Ri c k E r f m a n n
Gas Station. Friesland, May 2014 (cover)
Maga zine of New Writing
I ss u e O n e • S p r i n g 2 0 1 5
A m e r i c a n C h o r data i s p u b l i s h e d t w i c e a y e a r , i n S p r i n g a n d Au t u m n .
ED I TO R Ben Yarling
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F I CT I O N ED I T O R
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American Chordata
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P O ETRY ED I T O R
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contact@americanchordata.org americanchordata.org
ART D I RECTO R Bobby Doherty
American Chordata seeks to publish and promote short works of exceptional fiction, nonfiction, and
C O NTR I BUT I NG
poetry, as well as art and photography. We have no
ED I TO RS
formal word limits or stylistic constraints, but
Emma Berry
look for work that is brave, illuminating, and
Quynh Do
emotionally detailed. For information about how
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to submit, please visit americanchordata.org.
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Adly Elewa
American Chordata, New York, and the individual contributors. All rights reserved. Please respect the rights of our contributors. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
C O NTENTS
Contributors
vii
Note
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Fi c t io n Diana Xin, We Lived Like Astronauts 1 Colby Halloran, Field and Stream 4 5 Carianne King, Essential Oils 9 3 Po e t ry D. Eric Parkison, Three Poems 19 Kayla Krut, Extremely Pleasant with Doors Open 2 8 Cal Graves, living Forever 3 2 Emma Furman, Saccades 6 3 Soren Bliefnick, Two Poems 67 Andrew Cedermark, Tritina Against Cho 8 5 Sarah V. Schweig, STORIES (II) 8 6 Kathryn Donohue, When we tell the story of us right now 118 A rt a n d P h oto g r a p h y Tammy Mercure, selections from Immortals 3 5 Talena Sanders, Body Memory 7 1
iv • FICTION
v • FICTION
justin guthrie
"It started raining," 2014
C O NTR I BUTO RS
T h o m a s A l b d o r f, born in Austria 1982. Exhibited in
galleries throughout Europe and USA. Featured in magazines like British Journal of Photography, It’s Nice That, Phaidon UK, Computer Arts Magazine. B e t o Ru i z A l o n s o is a portrait and fine art photographer
living in Berlin, Germany. Sergiy Barchuk is a Ukrainian-born artist who enjoys surreal
moments and quiet life in his Bed-Stuy apartment. So r e n B l i e f n i c k lives in Boston, Massachusetts. Ro b b i e B r a n n i g a n was born in 1992 and lives in upstate
New York.
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A N D R E W C E D E R M A R K is a guitar player from New Jersey. A N T H O N Y C U DA H Y (b. 1989) is an artist living and working
in Brooklyn, NY. He received his BFA in 2011 from Pratt Institute.
L I N D S AY D ’A D DAT O is a photographer, rock climber, and an
explorer. She highly values good jokes, bad puns, tall tales, fresh mountain air, and time well spent in the company of great friends. She gladly welcomes all adventures. K AT H RY N D O N O H U E ’s poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Hunger Mountain, Typo, MiPoesias, Octopus, and The Gettysburg Review. viii CONTRIBUTORS
Little scenes of value, born out of misery and neglect, are what R I C K E R F M A N N photographs. Things that are hanging on in the face of the carelessness with which people treat an industrial environment. Lately focusing more on portraiture, Erfmann shoots people expressing the same kind of latent melancholy as his surroundings growing up. A L B E RT O F E I J O O was born in Alicante (1985). He studied
photography in Madrid, where he lives and works. His work has been selected in PhotoIreland, Descubrimientos PHotoEspaña, and Fotomuseum Winterthur in Switzerland. L O U I S F R AT I N O was born in Annapolis, Maryland. After completing his bachelor’s degree in painting this Spring at the Maryland Institute College of Art he is moving to Berlin on a Fulbright grant. E M M A F U R M A N is a person who recently graduated with an
MFA from the University of Alabama. Her work can be seen in the “documents” folder on her laptop.
C a l G r av e s is a US writer who currently lives in Texas, attempt-
ing at a degree in English. He writes poetry and assorted prose. Currently he is working on a collection of short stories, poetry, and a possible novel. He posts poetry here: http://ignisorso.tumblr.com/. And other things here: http://theuvulartrill.blogspot.com/.Cal’s favorite part of the zoo is the reptile house. He owns no pets, but hopes to one day. J u st i n G u t h r i e , born in ‘93, child of the desert, growing man
of the self. S a m H a b e r m a n is an artist and engineering student born and living in Adelaide, South Australia.
Southern Review and the Emrys Journal. “Field and Stream” is excerpted from the novel Pascal’s Vases. Her play, “Bird of Passage,” premieres at the Carriage House Theater in Ann Arbor in July 2015. C a r i a n n e Ki n g received an MFA in fiction from Columbia
University. She is completing a collection of short stories. H e l e n Ko r pa k is a photographer from Helsinki, Finland. She currently works on a project about globalization and will soon publish a book of smartphone photos. K ay l a K ru t is an MFA candidate in poetry at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Mo n L e vc h e n kova is a photographer based in London who
is currently studying photojournalism and documentar y photography at UAL. Dav i d Lu r a s c h i is a French-American based in Paris, France.
He is mostly interested in people and do it yourself mythology.
ix • CONTRIBUTORS
Co l by H a l lo r a n ’s short stories have been published in The
T a m m y M e r c u r e is a photographer living in New
Orleans, LA. Rya n O s k i n is an artist living and working in Brooklyn, NY.
He is the co-founder of TGIF Gallery, an artist-run group showcasing emerging artists. D. E r i c Pa r k i s o n was raised near Rochester, New York, in
x • CONTRIBUTORS
a small town on Lake Ontario. He received his MA in English at the University of Rochester, where he studied literature and poetry. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in The Squaw Valley Poetr y Review, the Midwest Q uarterly, The Low Valley Review, and ZYZZYVA. He lives in Oakland, California, with his wife and their dog. T h o m a s P r io r is a Brooklyn-based photographer. He
was born in Los Angeles and raised in London and New Jersey. Ta l e n a S a n d e r s is an interdisciplinary artist and filmmaker documenting how people develop individual and collective senses of identity. Currently based in Montana, always a proud Kentuckian. Ki e r Coo k e S a n dv i k is a Norwegian artist with a passion
for horror, Twin Peaks, and haute couture fashion. Ni c o l e S c h i l d e r is a photographer interested in creating slightly unbalanced, anachronistic images with the use of old-school developing processes. A graduate of Hamilton College’s art program, she lives in New York. S a r a h V. S c h w e i g is the author of the chapbook S (Danc-
ing Girl Press). Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in The Atlas Review, Black Warrior Review, BOMB Magazine, Boston Review, Everyday Genius, Gulf Coast, HTML Giant, Maggy, Painted
Bride Quarterly, The Philadelphia Review of Books, Slice, Verse Daily, The Volta, West Branch, and Western Humanities Review, among others. A graduate of the University of Virginia and Columbia University, she works as a Senior Writer at a criminal justice thinktank in Manhattan, studies philosophy at The New School for Social Research, and lives in Brooklyn. J a k e S ta n g e l mostly rides bikes and shoots photos on the side occasionally. He lives in San Francisco. Favorite fruit is bosc pear. H ay l e y St e p h o n is a photographer living in New York City. She is currently studying at the School of Visual Arts.
based in Brooklyn, NY. She received her BS in Cinema and Photography from Ithaca College. Her work often considers the intricacies of location, fear, and storytelling. She recently spent time at artist residencies throughout Iceland before moving to New York, where she works at the publishing company W. W. Norton & Company. A l ly W h i t e is a painter from Atlanta, GA, who has exhibited
locally and nationally. She has been featured on the cover of New American Paintings #106 and selected as a “Jury Pick” for 100 Painters of Tomor row, a publication produced by Beers Contemporary in London. Di a n a X i n holds an MFA in fiction from the University of
Montana. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Alaska Quarterly Review, The Masters Review, and Gulf Coast. She lives in Seattle, Washington.
xi • CONTRIBUTORS
A n i k a S t e p p e was born in Ann Arbor, MI, and is currently
N OTE
Joseph Brodsky uses the word “chordate” a few times in his curmudgeonly-but-worth-it 1992 book Watermark. That’s more-or-less how we found the name of this magazine, though we approach the idea a little differently. When Brodsky refers to the atavistic “chordate” he’s referring to more than just the category of animal with some type of spinal or pre-spinal column. He’s speaking, I think, to the evolution of agency, attention, and experience, and the chordate core of the human brain; organisms emerging in water (he calls water the image of time) into awareness, metacognition, and the recognition or formation of beauty and meaning. Pretty cool. AC is also interested in the phylum chordata’s categorical inclusivity, and its ties to the ideas of structure and developed intelligence. Deliberate respect for the plurality of human experience. Chordata, a phylum that includes intelligent life in all its individual difference. Minus, sadly, some notables like the octopus. But still.
xiii
I’d say that good writing has its own inflection, creates its own contexts and raises its own questions. Questions about money, maybe, or rules, or play; about youth, or the passage of time, and the long-term effects of small choices. The poems and stories in the pages that follow are good. So I won’t add new inflections by saying too much about them. Beyond asking, at risk of sounding saccharine, that you take a few minutes to look, to listen, to read. Three short stories, eleven poems. Art and photography galore. The editors of this magazine value earnest voices, bravery, and clarity of expression. If you value that stuff, too, you’ll probably find a lot to like in here.
