--NO IS A COMPLETE
SENTENCE
Banana Raisin Cookies
Out
of the blue, my grandfather wants a banana raisin cookie. He lets me know by screaming, “I want a
banana raisin cookie, goddamn it!”
He’s
forgotten his teeth, left them somewhere.
Now he’s gummy, but he sounds like Elmo, his voice gravelly and
strangely comical, but also a bit frightening.
He looks like Elmo as well, with his beet-red face and clam shell head
wobbling without a neck.
He’s
wearing a plaid hunter’s shirt over his desiccated frame. I’ve only known him brittle, with hatpin bones. I am eight now, or at least I am eight now
looking back on being eight years old.
His
wheelchair bounces when he wants something.
The roller wheels squeal in need of oil, but Dad’s not here to squirt
WD-40 on them. I wonder where Dad is, where
Mom is, why they made me the sentry. I
am eight.
Then
he needs a bath because his diaper is full.
“Change me! It’s horrible. I can feel shit leaking down my legs.”
His
eyes are soupy brown sprockets, a pair of bees drowned in urine. In his anger and frustration, he is
shrinking, dissipating, taking baby steps backward toward some kind of awful
youth he must have had. He is bones and
sags and leaking water. He is my
grandfather and I should love him more than I do.
I check to find his diaper dry, though it smells foul,
like a tree with a family of rotting owls stuffed inside its hollow trunk.
“Change me!
Change me! This is hideous!”
I inspect again but there is no shit.
“Poppy,” I say, “you’re clean for now.”
But he goes on being an angry talking parrot. Change
me! Change me!
As a
distraction, I turn my ears off and keep on examining him, making comparisons. He has a puppet mouth, a side to side working
jaw. His nostrils are filled with hairy
spiders trying to crawl out. His face
skin is a trampoline warped by too much sun and rain.
Change me! Change me!
This is horrible!
I
have learned how to turn off my ears when necessary and I’ve learned how to
make my brain a house with different rooms.
In the attic is where I store the things I never want to see again, but
now the attic door opens and I remember the night of my fifth birthday. Grandfather bought me a locket, gave it to me
without anyone else knowing. Came to my
bedroom in utter darkness. He wasn’t
dementia-ed then, or maybe he was. His
breath sounded bear-husky and he smelled like the banana raisin cookies Mom had
made. His hands were rough and hot but after
he clasped the locket around my neck, his fingers roamed and turned into ice
bones on the rest of my skin, the first time something that cold had touched me
there.
Change me! Change me!
Now
he’s right. I can smell it, the sharp, awful
shit tang of shit. I don’t want to
change him. I don’t know how. I’m scared, but he’s bouncing in his chair while
the wheels make terrified bird cheeping noises, and I’m imagining the seeping
shit running a brown river down his thighs and calves and splatting on the
floor tile and it makes me so sick I have to fight off gagging.
I
can’t turn my ears off anymore. I want
to slap him even though I’ve never slapped anyone before, let alone an
adult. But he deserves a slap. More than that.
My
arms and legs twitch. My skin has a
forest fire on it, licking hot and fast and furious. The attic door in my head is open, Grandfather
is screaming and he smells like a full toilet that hasn’t ever been flushed.
I make
my twitching fingers grab the wheelchair handlebars, intending to do good but
ideas pop. I could lead him out the door
and push him down the porch steps and say it was an accident, Grandfather wheeled
away by himself. Better yet, I could shove
him down the basement steps which has a lot more stairs. I could watch him tumble and flail and then
afterward, we might be partially even.
But
I don’t. Instead, I push the chair
toward the bathroom. I swing the door
open and squeeze his chair in while not looking in the mirror. I take a breath through my mouth to avoid the
smell and say, “Please be quiet, and I will try to do this for you.”
Now Mom
is the age Grandfather was when I was six.
We’re sitting on the sofa, just back from the cemetery where we visited
graves and headstones, Dad’s and Grandfather’s.
It’s the first time I’ve been in decades. Going has made me feel like I’m eight again,
or like the eight-year-old me is trying to force herself inside the adult me.
Mom
says, “I brought a surprise,” and fishes something out of a bag. “I haven’t made them in so long,” she says.
She
takes the cellophane off the plate of banana raisin cookies surgically, as if
what’s under the thin clear plastic is made of fragile porcelain.
“These were your grandfather’s favorites.”
When she holds the plate out for me, the familiar sugary-banana
smell gets sucked up into my nostrils, heading toward my brain and the door to
the attic. My fingers tremble jaggedly,
like tarantula legs. A sudden wave of nausea
kicks in. I swallow a bitter squirt of
hot bile.
“Hey, honey, what’s wrong?”
I want to tell her that I am eight again, that I have
lived twenty-five years without being kissed by a man who was not a family
member. There is so much I want to tell
her, so I take a bite of cookie and swallow it down hard, choking a little even
though the cookie is moist. I finish the
entire cookie and then another and after that it gets easier eating them. Maybe it’s twenty minutes or less, but when I
look down at my lap the plate is empty but for scattered crumbs.
Mother’s eyes slit flat as she grins wide, on the cusp
of a laugh. “Wow. You’ve either been starving yourself, or you
really missed my banana raisin cookies.”
I say, “It’s neither one of those things.” I say, “It’s this,” and pull the locket out from
my purse. I say, “This is what I need to
talk to you about.”
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