open in her arms. Wayne would smile and throw handfuls of candy into the bag as he watched her mother, tall and slender, still in her work outfit. Her black slacks and smart blazer contrasted sharply with her bright blue running shoes. She stood further back on the lawn, talking to other mothers of trick-or-treaters. Rosie would yell her thank you and run back to her chaperone. Wayne wouldn’t retreat back into his house until Rosie and her mother were out of sight.

     Many times, Wayne had watched Rosie and the other neighborhood children playing tag, kickball, or hide and seek from his lawn chair on the patio. He was contemptuous of their energy, of how carefree they were. Nothing they did or said could possibly matter in any significant way, to anyone. Wayne did not understand how they could manage to inspire the unconditional love of the adults waiting for them back inside their houses when he had failed to do this even once within the span of his sixty-three years.

     After Wayne had finished the article, closed the paper, and eaten his greasy breakfast, he stretched himself out on his couch for a nap. Before drifting off to sleep, he thought about what he would do once he woke up, with his brand new day. A trip to Home Depot would be necessary, of course, for some gardening equipment. Definitely a stop at the Vista Verde Nursery, Wayne’s favorite, for something living to hide what he had made dead. Azaleas could work, but Wayne was tired of them. He longed for sunflowers, but he knew they would call too much attention to themselves. Bougainvillea would be best to swallow her up. Fast-growing. Expansive. Hot pink like her tiny barrettes.

 

     Hours later, Wayne returned home with a truck full of the magenta-flowering plants. Driving down his street, he felt like he was presenting an immaculate float at the Rose Parade. When he had parked on his cracked-cement driveway, he jumped out of the white pickup and began the unloading. As he threw down a large bag of planting soil, Wayne caught a glimpse of his neighbor,

     Brian Freeman, approaching from the street. He had his daughter Lizzie in tow. Around the same age as Rosie, Wayne could see.

     Her hair was pulled up into pigtails that swung to and fro on either side of her head as she skipped toward him. Wayne turned toward the father-daughter pair and crossed his arms in front of his chest.

     “Hello, Wayne.” Brian nodded.

     Wayne stared at the stack of brightly colored paper in Brian’s clenched fist. More of those god damned fliers.

     “These flowers are beautiful,” Brian smiled, “I’ve seen them before, but I don’t know what they’re called. What are they?”
Wayne turned back to the truck and pulled down another bag of soil.

     “Bougainvillea.” Wayne answered.

     Brain shifted his weight and cleared his throat.

     “I suppose you’ve already heard about Rosie.”

     “Rosie? Am I supposed to know who that is?” Wayne asked, pulling up the corner of his gray t-shirt to wipe the sweat from his forehead.

     The wrinkle lines on Brian’s forehead deepened as he frowned at Wayne.

     “She’s a little girl that lives in this neighborhood. In that house.” Brian pointed at the house directly in front of Wayne’s, on the other side of the street. “You’ve probably seen her around.”

     Wayne nodded. “I’ve seen a lot of kids running around this neighborhood. Making a racket. Tearin’ up my garden sometimes, too.” Wayne shot a look of disgust down at this new little girl.

     “Yeah… well, you see, Wayne, she’s been kidnapped. Nobody’s seen her in two days. I was just letting you know. Just in case you saw or heard anything notable that night.”

     Wayne nodded and turned back to the truck bed without another word.

     Brian led himself and his daughter back onto the street. They had been out now for over two hours. Sweat covered his entire body like a sticky layer of Saran Wrap. His blue t-shirt was soaked through. It clung to random patches of his chest and back. Brian hadn’t thought to put on sunscreen or to take a bottle of water with them on their three hour suburban trek.  They were paying for it. All the exposed areas of Brian’s skin were red and hot to the touch. He could already feel the damaged cells peeling away from him. Luckily, Brian had worn a hat and was able to give it to Lizzie to wear when the intensity of the sun became evident. Her nose and cheeks were rosier than usual, but Brian didn’t think it was a bad enough burn to end in a peel. Once Lizzie had started complaining about the heat, Brian began to regret taking her along. He knew his wife would not be happy at the sight of her sunburned daughter. Feeling guilty, Brian promised to walk Lizzie to the community pool, just a few streets away from their own.

     As they walked through their familiar neighborhood, Brian looked at each house they passed. They all had the same basic design. Two stories, two car garage, a symmetrical lawn. Some of the neighbors kept better yards than others. Jerry Coller, whose wife had left him a few months before, had done a pretty terrible job of keeping up with the landscaping. The grass was yellow and overgrown. The hose had been strewn across the driveway all week.  Most of the patios were empty, because all of the neighbors were gathered in small groups at random places in the street. Huddling together like opposing football teams planning their next play. As he passed them, the entire group would fall silent and turn toward him. Smiling or nodding in approval when taking note of the fliers Brian had obviously been distributing. They were doing their part. He sure as hell better be doing his. Brian noticed their sad smiles as they shifted their focus from him to his daughter. They had been so used to seeing the two girls together; Lizzie couldn’t help but remind her neighbors of the girl who was so much like her, but with so much worse luck.

     Brian knew there really was no hope for Rosie. He had known from the moment her heard she was missing that she hadn’t a chance. Margaret Carpenter had come over herself to let them know. She had remained composed as she told Brian about waking up, feeling that something was wrong, going up to her daughter’s bedroom and finding it empty. Lizzie and Rosie had been playmates, she wanted Brian to take extra care in protecting his own daughter until they had this thing all cleared up. Brian had placed his hand on her shoulder, looked knowingly into her swollen eyes and offered his sympathies. Margaret didn’t want anything to do with those, though. She shrugged his arm away from her, smiled awkwardly and said she’d appreciate any help he could offer in getting Rosie home as soon as possible. She had a science project to finish, a dance recital next Saturday. Brian nodded and stared dumbfounded as she walked away from his front door.  Brian knew it was hopeless. She must have known it, too.

     Brian prayed every night that they would find her. The past two mornings he had woken up two hours earlier than usual so he could post fliers before work. He had attended the community meeting and sent a care package to Margaret. Brian didn’t do these things because he thought they could find or save Rosie. He did them because he felt obligated to. Just like everyone else with a heartbeat and a human soul felt obligated to help. Brian helped because he had a daughter of his own, and he knew that if it had been her who had been kidnapped, he would be doing the same to find her. Because there was really nothing else that could be done.

     Brian wanted to be optimistic, but how could he really maintain much hope for the safe return of a missing little girl? No matter how much Brian longed to see Rosie wander back down Lindora Avenue smiling and unharmed, swinging her jump rope at her side, it was just not something he could envision happening in the world he had come to know.

