--AND HERE I THOUGHT WE WERE JUST GETTING
BACK TO NORMAL
Two and a Half
When I arrived she was out of her
wheelchair and seated on a gold sofa, so old now, so brittle-looking yet
giggling like a child into her fist while watching a sitcom. A clear globe of snot filled her nostril,
then burst and I remembered days of summer when she and I would have a bucket
of soapy dishwater, homemade slush from which to blow bubbles using for a tool
an old pair of eye glasses with the lenses popped out.
In the raw sunshine, we blew and
grinned. We hummed Partridge Family
songs—“Point Me in the Direction of Albuquerque” and “I Can Hear Your
Heartbeat.” We liked the same things but
would never admit it because we were twins.
From the upstairs sundeck that one
summer day we watched the bubbles glide windswept. Some caught on the old maple and stuck there
like crystal balls. Others wobbled away,
taking their sweet time before disappearing into a great skein of clouds.
Below Dad loped across our
sun-scorched lawn and ambled over the curb, holding his lower back and
stretching before stepping inside the white Caddie.
“I bet that lady makes him feel
younger,” my sis said.
Momma was inside the house and even
though she couldn’t hear us way up there, even though she had no idea, I
punched my sister harder than I meant to.
She flew back. Hit the top porch
rail mid-spine. I watched her eyes crack
like white lightning, never again to be so lively or disgusted.
Now she jerks when she senses my
presence at the door frame, me having not knocked loud enough.
“You scared me,” she says. On TV there are two men and a young boy, a
laugh track. “You really scared me,” she
says.
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