--IF YOU'RE NOT GOING TO USE THAT, YOU SHOULD GIVE IT BACK
TO ME
...Good moring. How is your week starting? Hopefully you are safe from the storm.
Where I am it's windy also. Gusts keep slamming my windows and it feels as if the glass might burst. That would be an upleasant way to die, being sliced with shards.
...Here's a story I wrote two years ago that appeared in Apocrypha Abstractions:
Facts
about the Moon
He
wanted to tell me facts about the moon.
When I didn’t have time, he wrote them down for me on sky blue
construction paper using chalk and diagramming solar systems that had once
looked familiar but now seemed bizarre, like a picture of one’s self in the
distant future when they are saggy-skinned and brown-spotted.
We
were young then, my boy and I, though it didn’t feel that way at the time. Still, now I remember once we ate bananas and
stuffed our gums with large chunks of the fruit and something got into me
because I made shrieking monkey sounds and scratched my arm pits and hopped all
over the couch dancing. My boy, my boy
he laughed so hard he almost choked to death.
When he finally caught his breath, he said, “That would have been a fun
way to go,” and I think he meant it.
Tonight
when I pulled into our development and saw the long limos and the strapless
gowned teens with their wrist corsages and spearmint smiles I wondered what he
might have looked like wearing a tux, a rash of acne on his cheek, nervous as
all hell but handsome I bet. She’d have
been blonde like Mary, sweet yet sassy, too.
And I would have liked her.
Now
I’ve got a drink in my hand and I keep studying my son’s galaxy picture. There are spindly stars, rockets and oval
planets, but the moon dominates. Luna is
a warbled jawbreaker hovering in space, yet drawn with curved edges so that it
appears to be spinning right out of its own orbit, its trapped dimension. I don’t know what any of it means. I should have asked when I had the chance.
Right
as I’m folding the paper up, I notice on the back side something he’s written
in pencil at the base, the font a nine year old’s unsteady scrawl. The lead is faint and smeared. I hold it up close enough that I can smell
the dusty wheat smell. “Facts about the
Moon,” it says. “Fact One: even when
you’re not aware of it, the moon is always there, waiting for you to look up
over your head and notice it.”
That’s
all it says.
I
get up and walk to the window, draw back one of the blinds. It’s been clear all week but now the night is
so stuffed with clouds that nothing else is visible. I stand like that, looking, waiting for the
light to break through, not worried about how long it will take, just waiting.
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