--I LEAVE PIECES OF ME EVERYWHERE I GO
…How is your
Monday morning looking? Bright, I hope.
…I’m going
to try to steer away from the death of my father, but I thought I would post
this story that I wrote some time ago which achieved a fair amount of
acclaim. I was even interviewed about
it, and asked how I came up with the idea for the piece. When I told the interviewer that it was
almost completely true, she said, “No, really, how did you come up with it?”
Summer Scalping; Scarecrows
Mother
teaches us how to steal.
We
start with Henderson’s corn field, undercover of the night, our station wagon
skulking down the dusty aisle ends like a muttering alligator. She throws us out, tosses us the gunnies and
we scamper through the rows and I start ripping off ears as fast as I can. It feels like cheap murder or beating up a
kid, someone helpless and smaller than me.
When I pull them from the stalk, they make a scratching noise similar to
Mother’s fingernails on the arm rest or the sketchy rumble of her cigarette
cough. The corn leaves are ridged and
sweaty and the corn hair tickles my neck, but just for a moment until Davey
jams his elbow into my rib.
“Stop
fucking around,” he says. His eyes are
electric brown, Mexican jumping beans.
Black smears of grease sit below them.
Davey takes this shit seriously.
He looks like a resentful quarterback or a warrior looking for a scalp.
When
I still don’t get it, he slugs me in the gut.
“Don’t be stupid. We work in the
middle.”
He
hisses, flops down and slides in the dirt on his belly, an iguana now, a combat
soldier. He motions that I should follow
and I do because I am scared and confused and dizzy. Old Man Henderson is who we work for during
the day, and here we are robbing him at night.
I know these fields as well as I know the twelve-by-twelve bedroom that
I share with Davey. We shouldn’t be
here. We’re poor but we’re not starving.
In
the center of the field the stalks sway with the breeze, their tops tipping and
dipping, brushing our shoulders as we work, whispering conspiratorially. I can’t stop shivering even though it’s a hot,
humid summer night.
Davey
has a flashlight. One end is stuffed in
his mouth. Light comes out the other end
in swaths and cones. Davey’s face glows
menacing lavender. He sees me staring
and thwacks me across the forehead with the flashlight. He calls me a stupid fag as I finger the new
bruise and rub his saliva from my eye.
I
helped Mr. Henderson put up the new set of scarecrows that stand at the sides
of the field, arms outstretched as if crucified. It was a lazy job, given to me, I presumed,
as a kindly favor. Usually I was charged
with moving the twenty foot long irrigation pipes and shoring up rows or
pruning, which is the same as prison work when the temperature gets past a
hundred. Anyway, Mrs. Henderson gave him
half a dozen Albertson grocery bags stuffed with all sorts of clothing articles
and Mr. Henderson said, “Go to it.” As a
test run for bringing up the news to Mother, I’d once confessed to Mr.
Henderson that I wanted to be a fashion designer when I grew up. His eyes worked over my statement and out of
his shirt pocket he pulled a piece of straw the size of a pencil. He chewed it for awhile. It took him so long to answer that I thought
my shame might burn me to death, but then he showed me a grin. It was wide and toothy and real. “That’s wonderful, son.” No one had ever called me that. “It’s important to have large-sized
dreams.” So I figured there was a tie to
me confiding in Mr. Henderson that day and him wanting me to put together a
collection of scarecrows. I did as I was
told. I would have, no matter the
request, since I was getting paid cash money and, as anybody can tell you,
that’s a hard thing to come by. When I
was finished I had six fairly realistic men.
They were skinny things because the straw kept slipping down their
drawers or out of their sleeves. But
they looked fine, stylish even.
Afterward there were a few garments left over, one being a sky blue
turtleneck that didn’t make sense on a scarecrow. Mr. Henderson said, “You like it?” I lied and said, “No,” because even though
the color was blue, it was too light, pastel, bordering on effeminate, and I
didn’t want him or anyone else getting ideas.
“Take it,” he said. “Go on.” And I did.
After I got home, I stuck it between the box springs and the mattress I
share with Davey. One of these days I
plan on showing him, but that might not be for awhile.
When
our gunny sacks are full of corn we stagger in the dark toward the lurking
station wagon. Mother sits smoking with
the dome light on. She doesn’t blink,
doesn’t say a word, just starts the engine and pulls the silver stick shift on
the side of the steering wheel and we drive off.
The
next morning Mr. Henderson calls me to his office which is a trailer sunk into
the sun-baked mud northeast of where some broke-down combines slumber. His golden lab, Leroy, scents me, sneezes,
and scampers off. A crow caws.
He
shouts to come on in when I knock. I
hesitate and try to measure the tone of his voice, sift through it like a gold
miner, for evidence of a mood. The door
catches and won’t open. “Kick it at the
bottom!” he tells me. I wonder why he
doesn’t just open the thing for me.
“You
gotta kick it!” he says. I still can’t
tell if there’s anything to learn from his tone, but by now I’m running and his
voice isn’t very loud. Stalks slap me
because I’m off balance. My feet burn,
my eyes sting. It’s not even noon
yet. I sweat. I run through the corn row and don’t
stop.
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