xiv • NOTE
Nobody got paid in the making of this magazine. Not the staff, not the contributors. So I want to take a moment to thank those contributors for their trust in choosing to publish with us. I’m deeply grateful and honored to be able to share their work with you here. There’s a long list of people whose generosity and talent helped make this first issue possible. Adly Elewa, who spent many hours designing it, gets a big, boldface, glittering entry on that list. So do the friends, family members, and big-hearted strangers who helped us spread the word and find the many stunning and often surprising submissions we received back in the autumn of 2014 when this whole thing got started. Our sincere thanks go out to the following people and organizations: Abby Ronner, Alicia Wingard, Anna Ross, Artist Trust, Ashley McHose, Banjo McLachlan, Beth Steidle, Bob Yarling, Brooklyn Arts Council, Brooklyn Community Chorus, Bruce Smith, Caroline Badseed, Chris Critelli, Chris Wait, Christina Thompson, Claudia Gerbracht, Connie Brothers, David Jacobsen, Dennis Cooper, Elena Passarello, Ellen Richmond, Ellen Shell, Erica Osvath, Erica Wnek, Frank Driscoll, George Saunders, Joe Lops, John Plough, Kaitlin Bible, Katherine Mavridis, Kevin Olsen, Kimberly Todd, Kurt Wildermuth, Lambda Literary, Larry Longhanger, Leanne Bowes, Leeann Graham, Margot Livesey, Mark Spurlock, McNally Jackson Books, Mike Thompson, Mindy
Yarling, Molasses Books, Nancy Green, Nicholas DeBoer, Queer Exchange, Rachel Freedman, Ryan Harrington, Sara Fiore, Sara Thompson, Sara Yarling, Sarah Schaffer, Scott Sugarman, Sean Mintus, Sophie Hagen, Sybilla Kenny, The Center for Fiction, Tom McKee, Trinh Nguyen, Vani Kannan, and Vinny Senguttuvan. One last thing: Submissions guidelines are available on our website. If you have work that you think we might like to publish in a future issue, we’d love to see it. With warm regards, B e n Ya r l i n g
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xvi • FICTION
m o n l e vc h e n kova
Diana Xin
Mirrored Hand, 2014
We Lived Like Astronauts “We lived like astronauts!” — Caitlin Stainken
1
m o n l e vc h e n kova
Gletscherpark’s “Gepatsch-Stausee” lake, 2014
Carson has searched the Internet and ordered six air plants. They sit with roots exposed inside clear glass eggshells—crinkled green ferns that look like a bad perm job and succulents shaped like roses. We hang two of them from the curtain rods and the rest from hooks on the ceiling. There is a crack in the corner of the ceiling and sometimes bits of plaster rain down on our bedroom-living-room-diningroom. This studio is all of those things. A three-for-one, we call it. Plenty of room for two. The trick to living in a small square footage is to utilize your vertical space. What you don’t have in length and width, you make up for in height. Multiply it together and that’s how you get volume. In addition to the air plants, we buy hanging shelves and nail them to the walls. We line up our knives on a magnetic strip and glue more magnets to the back of our spice tins so they can sit 3
4 • FICTION
attached to the fridge. This is utility. If we had a ladder, we would build bookshelves along the upper edge of our walls. It would feel like we lived at the bottom of a very tall library, and we were very small. I lost three boxes of books to the US Postal Service. Somewhere in Iowa or Montana or Idaho are my copies of Jane Eyre, MobyDick, and the complete Austen. I like to think that they arrived on the doorstep of an unsuspecting elderly woman who just recently lost her husband and is in need of comfort. Or else to a teenage girl growing up in a communist christian household who has read only the words of Mao Tse-Tung and Jesus Christ. I picture my books emanating the warm glow of untapped dreams. In reality, they are probably still taped down in their boxes, buried underneath other boxes in a dank and unlit storage unit. I imagine them cold and water damaged, shriveled pages starving for the touch of fingertips. Carson tells me to look on the bright side. He is a firm believer in the bright side, which is one of the reasons why I love him and why I am willing to move across the country to be with him. He says that now we have fewer things to get rid of. The other trick to living in a small space is to get rid of your things. Kick your habit of mindless consumerism! Don’t let your possessions possess you! Back in Iowa City, I lived with my aunt in her duplex three blocks from campus. “Move west with me,” Carson had said, while we sat around her cherry wood drop-leaf dining table eating spaghetti and meatballs from vintage mango-wood Pottery Barn plates. “I’ll teach you how to slide down mountains on your ass. I’ll teach you how to glissade.” “I don’t know.” I poured myself sangria from a Crate and Barrel pitcher. “I’m not very good with change.” “But life is all about change. Evolution. You evolved when you finished grad school. That’s a change. This is just another change.” “What would I do out there?” “You could do anything. What would you do here?” I didn’t answer.
He took my hand. “In Seattle, there’s no winter. And no cornfields, either. There are mountains and ocean and fields of raspberries. Come on. Take a bet on me.” I looked up and saw that he was serious. We celebrated by rolling across the sheepskin rug, until we almost knocked over an antique standing birdcage. My aunt has no birds, only birdcages. She is an example of someone who is possessed by her possessions. She owns three sets of china, two leather couches, and six birdcages. We have none of those things, but we have each other, and we have our air plants. Carson says that this is plenty. “We don’t need to be loaded down with books,” Carson says. “We can get library cards.” It can also be said that I love Carson in spite of his bright side. This would not be untrue either. 5 • FICTION
Carson and I met at a benefit concert for children with cystic fibrosis. One of the opening bands was called Fill Your Lungs, and I was sleeping with their drummer. Carson was selling poems for donation, seated at a long table with other poetry students and their personal typewriters. He didn’t have a typewriter so he was painting his poems onto squares of stock paper with black india ink. Mine had two words: beauty and fear. “What does it mean?” I asked. “What every poem means,” he said. “Your calligraphy’s nice.” “Thanks. Remember to live without fear.” At some point during the night I lost the poem on its square paper. After the event we ended up beneath the same awning as the rain tapped its rhythm above us. The drummer had left with a girl he said was his sister. She didn’t touch him like a sister. Underneath the awning, Carson offered me gum and a shared cab ride, but I said I was fine walking. He lent me his jacket instead. I returned it to him later that week at the place with the sweet potato pancakes.
That was almost two years ago. When I ask him about the pancakes now, he says he prefers savory breakfast over sweet. Living with another person, you learn that so much of what you thought you knew about him is actually untrue. This is one of the risks of living together that I had not considered. Carson says that either way, we need to give living together a chance. That is part of evolution. Without evolution, there is only extinction. Sometimes I look at him and wonder what I would do if he died. If I died, I know what he would do. He would spend a few weeks or months climbing mountains, and on top of the mountains, he would write poems for me. Eventually, he would become a celebrated poet with a heartbreaking history. This would be its own happy ending. But if Carson died, I would be stranded. This is unfair, and I am entirely to blame. 6 • FICTION
One of the things you have to prepare for when you move into a small space with someone you love is the possibility—or rather, certainty—that you will fight. Here are some of the things you might fight about: closet space, washing dishes, things you think you saw that resembled mice but you can’t be sure if you really saw them, fruit flies, milk expiration dates, curtains versus blinds, headache remedies, and the point at which a healthy interest in neighbors becomes nosiness or paranoia. Carson and I could have fought about any one of those things, but we have worked through this by using I statements, compromise, and negative feedback loops that de-escalate emotional tension in a positive way. What we fight about is more difficult to define. It springs up from somewhere unknown and discolors everything that has come before. “Are we only pretending to be nice?” I ask. “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he says. “We don’t have time for this. We’re supposed to be there at seven.” I put on one shoe but pause in front of the other. “If you don’t want me to go, you shouldn’t feel the need to invite me.”
7 • FICTION
“Do you not want to go?” he asks, and then continues, “Why wouldn’t you want to go? The party’s on a boat.” Carson is thinking about balloons and beers and a boatful of friends, but I am thinking about seasickness and silent looks and the lack of walls and exits. “Why don’t you want to go?” he asks. We are entering a positive feedback loop, which aggravates emotional distress in a negative way so that emotions grow further distressed. I kick the shoe off my foot. “I just want to be with people who love me before they love you.” “My friends do love you.” “But they love you more.” “So what? They’ve known me longer.” “I just want someone who’s on my side,” I say. He crosses his arms. “Since when are we picking sides?” “I don’t know,” I say, confused because suddenly we are standing on opposite sides. “Why would we need to pick sides?” I think of an earthquake, a plague, a kickball game. At that point, everyone would need to pick sides. Who would pick me to be on their side, if the earth cracked open beneath my feet? “Now I don’t want to go anymore, either.” Carson sits down on the old wooden chest we use as a chair. “It won’t be any fun.” Out of contrition, I say, “No, you should go. I’ll be fine here. I don’t really like boats. It’s nothing personal. I just didn’t grow up near a body of water.” But it is getting late, and the boat is leaving the dock at seven. Carson does not go to his boat party. He goes for a walk instead, and he does not invite me to come along. I resolve not to dwell on this and, instead, move the wooden chest around the room so that I can stand on it as I spray the air plants with water. The correct term for this is misting. The air plants do not need soil or water to survive, only a delicate misting, every once in a while. It seems cruel to deny them their natural thirst, but they are not like other plants. They have learned another way to subsist.
