--ONE
SECOND; I’M GOING TO GRAB A BEER SO I’LL FEEL RELAXED AND TELL YOU ALL MY
SECRETS
…It’s so quiet right now, this morning,
that all I can hear is the fain whir of my computer. Outside my window is a swirling coil of
nearly invisible gnats. It looks like
gossamer.
…I had this published yesterday at
Doorknobs and BodyPaint:
Within Reach
Afterward, there was
an exchange of promises: we would no longer be twins. No more matching outfits, matching hairstyles
or hair color. One of us would get
tinted contacts, the other a nose piercing.
What mattered now was a physical detachment, however concocted.
Now we sit on a bench
overlooking Faxaflói Bay on a summer night (summer is the best time to visit Iceland) with city
lights washing over the water in rainbow colors and I know Shelley is thinking
the same thing as me—that Mother claims to have seen a double rainbow the day
before we were born. “That’s when I knew
I was having twins,” she’d said, though we’re both certain the doctor would
have handed out such news.
A cruise ship slides by like a white cloud floating over the water. On its side is the word Carnival and now I
know Shelley is again thinking what I’m thinking, how if Dad had never taken us
to the carnival that time he’d never have met Dorinda, the lady who swallowed
swords that were on fire. He’d waited
back stage after the performance, mesmerized.
He wanted to know how she did it, how her throat didn’t get
scalded. “It looked so real,” he’d
said. “There’s no way for it to be a
hoax.”
Dorinda seemed amused, but she was more interested in us. “These two girls,” she said, in a heavy accent
I couldn’t place, “they are surely a hoax, so identical in every way.”
After that brief meeting we never saw Dorinda again, but a month later we
never saw Dad again either. That was a
year ago and now we’re here in Reykjavik visiting Mom’s sister.
Mother comes up forcing a smile, as she’s done all these months, trying to
appear ever hopeful. “Here,” she says,
handing us each desserts that look like Ho Hos.
“What are they?” Shelley asks.
“A signature dessert here. Slöngukaka.”
The way she says the name sounds like she saying
something-something-Caca and so I actually chuckle while Shelley does as well.
“What?” Mom asks.
It feels good to be happy for once, if even momentarily.
Mom sits down, eying the cruise ship.
Dad sends postcards.
They’ve not divorced. He says
there’s nothing romantic going on with Dorinda.
He says he’ll be back before we know it.
Shelley looks at mom watching the cruise ship then back
at me and we both know she’s thinking Dad’s not on it, but he’s out there
somewhere, within reach.
Without speaking, through my thoughts, I tell Shelley: To
hell with Dorinda. Let’s not change
anything about ourselves.
She nods, gives a small smile and we both watch the ship
slink farther and farther away.
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