     When Lizzie looked up at Brian and asked him where her friend Rosie had gone, and if she would be okay, he hesitated to answer. How would he tell his daughter that her friend was gone, that she would never see her again? He looked away from her face and squinted into the sun, as if it could give him the right answer.

     “Nobody knows where Rosie is. We all hope she’s okay.”

     “Well, are the police gonna find her?” Lizzie whined.

     “I don’t know, Lizzie. They might.”

     “Will what happened to Rosie happen to me?” She asked as though being kidnapped were a normal childhood experience. Like losing a tooth. Spraining an ankle. Falling off of your bike.

     “No.” Brian answered quickly, inadvertently tightening his grip on her hand. “Never.”

     Once they had arrived at the pool, Lizzie ran straight into the water, forgetting in her excitement to take off her sandals. Brian sat on the grass and watched the children of his town play and splash in the sunlight. Small kids, big kids, chubby kids, skinny kids of all different colors and shapes. All smiling. Happy. Unaware that every day, one of them, somewhere in the world, was snatched away from their families. Tortured, beaten, raped, killed. They had all heard about Rosie, sure. But right now, playing in the shallow end of the sparkling, blue pool, they didn’t think about her.

     Brian was glad.

     He watched as his own daughter, the person he loved more than any other in the entire universe, climbed out of the water and walked, dripping, to the diving board. Her baby-toothed smile white and wide. She looked through all the parents, sitting on the same grassy hill as Brian. When she caught sight of him, she waved big and proud. She ran forward, and sprang herself from the board high into the air. Her body appeared just as a silhouette in the moment it imposed itself in front of the sun. Her arms up above her head, each finger extended into a tiny exclamation point that insisted that she was alive.

     Back on Lindora Avenue, Margaret Carpenter washed the dishes that had been piling up since Rosie had vanished. She smiled mutely as she scrubbed away at the dried macaroni and cheese which had been Rosie’s last meal at home. It had adhered itself to the plastic plate and no matter how much dish soap Margaret poured on top of the plate and regardless of how fast or hard she scrubbed, she could not get it to lift. Calmly, she walked over to the trash can, and dropped the plate in with all the sappy condolence cards.

     Margaret wasn’t ungrateful for the concern and support of her neighbors and friends, but she did not find such displays necessary. She did not appreciate their fatalistic attitudes, their eagerness to dismiss Rosie from the earth. Especially since Margaret knew perfectly well that her daughter was just fine. She would be returning safely any moment, any hour, any day now.

     It was just a matter of time. Margaret knew.

     She, of course, hadn’t been so cheerful that first morning. When she walked upstairs, into her daughters’ bedroom and found it without her. The bed empty. The lamp from the nightstand broken on the floor. Within a few hours, though, after she had swallowed a cup of chamomile or two, Margaret began to think more positively.

     Of course her daughter was fine. Rosie was the most energetic child Margaret had ever known. So patient, too. Margaret could already envision their reunion. As the kidnapper returned Rosie to her, they would comment on her good manners and lively disposition. Thank her for raising such a beautiful and well-behaved child.

     “It was a pleasure spending this short time with her,” the kidnapper would smile. “Let me know when she has another dance recital.”

     “Thank you! Oh yes, isn’t she wonderful?” Margaret would beam, “Thank you for bringing her back to me. Thank you for bringing her home.”

     Margaret walked over to the front room and stared out from the window. Across the street, she could see her neighbor Wayne, over his fence, working in his backyard. On his hands and knees, he labored in the soil. Rooting the most beautiful plants. She recognized them. When she was a little girl, Margaret’s mother had spent many hours tending the bougainvillea that stretched over the fence in their own backyard. Margaret couldn’t help but smile at remembering hot summer days in southern California spent helping her mother with the yard work. After they had finished for the day, they would lay together underneath the newly trimmed plants and stare up at the clear sky, through the magenta flowers.

     Rosie would love the bougainvillea, Margaret knew.  Margaret began to cry as she thought about how wonderful life would be once Rosie returned home. When they could stand in front of this window together. When Margaret could watch as both the bougainvillea and her little girl grew and bloomed together, thriving vibrantly on Earth.

Rebecca K. O’Connor

Homecoming

 

     “The flutter of blue pigeon’s wings, Under a river bridge, Hunting a clean dry arch, A corner for a sleep—, This flutters here in a woman’s hand.”

– Carl Sandburg

     On the year anniversary of Nathaniel’s death, I opened the door to the loft and set his pigeons free. The old pigeons bustled out the door, springing into the air without hesitation, perhaps without thought, a few of their progeny following in trust, others lurking at the doorway peering into the unknown. I propped the door open and stood watching.

     This shed of cooing conversation and whipping wings held a change of guard, a generation come and gone. I had done little more than feed them and give them fresh water, but the mechanisms of life in the loft ground on even without their pigeoner. Things had evolved in here, while outside my moments remained so raw that Nathaniel could have died yesterday, the cordless telephone still slick and fever warm with terrible conversations.

     There were thirty-one birds in the loft; a dozen were young birds that had never tested their powerful wings against the breadth of the sky. There were six that had died of mysteries, perhaps old age and two others by the taloned reach of a starving young Cooper’s hawk, fishing desperately for morsels. In the failing feast that heralds the end of summer, the pressed predator could do little more than jam her foot between the bars of a tempting storehouse, withdrawing feathers, skin and blood, little more than a taste, a wish. I found the hawk dead in the yard, thin-keeled and stiff-legged. I buried her with the two pigeons that had been destroyed by her unsated hunger, uncertain which or who should claim the moment as their tragedy.

 

     Shooing the shy dawdlers out the door, I entered the loft to top off their food and give them fresh water. I could have withheld their meal yesterday, drawn the experienced birds back in with the taut line of their hunger, but I wanted them to make up their own minds. I imagined the whirl of grey, white and brown wings spiraling upward, flashing out like sparks from the chimney, blown out and away for good. The idea that the pigeons could leave was potent and hopeful. Still, I raked the gravel, pulling piles of droppings out from under perches and into the well-fertilized flowerbeds edging the building, tidying up for their return.

     The loft clean and prepped, buttoned up and mostly safe from predators, I opened the landing platform. Testing the bobs to see if they would give way under the weight of a pigeon, free of rust and resistance, I shoved my hand through the one-way entry. The metal curtain pushed in and plinked back against the frame of the platform, a muffled wind chime, a promise of a feather-evoked breeze.