8 • FICTION
“We have sex until we are weightless, two small bodies locked together inside a vast galaxy.”
m o n l e vc h e n kova
Mirrored Hand, 2014
9 • FICTION
When Carson comes back, he brings a ladder. “Someone was just going to throw this away,” he says. We move the ladder to the middle of the room and stand it up like an inverted V. There are five metal rungs, and after I climb them I sit at the top and reach up my hands to touch the rough swatches of white paint on our ceiling. From here, I can spray the air plants without craning my neck and see each crinkly leaf on the ferns. Carson has a turn as well. He is taller and the fit is tighter, but he sits with his back straight and examines the walls. The next day, he brings home long planks of wood, which he paints dark brown. He nails metal supports high up on the walls as he waits for the paint to dry. Then he lays the wood over the supports and secures them into place. “Now we need some books,” he says when he is done. It is almost midnight, so we wait to get the books. We admire our bookshelves from our mattress, which sits on the ground, maximizing our distance from the shelves. “I feel like we’re ants,” I whisper into his neck. “Are ants super quiet?” he whispers back to me. “They’re the quietest.” He rolls up over me and shouts in my face, “Maybe we’re astronauts. Who have to yell across space.” In outer space, astronauts are as small as ants. Perhaps even smaller. I swing him back down so that I am on top. “Houston, do you copy?” “Roger that.” He slides two fingers into my boxer shorts. “Have
10 • FICTION
you ever wondered how astronauts have sex?” “That’s what I would do if I were in outer space. I would have sex with you.” He turns serious. “Are you sad about your books? You should have books, if you want books. You shouldn’t change for me.” I answer with a kiss. “Are you sad you missed the boat on your boat party?” “No, because I found a ladder.” I kiss his neck next. “Do you want to know how astronauts have sex?” I pull the blanket tightly over us, to keep us strapped together. I press myself as closely to him as possible. “Don’t let go or I’ll float away.” We have sex until we are weightless, two small bodies locked together inside a vast galaxy. We flail against gravity, but we hang on to each other. Above us, six green planets sway in their glass orbs. A gentle susurration rises from the corner, and a shower of plaster falls onto the ground like bits of star and moon dust.
It turns out a ladder is exactly what our home needs. Although standing the ladder up can take quite a bit of space, this is well worth having another level. I sew a small red cushion and strap it to the top step. Now we have a single-occupancy loft. This is perfect for getting away from each other. It is a simple way of telling the other person you need to be alone without having to verbalize it. The high altitude also offers a peaceful location for clearing your head and seeing things from a different perspective. Plus, when we are done with it, we can easily fold the ladder up and tuck it away. In its sedentary state, the ladder makes a convenient place for laying wet clothes out to dry. I am slowly filling up the bookshelves with books. At the library, they sell old books from fifty cents to two dollars. Some people also bring in books to donate, and those books are free. I go to the library to work on job applications, and each time I submit an application, I select one book to purchase or take. My favorite picks so far have been Recipes to Feed Your Growing Family, Washington Trees and
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Shrubs, and The Collector’s Gallery of NASA Photographs. All three of these feature faded, full-page photographs, and the last one shows early astronauts suited up for travel, as well as red planets lost in swirling constellations. Sometimes I like to sit on the ladder-loft next to one of the ferns and flip through the books. I think spending more time with them will help them lose their musty library smell so that they can adopt a new smell that is more similar to the smell of my books. If I see a nice photograph I shout to Carson, and he jumps up onto the second rung to take a good look. Then he leaves me alone again. Carson already has two jobs but he is looking for another, because neither of the jobs is as fulfilling as a job could be. “I just want us to be as happy as we possibly can,” he says. But happiness means different things to different people. “We just have to try to find our own happiness.” Carson works very hard to be happy. He won’t stop looking for jobs until he finds something that will teach him about people and inspire him to write poetry. Back in Iowa, I tutored at the university’s writing center and assisted a professor with his Romantic literature class. I would like to find another tutoring job, but I wouldn’t mind a different job, either. I wouldn’t mind waitressing or answering phones or selling shoes. Possibly, I could do better than that, but there aren’t many jobs for masters of English literature. At the library, Ellen is looking for work in marketing and Maurice wants a job where he can lift boxes and not talk to people. Maurice is not good with computers so Ellen and I help him check his email and update his résumé. Later, Ellen asks me to update her résumé as well. She says I am good at verbs. At home, Carson asks if I am happy, and what would make me happier. I try to think of the verbs, but they skip away from me. I am left only with “want.” But “want” is a verb that demands a direct object and I don’t know what my direct object is. “I am happy,” I say. “I have everything I want.” “But you can have more,” he says. Sometimes what I want is less. I want nothing but this bed, and a few books, so we can lie down together and look at photo-
12 • FICTION
m o n l e vc h e n kova
Austrian Alps, 2014
13 • FICTION
graphs. “Look,” I say, pointing. “Here’s a recipe for of bananas baked with ham. This is what people were eating in the seventies.” “I just want you to be happy,” he says. I do all the things that will show him I am happy. I make recipes for a growing family in the 1970s, as well as recipes from other cookbooks I have brought home. I have collections of meals from a Spanish castle, a Vietnamese village, and a Japanese TV chef. Cilantro on my fingers becomes my new favorite scent. I keep the house clean and the bed made and the bright side on my face. When plaster falls from the ceiling, I sweep the floor and throw out the debris. At the library, Ellen asks me what my five-year plan is. I ask her how one goes about making a five-year plan. “You have to start with a vision,” she says, “of where you want to be in five years. That’s your objective. Then, you decide what you will do during each year to help you meet your objective. Those are your goals. They should be small, measurable, and achievable. And you should put them on a spreadsheet.” “If you know a goal is achievable, does that still count as a goal?” “Knowing that something is achievable is very different from achieving it.” This is true, and we think about this quietly. Maurice throws a pencil at us from the other side of the table. It clatters against the fake wood laminate. “Hey, dimwits. How about a little focus?” Although Ellen and Maurice started out strangers, they are becoming more and more beautiful. Ellen has a frail face and gray hair, but her curls are tight and vibrant. She has dyed a lock of it bright blue and the neon streak hangs over her right ear. Maurice is bulky with a large head that sinks down into his chest. He looks like he has no neck. At first he is intimidating, but now I am charmed by his smile, which brings out two deep dimples in the middle of his cheeks. His size has made him shy and embarrassed but, since we are his friends, he is not afraid to throw pencils at us to keep us focused.
14 • FICTION
I invite Carson to come to the library and work with us, on one of the afternoons he is not at a job. I immediately regret doing so, but it is too late to take it back. When he sits with us, the whole dynamic changes. Ellen keeps her lips pursed and her face stern. Maurice is silent and avoids eye contact. I wish that he had not chosen today to wear a dirty T-shirt. He smells like yesterday’s sweat. Carson makes small talk and asks about our interests and daily schedules, but we all know that he is not like the rest of us. Ellen has added feathers to her hair. Three brown, spotted feathers dangle from the lock of blue hair along with several earthen beads. I wonder if Carson thinks this is tacky. I wonder if I would appreciate the feathers more if he were not sitting next to me. Sometimes you see your friends as beautiful because you love them, but no one is really beautiful. It is only loving them that makes them so. Other times you look again and see what the rest of the world must see. And then you are forced to make excuses for them. I wonder what excuses Carson has made for me. When he tells me I am beautiful, I want to ask for the specifics and the comparison over time. Have my freckles aged? Has my cellulite spread? Have I said anything to expose a lack of knowledge or a simple mind? No one is beautiful always. Sitting next to his friends at pub trivia, at dinner parties, at taprooms, I feel as big and embarrassed as Maurice. I forget that Maurice has a lovely and affecting smile. When Carson suggests we have a housewarming party, with a guessing game as to how many people will fit inside our home, all I can imagine is a crowd of strangers breathing our air, until there is no more left for the two of us. I feel sick in my stomach. “Why can’t we invite Ellen and Maurice?” I say, after he lists some of the people who will come. “Of course we can invite them,” he says. “I just didn’t think this was the kind of thing they’d enjoy.” “Everyone enjoys a party,” I say, even though I know that Ellen and Maurice would not enjoy such a thing and I don’t actually want them to come.
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“Okay, then. Let’s invite them,” he says, and so we do. For the special occasion of our first party, we string Christmas lights up along our ladder and stand it up in the back of the room near the oven and the fridge, not far from the crack where the plaster falls. Carson cleans and folds up our bed, leaning the mattress against the wall. I make several recipes from the 1970s, including a Watergate salad, which is a mixture of crushed pineapple, pistachio Jell-O, marshmallows and whipped cream. There are also pecans sprinkled on top. Ellen is the first to arrive. For the party, she has added more feathers to her hair. On the right side, they are small and brown and neat, much like the original three. On the left are two big black feathers that look like they have seen rough winds. The white rachises are bare at some points. I hope that no one else will see that she picked the feathers off the street. “I brought you an evil eye,” she says, holding up her token, “to ward off bad spirits.” The evil eye is a disc of transparent blue plastic, on top of which is a watery white circle with another oval of black felt inside. “I made it myself,” Ellen says. “It’s beautiful,” Carson says. “Welcome.” As the party picks up, I stick close to Ellen and Maurice like we are on our own planet, with a magnetic force that repels intruders. The rest of the party orbits around us. Someone laughs at the case of beer that Maurice has brought, because it is of low quality or because it has been linked to an unfavorable subculture through corporate marketing strategy. I try to make him feel better but I don’t know how. “I don’t think people like my salad, either,” I say, but neither of them responds. Carson steps in instead, picking up the case of beer. “This is just what we need,” he says. He places two cups of beer on the wooden chest and drags it out so it is across from the ladder. Then he places two more cups on the second step of the ladder, and pulls out three Ping-Pong balls from a drawer. Ellen sets down her drink and ruffles the feathers inside her hair. “This is my favorite game.”
