--THE SUN HAS ALREADY LEARNED HOW TO DIE
Wicked
Water
I wanted a way to kill water.
The
river ran like a gray scar, screaming in certain sections where it got caught
up by boulders. Birds fluttered in the
tree tops. A deer poked through a
clearing on the other side and cocked its head at me.
It should have beautiful, but it took my
breath away for all the wrong reasons.
Ironic, I thought, that Ann had been a
swimming sensation in college. Before
we’d married, I loved watching her in the pool, so fluid and controlled, each
stroke like glass. The last time I’d
seen her she was surrounded by water, too.
I thought she’d fallen asleep in the tub. The jets were on, the water churning what
must have been gallons of her blood.
Our son never learned to swim. He came to this river with Jared, who turned
out to be his lover. Jared said they
liked to raft to the other side. It was
safe, he assured me, so long as two people paddled. But then they’d gotten into a fight, my son
angry because Jared wouldn’t come out publicly, wouldn’t let them be like any
other couple.
When he dove in, Jared told my son to
stop screwing around, to grab the oar, but the current had already caught him.
It would have happened right there,
where I’m headed now.
The water bites my skin. Its liquid limbs tug hard.
I don’t resist at all. Instead I let rage do the work.
No comments:
Post a Comment