 

     He had only been gone two hours when the phone rang that afternoon. Who would have expected that crushing news could come so swiftly and to a person so angry? Even when the steady contralto asked to speak with Mrs. Joyner, my anger didn’t falter. No one referred to me as a married woman. Everyone who still spoke with me knew that Nathaniel and I were barely married, despite the four year mark of our vows. And even though I recognized the clipped and careful speech of authority, could visualize the uniform that had so often arrived on my doorstep, a harbinger of bad times, I clung to my rage.

He had done it. I had hit him first, but my nose had just stopped bleeding. I was sure he had broken it. I was certain I was going to press charges this time, not because he had struck me, not even because the pudgy brunette with the huge eyes who had shown up at the door had insisted he was divorcing me to marry her.

     I had thrown a potted lily at her, called her a cow and an idiot to think she was the first. I had screamed at her with all the sound I could draw from the depths of my gut, yelling to get off of my property, that she would never have him even if he left me. This scene, the neighbors darting quick looks between blinds, the dogs next door howling along would have been enough to rectify my honor if it hadn’t been for Nathaniel’s solemn whisper to the woman.

     “I told you she was unstable, darling. Why did you come?”

     I had halted. The game had changed and I didn’t know how to play.

     “Get out of here before she does something stupid, Ann. Let me take care of it,” he said. “Just a little bit longer.”  The woman had fled and I had turned on Nathaniel, feral and spitting, my claws and words sharp.

     It doesn’t make a difference what I said. I always knew what to say to push enough to make him push back. He had taught me well. He had never been faithful. He had never been kind. There was only passion and pain and the extremes of our relationship bound us tight and locked us in. I had always thought I would get out someday. I never thought it would be too much for him first, but now I wonder. Maybe he drank just enough tequila so that he wouldn’t tense and curl tight, protecting his fragile parts as the motorcycle flew over the guardrail and plunged away from the mountain, racing for the earth.

 

     The pigeons expanded and contracted like a thought, their wings smacking together, feathers singing as they traced the boundaries of the property from the air. They were dropping their altitude, drifting like dislodged maple leaves. I had hated the loft, the hours Nathaniel spent smoking pot and daydreaming over birds. Now standing beneath them, imagining their escape, I had to admit they were fantastical in flight, a means of extending yourself above and then reeling your senses back in. I wished I was high.

     Young birds had broken away, panting and perched in the pines, too overwhelmed to keep up, but following the progress of the falling flock with bobbing heads. It was them I found myself watching now. Their eyes were wide with disbelief, a lifetime of experiences blasted through tiny brains in one explosion of flight. Their parents were too fast and strong to catch up to and for the first time in their lives they were alone and unsteady. Yet I didn’t think to be afraid for them until we all startled under the shadow of a red-tailed hawk.

     The adults plummeted, diving for safety and rushing though bobs into their cloistered loft, but the young birds had never ventured in and out. They had yet to learn that there was a way back in. They scattered, some in desperation, some for cover, and one in confusion. The juveniles heading for the horizon were never coming back and the one sitting on the rooftop had tempted fate.

     The hawk, in a twist of red and the faint percussion of airy bodies struck, carrying the pigeon in silence up into a pine. On a sturdy branch, she settled in just moments and a gentle shower of feathers began to rain down on the yard as I caught my breath.

     “I’m sorry,” I said, my eyes tracing the spinning fall of a grey tinged primary, but I felt no guilt.

     I counted five pigeons still out and visible. Letting a few adults back out to hopefully lead them back in, I knew I would spend the rest of my afternoon waiting and watching, but that there was no guarantee.

     I made myself a pot of coffee. I had given up booze when Nathaniel died and I had never like drugs. I had thought I should begin new, do better, honor his memory, but the best I could do was to stop drinking. Most nights I worked at Johnny Russo’s and imagined the spices I could add to the bland sauces if I owned the joint, coaxed the chefs into making something different for regulars. Mostly I worked, smiled and ignored the sad “isn’t she the one?” looks, came home to read another novel and started over again. Nathaniel had hated that I read classics and accused me of making him look like an idiot with my “fancy” words. He had said it was ridiculous to think I would own a restaurant. I had wanted things once, but I now I wasn’t so sure.

     “Love is enough reason, Gram,” I said, certain that no seventeen year-old had ever needed more of a reason and that no adult had ever fully understood. I was turning eighteen in two days and I was going to California.

     “If you leave with that man, don’t come back,” she said. “After all that I’ve done.” She added this as afterthought and I thought our conversation couldn’t be more scripted. How many times had this exact exchange flown across two generations? I imagined I was in a poorly written play.

     “I didn’t ask her to leave me with you. I would have asked you to love me though, but there was never any hope of that, was there?” I said. I didn’t believe this, but was certain it was my line.

     “Can’t you see?” she asked.

     That he was five years older? That he had me crawling on my knees for his approval. That he was dangerous and I was in danger. Yes, I saw this. I rolled the suitcase down the hall and didn’t flinch when she slammed her bedroom door.

 

     Giving the phone a considering look, I imagined calling my grandmother to tell her that Nathaniel was dead, that I was coming home. This was something had I imagined often in the last six months, but with five silent years past, it seemed pointless. I had left my friends, my gram, shut everyone out. Every new relationship had been sabotaged by the poisonous one that had my full attention through what had passed of my adult life. Occasionally some Samaritan tried to “save me” and suffered for their kindness. I had been too busy fighting and making up, nursing my pride and my desire to be any good to anyone else. Now I missed that, damn him.

     I poured myself a cup of coffee, watching the five pigeons on the roof of the loft. A young bird considered the path of an older hen, perhaps its mother, putting herself away. Following, the bird with the thin body and wobbling wing beat, found the platform from which she had disappeared. It poked its head through the bobs, withdrew and then plunged back to the safety of home. I nodded in approval.

 

     Of the twelve first-time pigeons I had released only six made it back inside their first trip, a week later I was down to four and had lost two of the more experienced birds. I never saw another one caught, but the red-tailed hawk that lived in the neighborhood began to make an appearance whenever I walked into the yard. She positioned herself in the tallest pine above my loft and waited for me to let out breakfast. I didn’t think red-tailed hawks were known for their bird hunting prowess. I thought they consumed clumsy earthbound creatures like rabbits and squirrels, but she seemed to be making a fine living on my flock. I started calling her “The Red Queen”, my admiration for her equal to my irritation even as I refused to lock my pigeons in.

     I wasn’t giving up, not until there were no pigeons to fly. I was addicted to the rush of wings beating in the froth of early light. They got stronger, spiraled higher, whipped their wings faster every day. And I needed them to fly. Perhaps this was cruel.
Would Nathaniel have locked his pigeons in had the Red Queen arrived and begun the methodical thinning of his flock? I doubted it. I remember the loss of very few pigeons. How had he kept them safe?  I shuddered and imagined him drowning cats and shooting hawks.