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It is so crowded that while four people are playing, the rest of us have to stand packed against the walls. Everyone takes turns playing but Ellen is the only one who is undefeatable, so she stays in the game all night. Carson’s friends tell her that she is incredible, that they have never met anyone like her, that they adore her unique hairstyle. When it is Maurice’s turn, they cheer for him, too. They call him Big Mo and he smiles his lovely smile. Carson hugs me from behind. “We did a good party, didn’t we? Want to count how many people we fit?” But I slide away because I don’t want him to touch me. “Aren’t you having fun?” he asks. “Yeah,” I say, and I try to smile. “Are you okay?” “Uh huh.” I feel like he has betrayed me and stolen from me, even though I know that nothing had been mine to steal. I move away from him and congratulate Maurice on his good game. Later, there is talk of going to a bar. Ellen says she knows a place with shuffleboard, and everyone is enamored with the idea of shuffleboard. “Do you think you’ll go out, too?” I ask Maurice. He shuffles from foot to foot. “I don’t know. Maybe.” “I don’t know if I’ll go out,” I say to Carson. “I might just stay here.” “What’s wrong?” he asks. His eyes are pleading. I shrug. “I would rather be by myself.” “Did I do something?” I am quiet a moment too long. “Tell me what’s wrong.” “It’s nothing. I just like being alone sometimes.” What I have said is too much. As a poet, Carson can be very sensitive. But I am tired of caring about this. “Why do you always choose to be sad,” he asks, “when you could choose to be happy?” “I’m not choosing anything.” He turns away from me and I can see him giving up. “I’m going to go out,” he says.
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“That’s fine.” Ellen walks by surrounded by new friends and she does not look in my direction. Maurice tries to tag after her, but he slows down as the rest of the group speeds up. I think about asking Carson to stay, but I don’t. I don’t even say good night. Maurice sticks close to the wall and hugs his elbows over his chest, as if to make himself smaller. “Maybe I could help you clean up?” “That’s okay,” I say. “I’m pretty tired, actually.” His back looks lonely when he lumbers off, but I am not sorry to see him go. After the noise of the party, the room is quieter than ever before. The floor and windowsills are littered with empty cups and bottles, and the space echoes like an abandoned wreck. I feel polluted. I dump the trash into a large plastic bag, but the atmosphere is stained by new smells and events. I mop the floor and try to wipe everything away. Mopping makes me tired, but nothing more. I lie in bed with the lights on, not sure if I will sleep. Our little room seems larger than ever before, a vast and cold galaxy, and I shrink smaller than an ant. The air plants glow inside their crystal balls and I count them over and over.
Anik a Steppe
D. Eric Parkison
2014
Three Poems
19
The Boy You’ve seen the boy on the bus Whose brothers beat him? Seen him rock forward and back, Eyes tracing the roadmap of cracks In the backs of the stiff leather seats? Where he wasn’t joined, His hands rubbed his skinny thighs, Chin to chest, he whispered into his lap?
20 • POETRY
Where he is today: listen to wind Roll over the bus, catch in windows. I was young when I burned a bee’s nest, Shot a BB through the wall, Part flesh, part ashy paper. I was young when I looked away from the boy, Rested my head against the window on the bus, and felt The rattling diesel babble through it all. Think, though, of a bee-less world: Somber faces among blossomless stalks, Limbs ascending, unburdened, In breathtaking, useless rows.
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Ro b b i e B r a n n i g a n
2014
Family Dinner
22 • POETRY
The wife could not let the painting hang On the living room wall. Flat, acidy river poorly Rendered, poorly imagined, framed Before they’d left their trailer at the airfield, ugly And ugly, and bad. Behind the creamy Vinyl siding in the new place, a nest Of wasps seized and buzzed like an idling engine all day, All night. Two birds in the black tin chimney Needed letting out. I’m not tilling the rocky clay For a few yellowed beans scrunched up, scattering In the garden like snubbed-out Cigarette butts, he thought, If even the pumpkins Won’t take, what can I do? Last to arrive, His father twanged a splinter on the dried-out railing Like the tongue of a mouth harp, readjusting The mesh-back hat over his thin hair. Not Today, he thought. His father’s wife offered The drooping aluminum pan of frank and Beans up asking it be Taken off her hands. I’ll Take a little time, he thought, and eat. The out-building shined its palish light, So he remembered being a boy, the way The basketball might pull off to one side, Roll into the cold, dew-moistened grass When it caught a big stone in the dirt driveway just right. Plinking bugs were performing their loopy orbits, Around the porch bulb in their dust-colored bodies. That’s the biggest moth, he thought, That I’ve ever seen.
Anthony Cudahy
T, oil on canvas, 26 x 18 inches, 2014
Noise and Scent Surrounded By the monied people, thanksgiving song Of circular saws biting steps from planks, Heavy scent-flushed blossoms plunking wetly Against the sidewalk, young lovers, And not of it. The air is a river without banks, the world is always flooded, The heavy coin clanks and covers the sewer, the cars Roll over it. And what of it? 23 • POETRY
Subtract I am from later drafts, absence Is all. Of the Eight dreams of hell only two reveal the face Of the inverted snake, hanging Like a microphone cable: you Speak into him and he regurgitates An answer. Interior. Bloodsong.
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Kayla Krut Extremely Pleasant with Doors Open
From two backyards off, running water. Here, rose on a breeze and nasturtium splinters orange sparks in sunlight Inside cornbread stiffens in its glass box and sugar stirs dim coffee and gladiolas hug the red pressure of air around their vase. I note after the fact how even the gentle because dull are influenced by the popular ambiguous propositional style, and so a genius template breeds bad reverb—out back, air still enough for flies to drag their own willed paths Cats negotiate under the stairwell with wet pelts on cool fern-colored pavement
29
Thomas Albdorf
Untitled (from Studies for “A Song of Nature“), 2013 Thomas Albdorf
Untitled (from Studies for “A Song of Nature“), 2013 (right)
31
Cal Graves living Forever
i want to live forever not because i fear death; i want to live forever so i can hear all the music if i could live forever and manage to hear all the music i would gladly die happy.
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Ki e r Coo k e S a n d v i k
Tammy Mercure Selections from Immortals “Time in New Orleans flows differently. It is closer to the end of the world as we know it. People are compelled to be the biggest version of themselves while it lasts. The Immortals are present. The city is known for Dionysus, with the revelry of Mardi Gras and the drunkenness of Bourbon Street, and Poseidon is known to wreak havoc. But Artemis, too, makes her presence known, the 504 boys riding their steeds on the city streets, and Hera whispers in our ears, keeping empires alive despite interstates fracturing the city. The past, present, and future shake hands and it is beautiful to see.” —Tammy Mercure
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ta m m y m e rc u r e
Slidell, LA, 2014
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ta m m y m e rc u r e
New Orleans, LA, 2014
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ta m m y m e rc u r e
Angola, LA, 2014
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a rt c r e d i t
art name
ta m m y m e rc u r e
Baton Rouge, LA, 2014
Ja k e Sta n g e l
Field and Stream U2 spy plane pilot, 2012
Colby Halloran
45
Ki e r Coo k e S a n d v i k
2014
Governments have rules. Schools have rules. Families have rules. The rules in my family are: If the pocket doors to the living room are closed, it means the grown-ups are not to be disturbed. If you have an emergency, knock before you pull apart the pocket doors. An emergency is not baked potatoes exploding in the oven. An emergency is Marky getting hit by a car, or the pressure cooker lid flying off. Two bites are required of every item on your plate. A bite is not one pea or one carrot. A bite is a forkful or a spoonful. Never take the food on your plate for granted. Somebody worked hard to grow the food and somebody worked hard to pay for the food and somebody worked hard to prepare the food. There is not an endless supply of food all over this world. Your napkin ring is not a toy. If you must go to the lavatory during dinner, quietly excuse 47
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Lo u i s F r a t i n o
Fall Party, 2014
yourself. Nobody needs to know where you’re going. Just let the candles drip. Sit up straight. At Mother’s boarding school there were nails in the back of her dining room chair. Be grateful your chair does not have nails. The hand not holding the fork stays in your lap. When you’ve finished eating, put your knife and fork in the four o’clock position. Don’t push your plate forward like a convict. Don’t interrupt. Don’t talk with your mouth full. If you have a story to tell, tell it briefly. When old people enter the room, stand up and wait to be introduced. When you shake someone’s hand, shake firmly. If their hand is already shaking, do not giggle. They could have Parkinson’s. Writing your thank-you note is not enough. You have to address the envelope, put a stamp on it, and take it to the mailbox on the corner. Do not read letters on someone else’s desk. Do not eavesdrop. Respect absolutely every person on this earth. If you pick up the telephone and someone is talking on the extension, interrupt immediately and say “excuse me for interrupting.” Then hang up. Which is what I have every intention of doing, but in the second it takes to get used to the idea that interrupting is allowed, I hear my father say “honey” and a woman with a deep voice say “love.” Then a cupboard door shuts. I don’t hear what they say next because I have just broken the rule about eavesdropping and am burning with shame and hang up without saying excuse me. I thought my father was in the basement but there’s no phone in the basement so he must be in the kitchen.
