--SAY WHAT YOU NEED TO SAY
I Was A
Roulette Wheel
They started with darts because they
could, because Mom and Dad were gone again, off selling clouds to mountains
that didn’t need them.
I thought things might be different this
time, but my mind liked to get stoned on hope and abstinence, like a castrated preacher
with a flask full of clear.
The air inside the barn hung thick and
hairy and I was frightened again. The
ground lay covered in slimy chicken shit matted with white-gray feathers, even
though we’d never owned chickens or any other kind of fowl.
One brother wore a menacing look, a
tarantula face. Another brother kept
morphing into different versions of an angry orangutan, his wing span something
I kept an eye on.
The first dart hit me in the thigh, the
pain like eating a cactus. There should
have been seepage, but our family only bled dust.
A fleet of my other brothers stood
behind tarantula and orangutan like a troupe of horny inmates. Their faces were made of scaly bark, their
eyes only sockets.
They kept coming in and out of focus
because I was a roulette wheel tied prostrate to a swirling wooden disc. Upside down, the world felt momentarily safer,
the way breathing can when you’re dead but don’t know it.
Soon the darts came flying in pairs and
threes. My brothers were good at aiming,
be it fists or rifle, but I was better at spinning, and so most of the darts
missed their target, though one did pierce my ear, stuck there in my lobe like an
exotic African earring.
We had a sister once, at least I think
we did. There used to be a few
photographs of a six-year-old girl around the house. There used to be a pink room that smelled
like cotton candy. I found a frilly
little girl’s dress once back by the wood chipper. It might have been her size, or perhaps the
wind blew it there. It’s terrible to
say, but I’m glad she’s not around anymore, my maybe Sis. There are far too many forms of torture.
Soon as I think this, I’m tied to a
chair instead of a wheel and I’m blindfolded, which I guess is a blessing. Or not.
Each brother takes turns bending words
into my ear, sharing their foul secrets.
I’d tell you what they are but then they wouldn’t be secret. I can share this though: my brothers have
done hideous things. But I guess we all
have, at one time or another.
Listening, as they whisper their deeds into
my soupy skull, is like being forced to watch a different grainy snuff film
every thirty seconds, real blood exploding against walls and clocks and
countertops. From fear, the chair I’m
sitting in keeps biting me on the ass. My
legs run away from me, tripping on tree root after tree root.
I remember we had pets once, dogs and a
couple of cats who kept losing their paws, then whole legs. Mom said we were broke, busted, that food was
scarce. For a few weeks around that time,
our meals were peculiar. And then one
day, the pets were all gone for good.
Sometimes Mom and Dad don’t come back
from their trips and they send their shadows as surrogates instead. That arrangement might seem less perilous for
a boy like me, but then some shadows yield butcher knives and tire irons,
garrotes and chainsaws. Shadows—you
gotta watch out for them, they’re tricky motherfuckers, and anything but flat.
Toward the end of the evening, my
brothers light my hair on fire. They rip
out my toe nails with their fangs. They
tape my eyelids open and stab my pupils thousands of times with a bent
paperclip, and then when that’s not satisfactory, they use an ice pick. Dust flies everywhere until everyone is
choking on the itchy plumes.
I wish I could hold a grudge the way the
moon does, but what good would that do?
We all have choices, though not the very first one, the one that
counts. Someone else gets to make that
decision for us, and so we carry on as best we can.
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