     In two months the flock leveled out at twelve birds that refused to be caught and I felt a little sorry for the Red Queen. She would just have to wait for the next batch of inexperienced pigeons to shape and she wouldn’t have to wait long. They had begun courting. Then one pair laid eggs that in 17 days hatched into boneless naked impossibilities, instead of pigeons. Yet from the soft clay of a squab, they sharped and hardened into birds in a matter of weeks. They were just beginning to peer over the edge of their nest ledge when the black pigeon came back with my flock.

     My racers were mottled, grizzled, blue bar and white. They looked like mutts because they were. Nathaniel was only as serious about his pigeons as he could be about anything else in his life. He didn’t breed to compete or to show. He simply possessed.

This black pigeon, tall with her regal head and sleek lines was a pedigree. Everything about her looked carefully planned, except for perhaps her destination. Someone around here had a loft. I imagined it had concrete floors and running water, each bird with a carefully notated record, hers matching the green numbered band on her right leg. She wasn’t mine and she didn’t belong behind the rotting wood of my unkempt loft, but I wanted her.

     I let my pigeons back out, hoping she would follow them back in. Instead, a brown and white pigeon, with a short tail and bulging crop met her on the roof. He paced, pushed his chest in her direction, spun and sang. She sidled away, but not too far, looking away but leaning toward him. I understood then, that he had somehow found her, luring her down from the carefree and thoughtless heavens and I didn’t want to watch anymore.

 

     “You’ll come then,” he asked.

     I hadn’t answered, just smiled and took another sip of my Bacardi Breezer. He knew the answer. I toyed with the glass rose between my fingertips, the one he had impulsively plucked from the plastic cup next to the register at the gas station, adding it to the Doritos, six packs and the cigarettes. He had handed it to me with a flourish, down on one knee saying, “My lady.” I knew it was a cheap classless gift, but sometimes presentation was everything. The lady behind the counter had sighed.

     “How’s that alcopop?” He raised an eyebrow at me and smirked. “I can’t wait until you’re old enough to drink the real stuff with me.” I rolled my eyes at him. Then he asked, “It really doesn’t bother you that I’m so much older?”

     “Please,” I said. How many times had we had this conversation? Had he never met an eighteen year-old boy? I had a lot more to say to a twenty-three year old man. He and I could stay up all night talking about our dreams for ourselves, for each other, for the world. He looked younger with the olive skin and etched features of model flaunting a Rolex or maybe standing in front of a luxury car. And I looked older with my a-line blonde bob and long legs. We looked like we were the same age. We looked like we belonged together and it felt wrong when we weren’t. When he was forty and I was thirty-five, how much difference would it really make? We had the rest of lives to close that tiny gap of five years. And I couldn’t wait.

     “As you wish,” he said, again with a flourish of his hand and a bow of his dark head.

     I rolled my eyes again, but I didn’t mean it.

 

     When the black pigeon began to sit on a nest, keeping the longer night shift and leaving afternoons to the male, I began wonder who she really was, what breed and from where. Another pigeon had stopped at my loft, tall and exotic like the black only bronze and capped with white. She wasn’t drawn in and she didn’t stay long. With the image of them both though, I was able to decipher that they were Persian high flyers and that someone nearby must have a flock. Who?

     Did he spend solitary mornings, warming his hands with his breath as he watched his birds fly? Maybe they were his father’s birds and he flew them to remember. Could it be that he was wondering after the black hen? Maybe he shot the hawk he thought had eaten her. Beneath the morning flights I imagined my counterpart. I changed the gender or the age or the circumstance but always envisioning the pigeoner’s neck craned toward the sky.

     Then one week at the feed store, a 50 pound bag of pigeon seed balanced on my shoulder, I started to ask Mr. Sampson, the owner, about my Persian high flyer. I said, “I was wondering,” but stopped. The cracking and rusty sound of my own voice startled me. In my imaginings the other pigeoners and I had begun to talk flock in the mornings, but in reality my voice had been untested that day.

     The old man nodded, motioned for me to sling the bag on the counter and adjusted his glasses. His expression was kind. Sampson had been in this town for fifty years, his wife gone for five. His home was overrun with grandchildren, but he knew grief and was expecting it from me.

     “My husband’s pigeons.” I pronounced the words carefully, expecting a jolt in my chest or a change of expression from Mr. Sampson, but neither happened. “They brought home a friend.”

     He nodded his head like he approved of this discussion. “A roller?” he asked. I knew he asked this because rollers so often lost their way, but I didn’t know why I knew this. Something Nathaniel might have said.

     “A Persian high flyer,” I said. “Persian high flyer, same thing. Do you know who has a flock around here?”

     “No,” he said. “Beautiful birds.” Then he noticed my disappointment. “You’ve got some thief blood in your flock then. Maybe you can catch a couple more.”

     “Thief blood?”

     “Never heard of Spanish thief pouters? Casanova of the pigeon breeds. They are selected for their ability to romance and draw a female in. It’s sport with that breed to capture the hens from another’s loft. All thief pouters can do it, but the originals come from Spain.”

     “He tricked her?”

     “Well, she came willingly, but she wouldn’t have come if he hadn’t of called and if he hadn’t have been good at it. He’ll likely bring you another or his sons will.”

     “I see,” I replied and absently paid for my feed.

     I had been home for over an hour before the flashing light on the answering machine caught my attention. I held my finger over the playback button and then pulled back. I found the handset and scrolled for the last caller. I recognized my childhood phone number.

     Far in the back of the refrigerator there was a bottle of Newcastle and on top a bottle of tequila forgotten behind cereal boxes and bags of tortilla chips. It took some time to find the bottle opener buried deep beneath wooden spoons, tongs and wire whisks. I popped off the cap, poured myself a shot and pushed play.

     There was a pause, my grandmother clearing her throat and then the short message. She said simply, “Come home.”

     I swallowed the tequila and nodded, trying to convince myself, but I didn’t think I could.

 

     The next morning, I watched my thieving pigeons take flight, apologizing for their bad blood and rough upbringing. Then just as they were winking out of sight, I saw a flashing of bronze and black wings crackling through my flock like fool’s gold.

 

     Before it was light the following day, I slipped into the loft and grabbed the black hen. Her chicks, both young hens, were now feeding themselves. They were upright and feathered, and consumed the nest space. The hen was sitting on a perch off to the side. She didn’t grunt or coo when I snatched her from her roost and she barely struggled against my palms. I tucked her into a cardboard box and set it on the passenger seat of my car.