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He calls Mother “Your Mother.” He calls my sister “Toots” and he calls me “Sweetheart” or, sometimes, “Tough Cookie.” He calls Marky “Pooch.” So who is “Honey”? When Mother asked me to go with her to the farmer’s market, I said I wanted to help my father in the basement, but when I went down to his workroom he was just puttering, not building anything, so I came upstairs to do my homework. Then I realized I didn’t have this week’s math assignment, so I went to the phone in the upstairs hall to call Molly because she wrote it in her notebook. Our phone doesn’t have that little button that lights up when the phone is in use, although maybe we should get one of those phones so this doesn’t happen again, because there is no way I could have known my father was about to say “honey” and some deep-voiced woman was about to say “love.” Then a closet door shut. No, it was not a closet door; it was a cupboard door. Was the cupboard that
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closed in the woman’s house? What house would that be? What woman? He seemed fine last weekend. It was a nice fall day. A perfect day, he said, for putting up the storm windows. I stay indoors and shout out the numbers on each window while he finds the matching storm window on the grass. Last year I yelled a “6” when I should have yelled a “9” so he had to carry the “6” window all the way back down the ladder, but this year I didn’t make any mistakes. Mother’s job is to wash the storm windows with the hose and dry them with a clean rag. We all did our jobs. I have to see my father. I have to look at him straight. We are straight lookers in this family. He says that all the time: in this family we look straight. I never knew what he meant by that, but now I think it means you look at the person right away. You don’t wait. There he is, standing at the sink, sawdust in his hair, a cigarette on the windowsill, the long ash about to fall into the sink. You would think it was a normal Saturday and he had just come up from the basement. You would think all he had on his mind was the fireplace in the living room. He told us at breakfast all about the fireplace project. We can still have fires, he said, but the old German tiles around the firebox will be covered up. He’s building a paneled box around the fireplace from floor-to-ceiling. The firebox will not be in the center, but to the left and the Renoir will hang on the paneling to the right. This is the modern look—off-center. I can’t picture it. Where will Mother put her flowers and candles without a mantel? The folding ruler in his back pocket means he is on his way to the living room to take more measurements, which means he will have to pass
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Lo u i s F r a t i n o
Disaster After Jesse Wong’s Kitchen, 2014
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me standing here in the doorway. I can either go back upstairs or I can stand here wondering is that long ash ever going to fall off his cigarette? “Sweetheart?” He turns the faucet off hard because it still drips. “What do you need?” He smiles his normal Saturday smile, a little more relaxed than a weekday smile. Need? He never asked me that before, but he’s right; sometimes I need help with my science report or I need him to sharpen my ice skates. “What? No questions?” He’s right about questions, too. I ask a lot of questions in school and at home. Well, my home question now is: did he hear the click when I put down the receiver and who is Honey? He looks at me straight, like every day we ever lived. He has always looked at me straight. And he has always talked straight. Now he looks straight, but he isn’t straight. He has crossed the line. It might be a figure of speech, but I know what Mother means now. You step over and you can’t step back. “Okay,” he says, picking up his cigarette, the ash still not falling, not falling, amazing—until he flicks it in the sink. Then he walks towards me. I can’t move. Then he turns around and walks towards the back hall just as Mother drives up the driveway. By the time she comes through the back door, he is halfway down the basement stairs and I am turned around because she will take one look at my face and start asking questions. Marky is dozing in the living room in front of the window seat. I half expect his nose will be dry and we will have to take him to Dr. Hanawalt, so many things are wrong in our family now. I’m not going out to the kitchen. I am going to stay right here with Marky and look at this straight. When my father isn’t home, I imagine him driving on highways with the sun in his eyes, having lunch at lunch counters in Toledo and Detroit, talking to waitresses, taking mints from the bowl by the cashier, meeting customers in offices in tall buildings. When he goes to the lumberyard I go with him, and he takes me to the
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camera store and the gas station. When he’s not working he’s home, doing his projects, fixing things, going up and down the basement stairs, out to the garage, sitting on the porch with Mother, reading the Ann Arbor News, tying his bow tie in the bathroom mirror, stirring sugar in his coffee. He is not one of those out-of-town fathers. But now he has a secret life. Say it straight: my father has a girlfriend. “Grilled cheese?” She always finds me. “Dear?” Mother is tall. She has wavy gray hair, dark circles under her eyes, a pointy nose, and she’s wearing the same brown sweater. Maybe he is sick of that sweater. “Tomato soup?” Mother’s voice is high, not low. “Dear?” I always thought they slept in different bedrooms because he snored, or she snored, but I was wrong about that, too. Nobody snores. Marky thumps his tail. “Shall we take Marky for a ride?” Is she crazy? Marky hates to go in the car. “You’re absolutely right,” she laughs. “I’m losing my mind!” So am I. So is my father. We are all losing our minds. “Help Marky up.” We have to hug his belly then lift gently. “Has he been out since I left?” “No.” “Then let him out, please. I don’t want any more tinkles in the house.” Marky doesn’t run to the fence anymore and he doesn’t lift his leg. He just stands on the grass, spreads his legs, and pees like a girl. Mother is standing in front of the sink, letting water run over her hands when I come inside. She doesn’t show me her vegetables or mention the pie she got at the market. She turns off the faucet, doesn’t notice it dripping, and doesn’t dry her hands on the
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dishtowel. She pushes her hair behind her ear and turns around, water running down her arm. I think she is going to call for Marky to come back inside, but she keeps right on going down the basement stairs. We don’t call him for lunch until its ready. Lunch is not ready. “I don’t know what’s gotten into everybody,” says Mother coming back up the basement stairs. “Your father is not hungry and you’ve got your lost-on-stage look. Give Marky two Milk Bones when he comes in. He’s the only creature in this family I recognize today.” I don’t know why she forgot Marky hates going for a ride, but she looks normal, cranking the can opener around the soup can, smiling her smile for babies and small animals. “Tornado dreams last night, my darling daughter? Did you eat that Hershey bar?” Not tornados. This, right now, us. Mother making lunch in the kitchen and my father, who now has a girlfriend, hiding in the basement.
Tonight I don’t have a brownie for dessert, but the tornado dream comes anyway. I am too old to wake up my father and Mother’s right; there is no reason I cannot warm my own milk. The tornado could be in the front yard, so I cover my eyes when I get to the landing. Then I trip over Marky. He yelps. Marky never sleeps on the landing. Why isn’t he in my father’s room, in the green chair? Maybe I don’t need warm milk. Maybe I should go back to bed. I am about to turn around, but Marky heads down the stairs. I run after him, and turn him at the bottom so he doesn’t bang into the wall. Walking through the dining room I feel better. It’s quiet, no sound of a train, no trees bent over outside. The kitchen isn’t even dark because somebody left the stove light on. I get the milk from the icebox and the glass from the cupboard. I turn on the stove and take the milk pan with the red rim off the
“Walking through the dining room I feel better. It’s quiet, no sound of a train, no trees bent over outside.” When I come down to the kitchen in the morning there is my father in a clean white shirt and blue-and-gray striped bow tie, standing by the stove stirring sugar in his coffee. He cut his chin shaving. Marky’s water bowl is full. Mother is standing at the sink where Tizzy’s pan is soaking, no questions asked about the mess I made on the stove.
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hook. Mother calls this pan “Tizzy’s pan” because my grandmother’s cook, Tizbelle, used to warm milk for Mother in this pan when Mother was a little girl. Mother is right about rituals. Using the same pan Tizzy used is comforting. Staring at the bank calendar I realize this is October, not June, July, or August, not tornado season. Why didn’t I think of that? Then Marky barks and there is a loud crash. Before I can scream Marky stops barking because leaning against the wall in the breakfast room, in his white shirt, bow tie undone, the window open, cold air coming in, is my rumpled father. He kicks Marky’s water bowl, doesn’t see the puddle, doesn’t close the window, doesn’t even see me or Marky, just turns towards the back hall, says a few swear words, unhooks the chain on the back door, says a few more swear words, and goes up the back stairs. Did my father just climb through the window in the breakfast room? The clock on the stove says 3:25. Why was the chain on the back door? Marky looks at me with his cataract eyes. The milk boils over.
