--I’M A BURNED DOWN TREE
…Hey, how’s your August starting out?
Mine’s been sun-filled.
…Here are some things I like, and after those things is a story I wrote:
"In order to discover new lands, one must be willing
to lose sight of the shore for a very long time." Andre Gide
"It doesn't matter how often you get knocked down;
what matters is how often you get back up." Vince Lombardi
"It's never too late, in fiction or in life, to
revise." Nancy Thayer
"There is no greater agony than bearing an untold
story inside you." Maya Angelou
"Love is still the greatest thing that ever happens
in our lives." Gary Player
"Physical courage, which despises all danger, will
make a man brave in one way; and moral courage, which despises all opinion,
will make a man brave in another." Charles Colton
Firecrackers
The next one is prettier than the
others.
She wears a white poodle coat with
knotted fringe balls on the sleeves, and smells like Lemon Pledge.
Her name is Rosie.
Rosie has a wide, cartoon
smile. Each time she pops her gum, it
sounds like a muffled firecracker.
“Wanna piece?”
When I answer yes, Rosie says,
“Ain’t got one,” and titters, head cocked toward the ceiling.
Dad rearranges the furniture as
Rosie points here and there, her bangle bracelets chinking like tin. Her wrists are pale, thin as a chicken’s, and
half the width of Mom’s. She wears pink
stilettoes with lots of straps.
Dad has gained weight since Mom
left. A wet sweat cloud stains his shirt
front and his hair is matted on one side.
Rosie keeps changing her mind about
where the recliner should go. She’s
unsure about the coffee table. She wants
the china hutch in the corner, but it’s too heavy to move, so Dad gets a hand
truck.
“Just ‘cause you’re a girl,” Rosie
says to me, “doesn’t mean you can’t help.”
Before Rosie showed up, Dad had told
me I needed to be more hospitable to his female guests. He said hospitable meant kind and
agreeable.
“Give the hutch a little push
forward,” Dad says to me, voice strained, his back bent as he crouches behind
the hand truck.
Each time Rosie’s gum snaps, I hear
the sound of Mom’s high heels on the linoleum floor.
I grip the hutch as if it’s a stiff
bear. I push forward, but lean right,
the hutch listing, then lumbering into a slow tumble. As it crashes, glass explodes, spraying the
air. The severed heads of two porcelain
figurines stare up from the thick shag.
Rosie calls me an idiot.
Dad doesn’t say a thing.
I give Rosie my best grin.
“That one’s a shifty little shit,”
Rosie says, but Dad stays silent, fetching a whisk broom and plastic shovel to
collect the shards.
After dinner, I’m sent to bed two
hours earlier than usual. I slip out
after five minutes, peering over the bannister to watch them on the
repositioned sofa below. Dad fondles
Rosie’s hair. He touches her cheek and
neck and blouse. Rosie says, “I don’t
know if this place is big enough.”
I want to tell her I agree. I want to tell her our house is filled with
ghosts, ghosts of every kind, but mainly female ghosts. I want to tell her that my mother’s perfume
sometimes wafts out of the wall paper, out of my pillow case and favorite mauve
cardigan. I want to tell her that I can
be agreeable, but there’s nothing for her here except confusion and misery.
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