     When the dawn began to break, I let my pigeons out at the usual time and then jumped in my Camry, which was already running. I crawled the car through sleeping neighborhoods, grinding gears and peering through the windshield past the trees. Twice I caught glimpses of pigeon’s wings, but both times they were other flocks, a flock of racers another of rollers. I found this heartening and unsettling. How many pigeoners were staring into the morning sky?

     I kept driving a grid and hoping for the best, wondering if I would have to make this drive for weeks before I pinpointed the swirl of the Persian loft barreling in for their breakfast.

     I had never really thought about how many houses, how many people even in our small neighborhood. My world had been not much bigger than my street and the drive to my job. This old neighborhood, some houses nearly a hundred years-old, each unique, a thousand hidden lives all different from mine. Who was this man with Persian pigeons? Was he very old? Maybe widowed like me? Were there other pigeons seduced into his loft as well, leaving him to ponder a world much bigger than and not nearly as inclusive as he imagined? What if he were looking for me? How would he find me?

     I realized that if I were him, I would get up in the hills adjacent to our neighborhood, a quick drive, but high enough to glimpse a larger vision. So not far from where Nathaniel’s bike skipped over the guardrail, I parked the car and scanned the air above the pines, juniper and chimneys.

     And then I spotted them.

     It wasn’t a big flock, maybe twenty and they were gathering like an unorganized storm over a grey house with a tile roof. The colors of the birds wings were so uniform, their movements so precise, I was certain, my pulse quickening as I headed in their direction.

     It wasn’t a grand house, kept up better than mine, but not fancy. It looked like it belonged to someone conscientious and proud. I pulled over two houses down and saw that there were three people in the driveway. I had imagined one person. I had wrestled out the beginnings of a one-on-one conversation in my mind, but to me this was a crowd. I left the engine on and felt my face flush.

     Then the man with a coffee can that likely carried a scoop of seeds, shook out a promise and began to beckon in the birds. He stepped through a gate to the back and left a woman in a flowing wrap and a little girl in a sunflower yellow dress in the driveway. The little girl danced a circle around her mother, pointing at the sky and her mother lifted her so she could point higher.

     The birds spiraled down into the loft behind the house, their color and heavy bodies making them obvious kin to the bird tucked in the box beside me. I reached for the keys to turn off the ignition and then let my hand drop. I had made up my mind. I pulled away from the curb, driving us back home.

Kate Anger

Digging

 

     Oliver Scott stood across from the woman who nine years earlier he had vowed to love forever.

     “Shoes, please,” Charlotte said, indicating that he should remove his.

     He looked down at his worn-out tennis shoes. “Maybe I’ll just wait in the car.”

     “And let our son think that I’m making you feel unwelcome?” she said, stepping aside to allow for his entrance. “You are welcome, welcome, welcome. We need to have at least ten minutes household-transition time.”

     That was a phrase she’d picked up from the onsite counselor they had seen during their lunch hour. They worked at the same behemoth software company, Infinity Mapping. Oliver was a programmer. Charlotte was hired (as a newly graduated computer science major from Wisconsin) to write how-to manuals. After they married, she got a column: “Map Rap” that ran in the company magazine. Oliver noted that this was when her hair got blonder and her makeup more precise. She started power walking. Now she was lean. Too lean, Oliver thought, making her sharp around the edges.

     “I already fed Lionel some lunch,” Charlotte said, nodding in the direction of their son.

     Oliver took his time undoing his shoelaces hoping that Charlotte would leave, but she stood there, sentry to the house they’d bought together, gatekeeper to his child. For this reason, and this reason only, he faked a sheepish smile. “I’m not wearing any socks.  Sure you want me to take them off?” Charlotte had a thing for socks after their son supposedly got a teensy case of athlete’s foot at Oliver’s place.

     Oliver followed her into the kitchen where she set the timer on the stove for exactly nine minutes.  She proceeded to clean up the lunch dishes; on the counter sat two mostly-eaten bowls of toxic orange macaroni and cheese. Oliver stared at the congealed mass. Didn’t she know she was killing herself, or worse, their son?

     “You can get that without all the preservatives,” he said.

     “I can get it, but Lionel won’t eat it,” she said.

     “He eats it at my place.”

     “He doesn’t eat it.  He moves it around on the plate. Then he comes home and eats a huge bowl of cereal.” Charlotte scraped the contents of both bowls into the sink.

     Was this true? Oliver wondered. Was Lionel just pretending to like whole-wheat macaroni to please him? Or was Charlotte a spiteful bitch, hell-bent on stripping their son of any nutritionally sound foods? Oliver would find out: “Lionel! Lionel, can you come in here?”

     “You probably haven’t exercised in like what? Two years? But you’re gonna go after my pasta?” Charlotte said.

     “For your information, I’ve started biking.” This was absolutely not true, but it rushed through Oliver as just as effortlessly as if it was. Maybe he would take up biking. Maybe the lie would give rise to truth.

     “What kind of bike, Oliver?”

     God, she knew him well. He was saved from composing an answer by Lionel’s entrance. At seven, their son was small for his age, just as Oliver had been. Charlotte would probably have said that Lionel was in need of a haircut, but Oliver loved his over-long locks, the way they hooded his large brown eyes. Under the eyes and across the nose, Lionel had a smattering of freckles. He also had big front teeth he hadn’t grown into yet. That’s my boy, thought Oliver. Oliver loved Lionel so much that sometimes he had the urge to squeeze and squeeze him. He was just a little afraid he would squeeze Lionel so hard that Lionel’s internal organs might get pushed out of their intended spots and land somewhere new. His spleen in his knee, his stomach up in his neck. When Lionel was a baby, Oliver had a similar irrational fear of taking a real bite out of him. He loved him that much.

     “Hey, buddy,” Oliver said. “Your mom here seems to think that you don’t like the macaroni I fix for you. The healthier kind.”

     “It’s okay,” said Lionel.

     “Your dad wants you to be honest with him, Ly. Or else he wouldn’t have asked. Right, Oliver?” Charlotte turned to Oliver and held up the empty blue and orange box. “You want to buy Lionel this kind of macaroni if that’s what he prefers, right?”

     “Uh…right,” Oliver said not quite understanding her plan of attack.

     “Okay, I like that kind,” Lionel said, pointing to the box in his mother’s hand.

     “Anything else?” she prompted. “The hummus? Do you want to tell your dad about the hummus?”

     “I don’t like it,” Lionel said to his dad. “And could you get different cereal at the regular store ‘cause I’m collecting the bobble-heads.”

     “Sure,” Oliver said with resignation. “We’ll go to the store now, just grab your stuff.” Lionel trudged off in the direction of the bedrooms.

     “So, did you get in touch with a realtor?” asked Charlotte.

     “Looking,” Oliver said.