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“I fed Marky,” she says, “and I let him out.” My father takes his coffee to the breakfast room. When I sit down beside him he nods as if I just said something we agreed on. Mother sets a plate of cinnamon toast in front of me and sets another plate of plain buttered toast on the table. Who is having all this toast? My father, who never has toast, eats two pieces. Then he gulps down his coffee, makes a face because he burned his tongue, gets up. Mother gives the last piece of toast to Marky. She never did that before. Then my father goes to the lavatory. When he comes back, the speck of toilet paper on his chin is gone, a tiny red dot where the blood dried. I look at Mother. She is not looking at him, she is not asking him anything. He puts on his jacket, picks up his briefcase, says something I don’t hear, and goes out the back door, no towns mentioned, no have a nice day. He doesn’t even turn off the light in the back hall, which must have been on all night. He walks to his car, puts his briefcase in the back seat and tosses in his hat, closes the door, and gets in the front seat. Then he backs out the driveway. Mother scrubs out Tizzy’s milk pan with the pink SOS pad. She forgets to turn off the faucet. All these things he is so strict about—not leaving lights on, not letting the water run, not giving Marky scraps—totally ignored.
We are in a new phase. I don’t do my homework at the kitchen table anymore; I go upstairs to my room. Mother writes letters at her desk, but there are a few nights every week when my father goes out and she listens to trumpet music on the record player and plays solitaire. She pulls the coffee table up to the horsehair sofa. There is not enough room on that table to play solitaire and drink and smoke, but somehow her martini glass and ashtray never fall off. Tonight, when I stand in the doorway, not asking questions, she snaps down a card and says, “Your father has gone out for a spin in this dreadful weather.” When I boldly ask where to, she doesn’t even lift an eyebrow, but snaps down another card and says, as if
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we are friends, “How should I know? I’m the last to know.” That I just turn the record over and go upstairs is what it’s like now—anything to do with my father going out, keep your mouth shut. A little bit later I hear cupboards slamming in the kitchen. It’s still raining and he’s still not home. Then I hear a loud thud and Marky yelping. When I get to the landing, Marky is under the front hall. A saucepan lands in front of the sideboard. How could she do that? That’s Marky’s favorite spot! A frying pan comes next. Then Tizzy’s pan. Roasting pan. Meatloaf pan. Coffee pot. Last time she picked the pots up. Not tonight. She leaves them on the carpet. He’s home. They start yelling in the kitchen. “One of these days, I’d like to meet your girlfriend. Why don’t you invite her for a drink?” “Don’t be ridiculous. You’re welcome to come. Sidney asked why you never come.” “I don’t recall receiving an invitation. I wonder why that is?” “And I wonder why all our friends have to be members of the goddamned faculty. What do you want? A card in the mail? Engraved?” “Does Dr. Hildebrandt teach at the medical school?’ “He does research and sees patients.” “Research on what?” “Blood pressure.” “I wonder how his blood pressure is these days.” A few days later another fight, this time in the living room. “I’ve been invited to go up north to their fishing camp.” “When might that be?” “Whenever they go up north. I don’t know, June? It’s on the Au Sable River.” “And who will be going to the fishing camp on the Au Sable River in June?” “Sidney’s fishing buddies. Christ Almighty! Can’t a man have a hobby? You’re the one who gave me a tackle box for my birthday. And I have a client who makes fishing tackle!” He’s right about that. She goes quiet. Finally, she says, “And what about Gwen?”
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“She’s going, too.” “I see.” “It’s her father’s fishing camp for Christ’s sake and somebody’s got to cook!” So that’s who Honey is: the wife of my father’s cardiologist. How exactly Gwen Hildebrandt made her entrance—with a blouse, a remark, a gutted fish—I will never know. My father still goes to work and he hasn’t moved into an apartment, but he’s forgotten all about the cartoon he drew on the Christmas box we mailed to his brother. Mother was the tall lady in the skirt and high heels with wavy gray hair; he was the bald man in trousers in the top hat and bow tie; Kate was the girl in the
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triangular skirt, her head turned to the side to show her red ponytail; I was the shorter girl with curly brown hair holding the leash pulled out to the side; and Marky looked as if he’d been, for once in his life, to the dog grooming parlor. We are not that family anymore. Molly says we are, too, that family. She says the night my father climbed through the window he was trying to get back to us and he hasn’t moved into an apartment like Carolyn Cranmore’s father. I like Molly, but her father hasn’t changed and he’s on the faculty and he stays home every night. Besides, I told her, when my father climbed through the window he was not glad to see Marky or me. He was not even ashamed. I remember it perfectly. He said a few Lo u i s F r a t i n o
Mom and Dad in Herring Bay, 2014
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swear words and turned towards the back hall, took the chain off the back door and climbed the back stairs. He used to say houses don’t need two sets of stairs, and Mother would say you do if you have servants, to which he said he had no intention of hiring servants who needed back stairs. Well, he’s been making good use of those back stairs lately. We have two kinds of days in our family now: a normal day when he goes to work and stays home at night and he’s all ours, or a day with the Hildebrandt’s at the end of it and no telling at breakfast or at dinner which day it’s going to turn out to be and no rules for what to do about it. The old fireplace is covered up now, and the Renoir is off-center. His favorite magazine used to be LIFE. Now it’s Field and Stream. When he goes for a spin Mother plays solitaire and listens to trumpet music, but she doesn’t throw pots and pans or yell. She has gone quiet. Even when I knocked her best sherry glass off the shelf in the pantry, she only let out a little gasp. Some special person had given it to her so I said I was very sorry, but all she said was, “You’ve forgotten the rule.” “What rule?” “Cherish people, not things.” I’m quite sure we never had that rule, but it doesn’t matter. I never cherished things and I can’t cherish people in the way she means. Animals are all that’s left. Besides, I’m making my own rules now.
Dav i d Lu r a s c h i
Seven Cans Of Goya On Pete’s Foot, 2012
Emma Furman Saccades There is no happy childhood. You just grow away. Stars surface on still water. All the “I love you”s. There’s a parking lot at the bottom of this canyon. Someone saying “I could have talked to a wall that night.” Someone saying “You’re an ass. A total ass.” At the same time every night, the street lights turn on. I know I am approaching the end of my depth, when a horse, a literal horse, trots out from the dark in photographic reality.
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Li n d s a y d ’ A d d a t o Li n d s a y d ’ A d d a t o
Lone Marshmallow, 2015 Hot Dogs in the Dark, 2015
Rya n O s k i n
Two Poems Cezanne’s Landscape, 2013
Soren Bliefnick
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Curio Storage
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The same way that when we form a thought we pull the indiscriminate red-knobbed levers of the thousands of slot machines in the casino, we’re immobilized as we scan without conscious effort the millions of possible symbols we know and their combinations, reeling to the clamor of their own ill-tended and faux-gilded machine parts like Fortune’s Wheel, they click click clack to a lackluster stop and reveal our thoughts, whose expression is only as rich as the winning or clunky combination we’ve earned, as we have nothing to show for our games of chance but the minted tokens which compose our speech, far removed from the context of their sweeping or rather unimpressive victory (meriting only a shrug of indifferent resignation). In the nanoseconds for which endures this fateful spin that I have never known in speaking, never having spoken, but observed with envy and rancor in others, I entered a space of gray matter very different from the casino. The event horizon I broached revealed the clinically lit, expansive reaches of a curio storage, whose limits I failed to define by the eye unaided. Circular, cherry wood curios, shoulderhigh, on three legs, with a light built in at the top. Curios to the n t h p o w e r. Cu r io s a r r a n g e d i n a g r id , id e nt ic a l , ceaseless. I began a curious tourage among them, peering into each, shadowed by my breathing and their creak under the weight of their own emptiness. Every shelf of every curio, irreproachably clean, no layer of dust in this chamber of the incumulable. Only many numberless spotlights shining down on their exhibitions of tiered blank glass. I gleaned t herein, in t he in f in itesima l ly sma l l elapsement of time thus far, that yester remained beyond my grasp eternally. I, who have never known a yesterthing, was not made to remember, to plumb the falsehood called my self. I was a rag, made not to retain the puke and tears and dust, only to clean them away, make them as if they and nothing ugly or c h a r m i n g or p oi g n a nt a nd ov e r w he l m i n g e v e r happened. I am the absolver of goosef lesh, I knew. And time resumed its indelible course.
Haus: Fort-Da
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But halfway down a hill resides one house All modular, a keep for hearts, and gin, Arising like the crenellations of Some sidestreet fortress. Shored against the bands Marauding in the street, we watch their cries For sex and validation, hop-soaked brains’ Sad ululations. From the terrace fear We spook with clinks of cheers and cigarettes In exhalation: spirit drums and fireWorks shrouding us in prelude, surety, pluck. Inside, among absinthe parisienne Posters, books overflow their case, in soft And hazy light: we incandesce, our lot Abrim with courage they call Dutch. No short Supply, we refestoon with juniper And ginger, blossoms on our cheeks, the mirth Of weekends, weekends, weeknights too; concised, Each night a palimpsest of precedents In this, the durance of our memory. In the room, the revelers come and go, Again, forgetting Michelangelo.
