--I FEEL IT IN MY BONES
…I listened to the new
Vampire Weekend disc on the treadmill this morning. It’s quite excellent.
…I’m almost finished reading “Mr.
Peanut” by Adam Ross. What an ingenious
book.
…Here’s something I wrote the
other day:
Scriptures
The
man who came to our village only spoke English.
My father, already partially deaf, cocked his head as he listened. “Mojo,” Father said to me, “what’s he say?”
The
foreigner called himself Peterson. He
grinned a lot, his teeth clean and bright and straight, so much unlike our own,
his corn-colored hair another oddity altogether.
He
carried a thick book that had no pictures in it and he would it to different
sections, reciting aloud, trying to get us to understand the words. He became animated when he read, his tone
sharp, as if he was angry, though he remained smiling the entire time.
“God
loves you,” he said. “Loves you just the
way you are.”
When
Peterson was hungry, we fed him fried cornmeal and wild tubers that grew between
the rocks strewn against the mountainside where our homes were built on wilted
stilts. When he was bored we let him
read to us from the thick book.
He
spent a lot of time with my sister. He
liked to touch her hair while they played marbles. He tickled her ribs and armpits. He taught her a game he called Jacks which
involved a rubber ball and tiny spikes of metal. Once, when the ball bounced away from my
sister’s toss, skittering off the makeshift porch, all the way down the
mountainside, Peterson said, “Now you’ve done it,” and tickled her some more.
Our
house, like all the others, was a box put together with spit and mud, and so
Peterson took my sister outside at night to avoid us hearing. I saw them once, two naked forms gleaming
under the sad glow of moonlight.
One
morning we woke and Peterson was gone.
My sister bawled for weeks, and in the years that followed, she took
countless other suitors. Maybe she
missed Peterson too much. Perhaps he had
shown her something she couldn’t live without, something she looked for in the
men she went with.
Around
the age of eighteen, Sis’s face grew sores, berry-red blisters. They ran down her neck and back like molten
lava. Her elbows bled. She became ashen and weak and would not
eat. During summer, when the sun was our
arch enemy, her sweating became relentless and she died while whimpering
Peterson’s name.
Others
died, too, one by one. There was no
place on the hillside to bury them, so bodies were stacked in a valley below
where a flock of squawking vultures stripped the bones bare.
I’ve
been here alone, the last one left, for several months. I have no sores, no sickness, but I’m weak
from a lack of food.
Today
an air machine with whirling blades landed in the plain below and now two men
are working their way uphill. I have no
idea if they’re carrying a book like Peterson’s, but I’ve loaded my bow and
I’ve got many others arrows on hand. As
soon as they’re close enough, I intend to shoot and keep shooting.
No comments:
Post a Comment