     “You should check out those condos off Parkland. Prices have really dropped and they’re less than half-mile from here. It’d make it a lot easier on Lionel if you lived close by.”

     “How about here?” he said, hating himself even as he said it.

     Charlotte stopped wiping the toaster. “Do you have amnesia about our marriage? You weren’t any happier than I was.”

     “I never wanted a divorce though.”

     “Then you shouldn’t have cheated on me.”

     This was true.  He had slept with Stacy from accounting on one occasion. She had reminded him of the old Charlotte: wholesome and pasty-white, her body slightly Rubenesque. They’d had sex on her double bed while a Winnie-the-Pooh stuffed animal watched from the headboard.  Oliver had gotten a migraine headache right afterward. Charlotte put cold washcloths on his head that very evening; even drove him to Urgent Care for an injection of Imitrex. He regretted the infidelity, yes, but he regretted the confession even more. There was no point to it, no catharsis for either of them. He should have lived with his guilt, made peace with its gnawing presence.

     “I still wanted to figure it out together,” he said.

     “What’s to figure out? You wake up, you take a deep breath, and you live. Some days are better than others. It’s not that complicated.”

     And then she smiled, a sad little smile that said “I-know-you-don’t-have-a-bike-and-I-feel sorry-for-your-compulsion-to-lie.”

     The timer on the stove buzzed. Transitional time was over. Oliver felt the loss of those nine minutes. A portion of his life delineated and cut. Of course it was complicated. There were layers and layers she didn’t seem to see.

     “Wake, breathe, live,” Oliver said.

     “That’s right,” she said, not taking the bait.

     “And wear socks. Socks are important.”

     She stared at him. He loved her. He hated her. He wished she would slug him. He wanted his hair pulled, his cheek shoved, his chest beaten with her hard freckled fists.

     “Goodbye, Oliver,” she said, calmly rinsing the macaroni pot in extremely hot, germ-killing water. The steam rising up around her made Oliver think of how she had looked naked coming out of the shower, naked and full of Lionel. How her body that way had made him—for brief moments—believe in God.

     Pulling away in his truck with Lionel beside him, Oliver found it hard to believe that he had ever agreed to buy a house here. The front yard was ten by sixteen feet. That wasn’t a yard. That was a suggestion of a yard. He hated this whole neighborhood: East Highland Ranch, at the base of the foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains. Long ago the area had been citrus groves, probably an actual ranch or two. Now the top of the hill was covered with a rash of custom homes on half-acre lots, some with plywood covered windows, fluorescent orange No Trespassing stickers, yards returned to hard-pack earth—the downturn opening the way for the desert to reclaim its own. Next down the hill came their division: smaller lots, but not necessarily smaller homes with pockets of houses similarly abandoned. At the bottom of the community boundary were the condos. He passed them now on the way back to Redlands, where most of the East Highland “ranchers” worked and where Oliver was currently renting..

     By the time they reached the old industrial neighborhood at the cities’ shared border, Lionel had already emptied his backpack unto the seat and was busy constructing a flying submarine. On Monday, Oliver would make an appointment to look at houses. Real houses. A boy needed a yard, something to mow, some place to plant a garden. Or maybe Oliver would move to the mountains thirty minutes away. A lot of people at work did that. Or he could move in the other direction, to the high desert..

     He and Charlotte had an agreement that until their son was eighteen, neither one would move farther away than sixty-five miles from the other. They laid a map on the dining table where they had eaten so many dinners together and Oliver drew their circle of geographic possibilities with a compass. The circle looked like an organ, a heart or lung, all the roadways their shared veins. Before Oliver lifted the sharp anchor point of the compass from the thin map, he dug it into the table just a bit. Sometimes when he stopped by the house, he took secret pleasure in touching that gouged spot.

     The pick-up’s windshield was filthy and the sun coming in made it hard to see the road. There was something up ahead. A box? Suddenly, the box moved directly in front of him. Oliver hit the brakes hard, his seatbelt locking his upper body tight, his hand flying protectively to Lionel’s chest, Legos flying into the dashboard.

     “You, okay?” Oliver whispered, stunned by the mere thought of injury.

     Lionel sat transfixed as he watched “the box” move back to the side of the road. “We almost hit that dog, Dad.”

     From the side passenger window, Oliver could see that it was a dog, not a box, a dog the color of cardboard and rather squarely built. Oliver pulled over next to the wash. The closest business was a tile manufacturing plant about an eighth of a mile up ahead. There were no houses here.  Not even much traffic.

     “I’ll just make sure he’s okay,” he told Lionel.  Oliver got out of his truck and approached the dog cautiously. He didn’t think he had hit it, but felt morally obligated to make sure.  The dog’s eyes were yellow, wide-set and wary. Oliver slowly stuck out his hand for the dog to sniff. He was a squat thing, size of a beagle, but with shorter legs.  His head looked oversized on his body, ears hanging like little pieces of curly lettuce. The dog seemed okay; end of deed. Only Oliver knew that he was supposed to do something more, knew Lionel would expect it. He should take the dog to a shelter, call a pet-rescue organization, something. He knew the wash was a dumping ground for all kinds of things. From where he stood he could see an old blue sofa and two tires in the silvery brush across the street.

     “Daddy?” Lionel called from the truck.

     Crap. Why’d he have to pull over? As a rule, Oliver was not a dog person. Maybe that was his problem. Wake, breathe, live was probably the philosophy of dog-people everywhere.

     “Can I pet him?” Lionel said, starting to get out of the truck.

     “No! Stay there.” Just then a big rig rattled by causing the spooked dog to run back out back into the street. “Hey! Here, boy! Come here!” Oliver called in the direction of the street. “Stay, Lionel! Stay!” he hollered towards the pick-up. The yelling and name-calling seemed to paralyze the dog. It froze as if trying to recall what “Here, boy!” and “Stay!” might mean. Just then a yellow Volkswagen coming down the road at a good clip caught the dog on its back end, spinning it like an ice skater.

     Miraculously, the dog limp-ran itself back to Oliver. Once at his feet, the dog turned in nervous circles, whining frantically. Oliver looked up to see Lionel framed in the back window; his boy’s mouth a frozen “O.”

     “Your dog all right?” the Volkswagen driver asked.

     “It’s not my dog,” said Oliver, but even as he said it, he knew it was a lie. Of course it was his dog. For whatever reason, it just was.

***

     “That will be three-hundred and seventy-nine dollars,” the receptionist in the Emergency animal clinic said.

     “Do you take checks?” Oliver asked.

     “Cash or credit only,” she said pointing to a large and obvious sign. “You need to give him this antibiotic twice a day for fourteen days. Here are his x-rays.” She handed him a manila envelope. “Oh, and apparently he’s got a pretty bad case of worms. They’ve de-wormed him, but you want to make sure and dispose of the feces carefully.”