Talena Sanders Body Memory
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Ta l e n a S a n d e r s
2AM in Raleigh, 2011
Ta l e n a S a n d e r s
Buxton, NC, 2011
Ta l e n a S a n d e r s
After William Eggleston, Greensboro, NC,
78 • POETRY
79 • POETRY
Ta l e n a S a n d e r s
Drive-Thru Nails, Greensboro, NC, 2010
80 • POETRY
81 • POETRY
Ta l e n a S a n d e r s
Owen, Kentucky, 2010
82 • POETRY
83 • POETRY
Ta l e n a S a n d e r s
North Carolina State Fair, Raleigh, NC, 2010
Sam Haberman
Steve, Angeles National Forest, 2014
Andrew Cedermark Tritina Against Cho On his bad days God screams into a jar, seals it and sends it hurtling down to earth. Those that don’t shatter are propped on bodies and called heads. Maybe you wondered if bodies were dead how many would fit into jars, or how many bodies would fill the earth with bodies. In dreams now you hunt the earth with twin pistols and fire on sand filled jars when you can’t find any heads or bodies to fill the earth
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Sarah V. Schweig STORIES (II) for Mark
It is your last night on Earth. I am listening to an opera singer from Berlin talk in broken English. It is a party. From a glass tumbler, I am drinking bourbon, and she is asking about my poetry. It is your last night on Earth. I am unaware. The party is sitting down to dinner. We have switched to wine, red and white. The opera singer is a friend of a friend of my lover. He rests his palm on my knee, and I rest my hand on his shoulder. About my poems, they are less and less about emotion, I tell the opera singer. A kind of demonstration of how one idea or image can always follow from the last. Once there was a man, and then there wasn’t, I wrote once, remember? You wrote: I am what is missing. Now the party is full and seated on couches. I drink spirits poured over a single cube of melting ice. Now, about moving, the opera singer is asking advice. It is your last night, I am unaware, and have nothing to tell her. 87
Once there was a man, and then there wasn’t, STORIES went, remember? You advised me to cut the moons from an image of airplanes, taking off, and I took it. I was learning. About moving to New York, the opera singer is asking advice. This morning, it is easier to write of her. Clarity over emotion, remember. Story over sentiment, you taught me. I was learning. It was your last night on Earth, and I am sitting there, drinking spirits poured over a single cube of melting ice. My lover says Tell me when he thinks there’s something wrong, I am learning. On the last night of your life, of which I was unaware, he said nothing, and I was off, living mine, with him, my lover, cupping delicate tumblers of ice, and you were off somewhere between everywhere and nowhere—ice, ice, ice everywhere—Tomorrow, I would learn it. 88 • STORIES
During dinner, and after, all the papers were poised to break, with the dawn, the facts: last night was the last night of his life, the great poet, etcetera. The party is talking visas and sponsors with the opera singer, who speaks in broken English, wanting, wanting, wanting . . . Why do I speak of this? Because it’s easier than saying this morning I woke and hid from the light in the shelter of the broad, living back of my lover, who was sleeping, asking nothing, commanding nothing, loving, loving, loving . . . Clarity over sentiment, remember. I am trying. Last night, the opera singer broke into an aria to demonstrate something. I don’t know what. When she stopped talking, when she stopped wanting, when she stopped moving, her voice was beautiful and clear. Once there was a man, and then there wasn’t, I wrote once, wanting, wanting. This is STORIES (II). It is for you, who are missing. I’ve kept it poised, clear, a promise to you, a tribute. It’s what you taught me. Tell me, my lover says now, and it is simple, old friend. I cover my face with my hands.
A l b e r t o F e i j oo
Untitled 1, from the series Life is for everyone, 2009
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A l b e r t o F e i j oo
Untitled 2, from the series Life is for everyone, 2009
Haley Stephon
Essential Oils Dahlia Bloom, 2014
Carianne King
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A L LY W H I T E
THE PORTRAIT OF
Pricked No. 2, acrylic and collage on paper, 12.75 x 9 inches
BRIGITTE BARDOT AT THE DOCTOR’S OFFICE REMINDED ME OF THERESE, JACK’S EX-GIRLFRIEND. In the picture, Brigitte sat in a dancer’s pose on a spotlit stage, her toes pointed forward, her back arched. Her long, blonde hair hung over her face like a sexy curtain. Dr. Fuller had gone off to look at my X-rays, and I waited for him in the sandy, scuffed room that had seen all sorts of bad news. I wagged my jaw back and forth and it was loose, a stretched piece of gum that rang with red pain. It was the end of junior year, and I was looking forward to spending the summer in Jack’s bedroom, getting some. In pamphlets at the career center I had learned about artsy colleges on farms— places where I could go and be myself. All I had to do was get through another year of high school, another year in these suburbs, a mall-studded belt that squeezed the nation’s capital. I was planning 95
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on floating through my classes, and then spending all of my extracurricular hours at Jack’s house, which was on a farm, a place where I liked being more than home. There I was treated to home-cooked meals prepared with vegetables fresh from the plots down the hill. The Larkins lived far enough from the highway that when I looked at the sky from their porch at night, I could actually see stars. When I called my mother to tell her about my jaw, she went on for a while about her boss Lonnie’s difficult travel arrangements— three hotels, three nights!—and how she couldn’t get the people at the Sunset Express to call her back. When I told her what happened, she said, “I’ll be there as soon as I can. As soon as I finish this payroll.” Her voice caught as if she might cry, and I hung up. My mother wanted life to be more than it was, as if we were characters in a sad story that could move others to tears. She used to channel her passion into the ballads she sang at Shenanigans, a sports bar off Route 50, but since the shopping center was razed in favor of deluxe condominiums, she no longer had an outlet. Dr. Fuller came in smiling, and for a moment I thought he might have good news. “Well!” he said. “I’ve got bad news.” He clipped an X-ray to the light box and pointed at the little sparks shooting into black around my jaw hinge, my ruined cartilage. “You’ll need surgery immediately,” he said. “And six weeks of mandatory sealed rehabilitation.” I asked him what that was, and he said my jaw would be wired shut, that he would wind little metal fibers around my braces. “It’s okay,” he said. “You will still be a beautiful young woman.” I didn’t believe him. Would my jaw be centered, as it was? Or would it hang low and loose? Would I talk funny? I saw myself: slack-jawed and unlovable. Kissing me would be like kissing a dog. When my mother arrived, her face was pink and salt-streaked. “The traffic was god-awful,” she said. “It was backed up for miles and miles. It moved an inch at a time. Literally an inch. I thought I was going to die.” She sat down beside me and looked out the window at the glaring sun. To her, it was raining. “I don’t know how we’re going to get through this,” she continued. “I barely have any vacation days left. There goes Ocean City. There goes summer.”
“I can take care of myself,” I said, slurring. “Don’t worry.” She reached for my hand. “Sweet girl,” she said. Then she asked Dr. Fuller to repeat everything he had just told me.
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In a dim, greenish pre-op room, I considered whether this, my accident, had happened to me for a reason. At school, I was a cocky, prideful pseudo-intellectual who harbored disdain for my classmates. Freshman year I had found a ripped copy of The Stranger by Albert Camus in a pile of books the school library put out next to the trash. “I opened myself to the gentle indifference of the world,” I read. Exactly, I thought. The kids at my school were “sheeple,” to borrow my mother’s word, with their straightened smiles, their grade-grubbing, their high-fives. Our teachers were just proxies for the far-away government executives who wrote our curriculum. They were all just pretending not to know the truth: that all of life leads to death, and there is no real point to anything. From the back of the medi-van, I had looked upon my teammates jogging half-heartedly after the Oakvale Falcons, who were up nine to zero. The Falcons were the best in the league, equipped as they were with tinted sunglasses, cleats with extra grippers on the toe, and a sleek, black touring van. While they munched quinoa bars and veggie platters during halftime, we ate corn products a grade above chicken feed. Our team had won only two games, both against Freelawn, whose numbers were down due to an outbreak of mononucleosis, and, rumor now had it, an outbreak of lesbianism. I didn’t care about our dismal record, though. I joined the team only to get the physical activity certificate that would qualify me for a silver-level diploma, which would look better on my college applications. I had been standing in the backfield zoning out when Coach Hamlin screamed my name and pointed toward a girl with pigtails running in my direction. From the gawky way she handled the ball, I could tell she was a player the Falcons let on the field only when they were far ahead. Sensing a steal, I jogged over to her. She reared up for a long shot and before I could duck, her elbow slammed into
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my jaw. I fell onto the turf, and she ran off without apology. As pain exploded from my cheek I saw her shoot and miss. She ran back upfield with her head hanging low, and her coach yelled, “That’s alright, Hadley. Good spirit, good spirit.” As Coach Hamlin helped me off the field, I could feel the eyes of my teammates on me, their unsmiling compatriot, and instead of applause for my courage there was dreadful silence. “You’re so brave,” said a nurse. She squeezed my arm and I felt myself start to float away on a powerful tide of anesthesia. Then came the blank time. When I awoke, I saw myself in the mirror, the horror of my new metal mouth, and though it hurt, I smiled.
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As per my recovery regimen, I was only allowed to eat liquids: milkshakes that I sucked through the gaps in my teeth, and tomato soup strained to remove chunks. The codeine I took for pain gave me mild psychotropic visions wherein it seemed like the television, my only companion, stretched to fill the room. In the morning, there were the loud, hectic variety shows that cut from interviews with celebrities to news, to demos of “easy pasta meals,” to a zookeeper bringing out an alligator on a leash. Then came hours of delicious drama—paternity tests, sexy teens, and moms who wouldn’t stop partying. Their wrecked lives were a comfort, a ratty shawl I wrapped around my shoulders. My mother convinced Lonnie to let her tap into her future sick and personal days and stay home with me. There wasn’t much I needed, just a smoothie every once in a while, but she tried to help nonetheless, once sitting at the edge of my bed and giving me a pinchy foot massage, and once offering me a grape popsicle she said I could let melt against my mouth. The rest of the time she sat in the living room with the TV on, emailing her friends. A bouquet of carnations arrived and I looked at the card and saw it was addressed to her. Jack texted me. “I miss u sexie,” he wrote. “When can I see u????” I wouldn’t let him come over. My cheeks were swollen up to my eyes. I was thin and pale from my liquid diet, and my hair was slick with grease. I blamed my mother.
