--SOMETIME AFTER TOMORROW WOULD BE A
GOOD TIME
Christmas in July
I
am watching the deaf couple talk with their hands, seeing how every so often
the girl stops and lets her mouth open up and drop out giddy laughter that is
as honest as a sunrise yet it sounds like a retarded child’s laughter and so at
once I’m ashamed for making that comparison and when I look around, indeed,
there’s a man in a black fedora staring at me as if I’ve just killed his pet
dog with a butcher knife.
The
waitress asks am I okay, would I like a refill, and so I nod but don’t catch
her eyes because I haven’t looked any living being in the eyes since I was
nine. For a few years it was even hard
looking at myself in the mirror. I kept
seeing dirty seashells and sidewalk puke.
But I practiced on magazines, staring at the woman who looked like she
could be my biological mother even though I knew she was a lucky actress
promoting healthful sleep by way of a certain mattress type. My guts ran through a sausage grinder as I
worked up enough courage to hold my gaze on the mattress lady for more than a
few seconds. Even though her smile was
soft and upbeat, I kept expecting her hand to leap off the page and her nails
to claw garden rows down my cheek, matching the scars that were already
there. And that’s when the actress sniffed
and made a face, her lips crinkling up the page. She tried to spit at me but couldn’t because
she was made of paper. Still, she said,
“You’re dirty. You smell like
garbage. Did you mess in your
pants?” I took her out back and lit the
magazine on fire and let it burn down to my fingertips before I chucked it
inside the old oil drum. Even then, I
could hear the lady hissing at me, her accusations echoing up with smoke like
the devil’s own belching.
Right
now the deaf couple has their eyes pinned on one another, speaking without
speaking, spilling and soaking up so much love that there’s excess. They finger each other’s faces with their pupils
wide open and shiny like sheet metal. The
girl has orange hair and pretty peach-colored freckles that swirl in ridiculous
swaths down her jaw and then run off down her neck and I see his thin hands
catch a few of the spackles as if they might be detachable, like miniscule
glitter pentagons.
Glitter
always makes me think of my first foster family. They ran a kiosk in the mall—“Christmas in
July!” it was called. They sold ceramic
Santa’s and elves and reindeer and Mrs. Claus in a girdle with her hand to her
face and her rosy cheeks embarrassed.
They sold everything Christmas every day of the year. I never remember either of them touching
me. I knew they got a check from the
government but I was fooled. One day
when we were packing up wooden carvings of toy soldiers for a customer, my
foster mom stopped humming and told me to look at her, to turn and look her
straight in both eyes. She said the
agency was coming round to get me that afternoon. “That’s just how it works. If you’re not placed before you’re ten years
old, you never will be.” I wanted to
ask, wasn’t I placed with you? But I
didn’t. I spread bubble wrap around the
carved guardians. I fastened ropes of
tape tight around their necks, trying to strangle those soldiers who were going
to live with people who wanted them. I
knew I was stupid because wooden sentries aren’t alive, but still, I’ve been
repeating a version of that process my whole life. I’ve been in seven homes and I’m grown now
and own a house, but no matter where I am, the air feels off—sort of heavy and
thick, like oily vapor. Even in summer,
even in the tropics. While we’re vacationing
there, my wife will take my hands and claim I have a circulation problem and
I’ll look at her through my mirrored sunglasses so she won’t know I’m staring
and I’ll want to tell her things, but I won’t.
I’ll watch the sweat fill up a slip of skin across my belly crease. I’ll marvel at the sun hanging so arrogant in
the sky, but I’ll get a little shiver nonetheless. I always do.
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