     “Worms?” Lionel said.

     “Can you hold the X-rays, buddy?” Oliver asked partly to distract him. Worms. Yuck.  Oliver couldn’t help but picture a city of worms existing inside the cavity of the dog in his arms. For a moment, he wanted to toss the wounded animal to the receptionist and run, run, run. Swallowing down the sweet spit that precedes vomiting, Oliver collected himself. With one hand he managed to take out his credit card and sign the slip. Lionel used his whole body to hold open the clinic’s heavy-glass door while Oliver gently carried the dog to the truck. From behind the bench seat they found one of Lionel’s old Thomas-the-Tank-Engine towels and laid it down for the dog, getting in on either side of him like a pair of bookends. Lionel pointed to the blank line on the X-ray envelope where it said “Pet name.”

     “We’ll have to think on that,” Oliver said.

     When they got to the duplex, Oliver made a bed with an old sleeping bag, but the dog ignored it, preferring to curl inconveniently in front of the back door. Lionel sat next to the dog like a patient nurse. He colored quietly and ate the all-natural puffed-rice cereal without complaint. “We need to stay here and watch him,” he said when his dad offered to take Lionel to the grocery store.  He didn’t even want to watch Happy Feet that night, preferring to play Monopoly Jr. on the floor beside the dog.  “Waldo,” he exclaimed, seemingly out of nowhere. “We should name him ‘Waldo.’”

     By the time Oliver was ready to take Lionel home on Sunday afternoon, the dog was drinking and eating a little.

     “Can we bring Waldo to show Mom?” Lionel asked.

     “He’s still a little weak, Bud,” Oliver said.  He slid on a pair of flip-flops.

     “When he’s better?”

     “Sure,” he said in a non-committal tone.

     Oliver headed back up to East Highland, retracing their route, half-hoping to find a new “Lost Dog” sign. There was nothing of the sort. No trace that the dog had ever been here, no sign that his presence was missed. Oliver crossed Baseline and headed up into the Ranch. Turning onto Parkland Avenue, he saw the large “Condos Available” sign. The buildings were the color of sand with the ubiquitous red-tile roofs. There was a lawn that bordered the front of the place in a thirty-foot deep expanse then flowed down the middle of the complex like an inlet, broad and green and empty. What a waste. All that thirsty grass when they were in a drought condition several years running, all that lawn for people who never go outside. He continued up the hill, making a right into their division.

     Lionel threw open the front door. “Mom! We got a dog!” Oliver admired the deftnes with which his son took off his shoes in a swift heel-toe pull before running inside. “Mom!” he hollered again disappearing into the house.

     Oliver entered and carefully set his flip-flops just inside the door.

     “What’s this about a dog?” Charlotte said, coming to the door.

     “He was hit, a stray… I—we had to take him in,” Oliver said.

     “So you don’t know anything about him?” Charlotte said.

     “He’s brown,” Lionel offered.

     “He hasn’t attacked us or given us rabies so I think we’re okay,” Oliver said.

     “What’s rabies?” Lionel said.

     “You shouldn’t just bring a stray dog”—Charlotte’s voice grew softer as she turned to their son—“into a house when—” Something stopped her cold, her voice changed again, “Oh my god.  You are covered in dog hair.”

     She pulled off Lionel’s T-shirt in a single motion and marched out the front door with it. On the porch she turned the shirt right side out. In the sunlight, Oliver could see the hair. It was as if it had been purposefully applied. Charlotte shook the shirt like a starting flag, but even Oliver could see that it did little to dislodge the thick, straight strands.

     “Did you check him for ticks?” she said.

     “The dog?” Oliver said.

     Charlotte shoved the shirt under her arm and grabbed Lionel’s head with both hands. She gently moved her hands across his skull like she was reading a contour map, looking for a volcano. “Ahh!” she said nearly breathless. Then she exhaled. In her hand was a part of a sunflower seed shell. She flicked it away. “Ticks have been known to paralyze children. Kelly—in advertising sales—sent me an e-mail about it. Neurotoxins are excreted from their salivary glands.”

     “His name’s Waldo,” Lionel said. “Daddy saved him.”

     Charlotte released Lionel and went back to his shirt, pulling at the individual hairs with her slick acrylic nails. Oliver imagined all ten of them pressing into his back. He had never made love to a woman with nails like these. He wasn’t even sure he had ever been with the woman in front of him. How long does it take for all human cells to re-grow; for him and her and Lionel and even Waldo to become all new creatures?

     It was time to go. Oliver leaned towards Lionel: “Give me a kiss.”

     “A hug,” Lionel corrected, but allowed himself to be kissed anyway.

     This was the hardest thing about what Oliver had done, the daily loss of the physical presence of this boy. Oliver slipped his sandals back on. “I’ll be sure to brush the dog next time.”

     “Thanks,” Charlotte said, her eyes as green as the lawn on Parkland.

***

     A month passed. The dog slept a lot.  Maybe a paralyzing tick had bitten him.  He wasn’t very active. This was fine as far as Oliver was concerned because there was less pressure concerning their interaction. Waldo required only food, water, a walk to go to the bathroom and an occasional pat on the head. Actually, the pat seemed entirely optional.

     Lionel, on the other hand, saw Waldo in a completely different way, freely inventing an entire emotional landscape for the dog:

     “Poor Waldo was so sad. He didn’t like those bad people who threw him away. Waldo wishes he would’ve bitten them.”  Or:

     “Waldo’s happy cuz he doesn’t have to take his anti-botics anymore. Huh, Waldo?”

     Lionel could go on and on. The dog’s expression remained neutral. Lionel tried to get the dog to play catch or fetch or even go for a walk, but the creature declined every time. At first Oliver reasoned that it was because the dog was still recovering, but after four weeks, it was apparent that it just wasn’t in the dog to play.

     Lionel adjusted accordingly: “I really like it that Waldo is mellow, don’t you, Dad?” “I’m really glad Waldo doesn’t jump all over us. Cory’s dog scratches like crazy.”  “Waldo’s such a good dog, Dad. He never runs away.”

     Lionel’s flexibility gave Oliver pause. Look how this child adjusts, he thought, like water, this boy, moving around the rocks in his life with gentle acceptance. Are all children like this?

     “Ly, it’s almost time to take you home. What do you say we take the dog with us and get an ice cream at the drugstore next to Sport Time? I need to run in for some new socks.”

     “I’ll have to ask him.” Lionel whispered into the back of dog’s neck. “He says that’s fine. You might have to pick him up and put him in the truck though cuz he’s feeling a little tired.”

