--I’M LIVING HOPEFULLY
...Oh my, it's a beautiful morning. The lake is a flat mirror. There are no boats out yet. I wish you could see this There are a couple of waterfront homes for sale if you're interested.
...This (below) is a story I wrote that was just published in Cape Fear Review. I wrote quite a while ago and now after reading it again i realize it's a tough story. The thing is it's pretty much a page taken out of my childhood.
Love Like a
Crooked Spine
She
does not notice, but we watch her for signs of explosion. At the dinner table it’s Rex, Jerry, me and
Mom. Mother chews the way a large
hamster does, chubby cheeks crimping. I
hold back a flinch when her fork tine screeches on the plate.
Though
she did not say it, we know Mother thinks our dad died because he was
weak. Her own father was made of cast
iron, and a sawmill amputation hardly held him up from running a twenty acre
farm. Her brothers, one in prison, and
one that died in Vietnam, look down on us from the picture frames that hold
their steely gazes.
We
eat slow, the half-raw potatoes becoming oatmeal rocks in our mouths. We don’t want the meal to end because we
don’t want what comes after. One of us
will be guilty, one of us will have to administer punishment, and one of us
must watch so that the lesson is learned by all.
Last
week Mother found a pair of light purple panties in Rex’s dresser. She might have planted them. Either way, Rex pleading ignorance didn’t
help matters. She shouted at me to use
the end of the belt, the end of the belt, the end with the buckle, and when I
didn’t, couldn’t, Jerry did so on me, as ordered.
I
suppose we could stop it, the madness.
We’re young boys, but there are carving knives in the butcher bloc. Even a paring knife would do the trick.
Mother
looks up from her plate, a drool of gravy sludge on her jaw, catches my eye,
forcing me to claim hers or else. She
looks disgusted, yet says, “Do you know how much I love you?”
A
girl I’m in love with says we were fated to each other. She’s a bit crazy, Wendy Adams, which is why
I like her. Really I like Amy because
she can stand the sight of me and where I live and who I belong to. Wendy believes everything happens for a
reason.
I
know she’s wrong. You can make up
rationales, but if it’s just clever lies, then nothing was really planned out
to begin with.
I
don’t have friends, only Rex and Jerry.
Still, I eavesdrop on the bus and at lunch. We’re not normal in this family. If there’s love here, it has a crooked spine.
The
one thing I do agree with Wendy on is, “Tis better to have loved, than never
have loved at all.”
I
just drop the “d” and think, “Tis better to have love.” To have some of it, even the warped kind.
As
I wash the dishes, Mother comes up behind me like a heat shadow. She says, “That plate there. Right there.
It has a crack that wasn’t there before.”
When
I nod, she says, “You’re right I’m right.
We’ll see about that when you’re through.”
I
always wonder if it’s the same stars and the same moon people see no matter
where they are on the planet. Sure, I
know they’re physically the same, but I wonder--if our moon is full tonight, is
it that way, say, in Barcelona?
When
I lean over my bunk and ask Rex that question, he calls me an idiot. He says, “You’re the reason she hates us,
because you look like him.”
I
don’t sleep. I keep hearing my brother’s
rationale for Mother’s madness. I hear
Wendy saying everything happens for a reason.
I ask myself: is that why I look like my dead father, so we can be
stripped and beat each night?
In
the morning, I wake even before the rooster’s crow. I withdraw the biggest blade from the butcher
block and slip through the screen door as quiet as I can. There’s a tall hill a mile behind our back
yard. It’s a fine place to stargaze, to
listen to the winds sweeping through the evergreens. It’s the kind of elevated spot where ancient
Aztecs might have thought up the notion of sacrificing to the Gods.
The
moon gleams off metal when I raise the knife.
I’ve got time for one last question: Does this make me strong then, or
weak?
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