--HEY, MOON, WHERE YOU AT?
…Well, I survived a rather fun and
somewhat raucous weekend in Portland.
That’s always considered a success.
Good times, for sure.
While I was there I got my 800th
acceptance. That’s a very nice feeling,
considering I’ve mostly been working on the novel and haven’t really been
submitting very much at all. I’ve been
doing this writing gig for six years now and man is it fun.
…Here’s something I wrote a while ago
that was published at Pure Slush:
Cherry Picking
They
were amalgams: nudists, migrants, Germans, chain-smokers, victims, assassins,
butchers and people with dirty fingernails who could till hardened soil and
make a life from it.
I
was six the year my mother changed the course of my life, divorcing a stoic
peacemaker for a stock car racer who wore chinos, a hairline moustache and his
name tattooed across one bicep.
For
a birthday gift, my stepfather bought Mom new breasts, these gum-pale mounds
that peeked out over everything, showing up at inconvenient moments. Whenever my friends visited, I’d have to ask
Mom to put a shirt on over her halter.
She’d narrow her eyes and purse her thin lips, cigarette smoke funneling
out of her nostrils like a defiant dragon.
“Just who the hell do you think you are?”
Summers
we picked pie cherries on rickety ladders, rope-tied pails slung over our
shoulders like ragtag infantrymen. As
far as I could tell, my brothers and I were the only ones who weren’t drunks. I knew for a fact we were the only pickers
who were white people.
One
year when I was thirteen, the foreman, who ran the orchard and had a crush on
Mom, threw a season-ending shindig, as he called it. What we had, really, was a two hour break,
some ice-cold hotdogs and plenty of alcohol.
It
was us and about fifty Mexicans; the friendliest folks I’d ever met, even if
they couldn’t speak English. Jack, the
foreman, was a squat stick of dynamite who chewed so much Red Man tobacco that
his teeth had become feces-colored, worn down and cracked.
At
the party, my Stepdad got drunk in a hurry.
I thought he was faking it, but then he toppled over a hay bale and
didn’t get up.
It
took about five minutes before Jack slipped his arm around Mom’s waist. Stone-faced, she allowed it.
I
had borrowed my brother’s Bowie knife a few days earlier to complete a chore
and had left it sheathed inside my boot the way wise drifters did. It was a noteworthy knife, with a wide
serrated blade and the tip slightly curved for easier entry. My brother used it
to skin rabbits and squirrels, and once he had even cut down a thin maple with
it.
While
someone turned up the portable radio, I transferred the knife from boot to the
inside of my pants.
Couples
formed, dancing to the clatter of yodel and Honky Tonk. Their shuffling feet threw up clouds of chaff
that swirled with cones of gnats in the sunlit air.
A
lot of people were drinking whiskey straight from the bottle. When handed one, I took a swig. The fuel taste was not unlike when we’d be
flat broke and have to siphon gas. I
took a second pull. “Well, how about
that?” Jack said, dumbfounded.
I
drained the rest of the bottle on my third drink.
“That’s
my boy,” Mom said, her face lit up with what I suspected to be pride, even
though I’d never seen it before.
She
broke from Jack’s embrace and gave me a hug.
I
felt Mother’s heart beating through those fake breasts just as I could feel the
hilt of the knife handle pressing hard against my hip. For the longest time then and afterward,
those two different pressures gnawed at me, urging me to choose, demanding an
answer.
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