     In Sport Time, Oliver bought a bag of socks. Lionel got tennis balls: “Maybe Waldo likes this kind.” Then they both got ice cream at the drugstore next door. They ate their cones in the shade of the store’s overhang, their backs leaning against the scratchy stucco surface of the building.

     This was the very drugstore where Oliver and Charlotte bought the home pregnancy test kit that announced Lionel. It was a Saturday morning in May. The air was clear and the surrounding mountains begged to have their picture taken. They planned to eat cones there, but they were so excited once they had the actual kit in their hands that they got a take-home carton instead. He still remembered the taste of Charlote’s cold sweet vanilla mouth; the way he was physically unable to keep his hand from her stomach, sure he could detect the change in landscape. Recalling that now, he fought the urge to cry. That’s the thing about living in the same place for a while. You run into your own ghosts.

     “Look,” said Lionel, pointing. Each time his Blue Bubble Gum cone dripped, the dog licked up the spilled bits. “Bubble-gum’s Waldo’s favorite, Dad.”

     Oliver had to admit, it was the most animated he’d ever seen the dog.

     “Mom puts a marshmallow in the bottom of the cone before she puts the ice cream in. That way it never leaks out,” Lionel said.

     Waldo was still in the car for the Lionel drop-off. Lionel insisted that his mother meet the dog. Reluctantly, Oliver put the leash on Waldo and carried him to the porch.

     “That’s a pit bull!” were the first words out of Charlotte’s mouth. “You picked up a pit bull?”

     Oliver knew that pit bulls were vicious dogs with clamping jaws. Waldo was… well, not that. Oliver lowered him to the pavement.

     “He’s not a pit bull, he’s a mutt. The vet thought maybe he was part lab, some terrier.”

     “A pit bull is a terrier!” she said, her words clipped and furious.

     “You are such a bitch!” roared in Oliver’s head, but instead of giving voice to this clear and compelling thought, he cleared his throat and took a deep breath through his nostrils before speaking. “We’ve had him a month. The vet okayed him. He’s not a pit bull. He doesn’t have paralyzing ticks. Lionel loves him and I don’t need your permission to keep him.” He tried to leave with a flourish, but when he tugged on the leash, Waldo refused to follow.

     “He likes it here. Can he come in?” asked Lionel.

     “No!” the parents responded in unison.

     Oliver kissed his son on the top of the head and scooped up the dog. As soon as Oliver got Waldo settled into the car, he took off his socks. It was too hot for socks. Who wears fucking socks in the desert?

***

     Oliver and Lionel started taking Waldo in the car for all their short trips. Oliver even started taking the dog in the car when Lionel wasn’t there. Sometimes at stoplights he found himself resting his open palm on the dog’s back. He started getting an empty feeling in the car when he was without the dog’s companionable silence.

     Oliver found a realtor who printed him a long list of properties in his price range. He entered the property listings into his company’s residential mapping system and printed out pages and pages of starred roadways. He and Waldo drove all over, focusing on one three-mile square grid at a time. Oliver’s favorite time to look was at dusk when—in the occupied houses—the windows were illuminated. The people looked like shadow puppets, like the shadow profile of Lionel he’d had done at the Orange Show Fair, the one Charlotte had insisted on keeping. He loved that simple black cut out, how in the most elementary way it captured what was essential about the boy. A few months after they’d separated, he’d snuck that framed profile out of the house in Lionel’s backpack. Propped against his reading lamp now, it was the last thing he saw when he went to sleep.

     The realtor left several messages on his answering machine: “If you don’t look inside anything and consider putting in a bid on anything, then I can’t really help you.”

     Two months into his adoption, Waldo seemed to slow down even more. His never-hearty appetite dwindled. “Maybe he wants a new kind of food,” Lionel suggested. At the grocery store, after choosing a box of Frosted flakes (with the agreement of banana slices on top), they went to the pet food aisle and selected one can of every brand of dog food.

     When they got back to the duplex, Lionel lined up all the various, colorful cans in front of the prone dog. “I’ll see which one he sniffs. That’s the one we’ll try first,” Lionel said.  But Waldo didn’t sniff any of the cans.

     By Sunday morning, Waldo wouldn’t get up at all. Oliver called the vet’s office, but they were closed. “I’ll take him in first thing tomorrow morning,” he promised. Together, they wrapped an old Mexican blanket around Waldo for warmth and Lionel kissed the dog on the top of his head before leaving for home that afternoon.

     Oliver checked on the dog several times during the night, but in the morning, the dog was dead.

     Oliver drove to the house with the news later that morning. Lionel answered the door. “Waldo died, honey,” Oliver said.

     The boy’s face remained perfectly still but tears ran down in uneven lines, like rivers on a map. “I miss him,” he whispered.

     Charlotte came down the hall in the robe Oliver had bought her two Christmases ago.  All of the sudden, Oliver was washed in panic, his chest hurt, he couldn’t catch his breath, maybe he was going crazy… or having a heart attack. He plopped down on the tile entryway and put his face between his knees.

     “You all right?” Charlotte said.

     “Waldo died,” Lionel explained.

     “Oh,” she said, “Lionel, why don’t you go get your dad a glass of water.”

     Lionel went off towards the kitchen.

     Oliver could feel the tips of Charlotte’s nails on his shoulder, could smell her ripe pajama smell. He wanted to climb inside that robe and begin again.

     “Oliver?” She rubbed his back in small, slow circles.

     After a minute, the grip on his lungs was loosened, his heart stopped racing. He could breathe slower, more purposefully. Lionel brought him a glass of water in a cup shaped like a rocket that he drank in one gulp.

***

     Oliver left work early that same day and picked up Lionel from school.

     “Can we bury him?” Lionel asked, getting into the truck. “I think he’d like a funeral.”

     Before he’d left for work, Oliver had laid one bag of frozen peas and two blue ice containers on top of the dog to prevent immediate decay. When they got to the duplex, Lionel approached the body reverentially. He poked it gently with his index finger to confirm that Waldo was really dead. Then he poked the warm bag of peas.

     They loaded the dog—still wrapped in the Mexican blanket—into the back of the pick-up truck. Oliver pointed his truck towards the mountains and the wide, rocky creek bed that lay at their base.

     Lionel and Oliver took turns at the shovel, Lionel’s slight body struggling against its weight. Watching those small arms at work, Oliver thought about what an elemental thing burying was. How father and son had been digging these sorts of holes together since humans were walking upright. How all these tumbled boulders everywhere had once been part of an even bigger mountain, how nothing can prepare you for death but the digging. Oliver put out his hands and with great effort, Lionel handed him the shovel.