Cat Yearning, acrylic and collage on paper, 6 x 7.75 inches
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“My mom says no visitors. What a b.” “Ur mom’s crazy. Companionship is vital to healing!” Before Jack and I got together, he had been seeing Therese, the reigning babe of all babes at our high school. She was the star forward on the soccer team. Her flawless smile hadn’t required braces, and her hair was so thick she could tie a bun around a pencil and it would stay. She exerted a mysterious power over the rest of us. She was known to hawk petty gossip, for example, and had famously stuck a quarter in Neil Klinger’s butt crack, which was always showing because there were no pants that suited his physique. She hurled traffic cones on the lawns of our teachers. The boys adored her. She and Jack dated all through the fall. She, the terror, and he, the sweet soccer goalie who smelled a little like earth, who loved programming games on his graphing calculator. I’d tried to flirt with him in geometry, leaning in close so he could smell the strawberry body splash I’d applied that morning, but for the months he was with Therese I was invisible. It was only after she expended him, as she eventually did all of her boyfriends, that Jack invited me to see Xtreme Speed 2, held my sweaty hand, and told me I was the “apple of his eyeball.” From my spot in bed, I watched through the window as summer bloomed. As the heat intensified, so did the sunlight, which seemed to thicken into the color of pollen. Then there were the long evenings, dusky pink that lasted for hours, until dark blue became total shadow. Before a thunderstorm, the light was always sickly green. Over the days, I felt myself grow weaker, deprived as I was of solid food. Under the fluorescent bathroom light, my skin was the color of old newspaper. I dreamed of eating—pizza, spaghetti, potato chips—and filling out again. One afternoon, my mother brought me a hot dog smoothie. I thought it was some kind of chocolate-strawberry creation, but then I saw the curdled bits floating around. “From scratch,” she said, setting it on my nightstand. I looked at her. “What?” she said. “You need protein.” “Nothing,” I said. “Thanks.”
I went to the bathroom and poured it down the drain, but it wouldn’t go. I ran some water until it went away.
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Jack asked multiple times if he could come over, and each time I declined. His efforts at showing care dashed, he texted less, only “G’night!” or just a winky face with its tongue sticking out. I knew he was busy with soccer training camp every day. I knew that his practices were at the same time as the women’s team, that Therese was there. One day he wrote, “My mom wants to know if you want to come over for dinner. She’ll make soup.” I loved to sit at the edge of Mrs. Larkin’s cutting board while she made dinner, to watch her slice farm tomatoes that were plumper and redder than any I’d ever seen. She ran a health and wellness center, and she’d tell me about her clients, who were all crazy and repressed because their lives had too many rules. She had taught me, as I was just then beginning to see, that there was a way of living that was smart and healthy. At the thought of the thick, herbed soup she would make, my stomach growled. I wandered down to the living room, where I found my mother tapping on her laptop. She had on a faded leopard-print nightgown and flip-flops she wore around the house like slippers. The television was on, but she wasn’t watching. It was America, You Got This. My mother had said that everyone who tried out on the show was “talentless and sad.” On screen, a trombonist was playing “Over the Rainbow” while a parakeet danced on his head. My mother looked up from her laptop. “I hate this show,” she said. “Don’t watch it, then,” I said. “I’m not! It’s just on.” The judge on screen gave the trombonist an 8.2. “Can I go to Jack’s for dinner?” “Can’t you tell him to come here?” she said. I shrugged. Whenever Jack came over, my mother barged into my bedroom for reasons that seemed improvised, like did we get any mail today, how about some ice cream, Aretha Franklin is
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doing an interview on TV, don’t you want to see, she’s a legend. I knew she just wanted to make sure we weren’t “doing anything.” “Could you be any more selfish?” she said. “I took off work to spend every single day with you. What if something happened? Do those hippies even believe in hospitals? Or are all of their problems solved with yoga and good vibes?” “Fine,” I said. “Never mind.” The air in my bedroom smelled like my own bad breath. I turned on the television and watched Island Infidelity, a show where they send three couples to a tropical resort and tempt them with sexy singles. “U coming or not?” Jack messaged. “My mom won’t let me,” I wrote. “Ur mom is emotional and selfish. She believes everything u want is a threat to her, which is not fair for u. Sneak out. I’ll come get u.” On television, one of the couples was making out in a hot tub, and I felt a spike of lust shoot through me. “OK,” I said. “Come get me.” When Jack’s white station wagon appeared across the street, it was so expected and so familiar I felt I had planted it with my mind. Under the soft streetlight, Jack was as handsome as ever. He wore his hair combed behind his ears, a t-shirt that clung to his abs, and some baggy shorts. As I crept down the hall, I could hear my mother snoring. Outside, the air was warm and wet, and my refrigerated skin felt cool against it. I ran up to Jack and threw my arms around his neck. With my swollen cheeks, I couldn’t kiss him. I pressed my lips against his face and made a smacking sound with my tongue. “You’re just as beautiful as ever,” he said. My lips curled painfully—I couldn’t help it—and revealed my metal smile. As we drove up Route 50, we fell into pace with the night drivers, people who liked to speed once they were out of the main streets. Jack floored it and I felt my neck tighten. Shopping centers
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with empty lots blurred by, car dealerships with their lights blistering bright, the condos that had replaced Shenanigans. They faded into black woods, out where Jack lived, where there were only large homes tucked into the hills, only the occasional church or gas station attending the roadside. “So, what have you been up to?” I said. “Thinking about you mostly,” he said. He put his hand on my thigh. “Really?” I said. “Why? What else would I be thinking about?” “I don’t know,” I said. “How’s soccer camp?” “It’s been so hot, you wouldn’t believe. Rick Devins fainted. But then he went to the nurse, and he was fine.” “Wow,” I said. “That sucks.” At the entrance to the community where Jack lived was the vegetable stand that sold produce grown on the property. A wooden sign posted at the edge of the driveway read, “Gone Sleepin’.” We drove uphill, where a planned community looked out over the land. At the pinnacle was Jack’s house, a three-story building with a wide porch and lush surrounding trees. Light shined from the kitchen window and, as we pulled in, I could see Mrs. Larkin leaning over the sink, the long braid she always wore dangling in front of her like soft rope. “My mom stayed up to say hi,” Jack said. The kitchen smelled like sweetness and spice. “Who’s this skinny lady?” Mrs. Larkin said, and hugged me tight. “Are you hungry? I made soup because I thought you were coming for dinner.” “Sorry,” I said. “I got held up.” “No sorry,” she said. She went to the stove and ladled some soup into a mug and handed it to me with a straw. “Still hot,” she said. The broth was golden in color, and creamy. I sucked the straw and felt warmth spread from my belly to my limbs. “I can’t imagine what it must be like,” Mrs. Larkin said, “not being able to eat real food. If it were me, I’d go crazy. How are you doing with everything? We’ve missed you.”
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“Okay,” I said. “I’ve just been watching a lot of TV.” “TV,” she said. The living room was framed by bookshelves full of well-worn paperbacks. She went over and browsed, pulled out two books. “Here,” she said. “This one’s about a couple who falls in love in India. Very spiritual. And this one—this is essays about families. This writer, he has a lot of pain, but he’s very funny.” Lately, I hadn’t felt like reading. I had picked up Camus and the words just slid off the page. “Thanks,” I said. “I’ll definitely read them.” “Alright, kids,” Mrs. Larkin said, ruffling Jack’s hair. “I’m going to bed.” “Goodnight, Mom,” Jack said. As Mrs. Larkin’s steps disappeared upstairs, Jack put his arms around me. His hand scraped my stomach under my shirt, and I shivered. “Want to go downstairs?” he said. “Okay,” I said. He leaned down and scooped me into his arms. As we went down the steps, I felt the crown of my head scrape a picture frame hanging on the wall. “Careful,” I said. Jack brought me to his bedroom and laid me down on the bed. I had missed it, the scent of his laundry in piles around the room, his messy desk covered in floppy disks that contained vintage computer games. Jack lay down next to me. He was tan from playing soccer all summer. I touched his hair, and he kissed me, little pecks against my wired mouth. He slipped his hand beneath the waistband of my underwear. “I don’t know,” I whispered. I watched him make a decision to be good. “We don’t have to do anything you don’t want to do,” he said. “Want to watch a movie? I’ve got Xtreme Speed 3.” I looked at myself in the mirror over his desk. My face was swollen. My hair looked colorless and flat. My jaw was off-center, gritted slightly to the right, as if tearing off a piece of jerky. “If you’re worried about your looks, don’t be,” he said. “I’ll love you no matter what.” “No matter what-what?” I said.
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“No matter what, you’ll always be the most beautiful girl I’ve ever seen.” He told me to lie down. He removed my pants, then my underwear. He kissed my hipbones, then he kissed me between my legs. I thought of Therese. Therese, with a horde of boys following her through the halls. Therese in a bikini in a picture on HotRank with a thousand votes. Therese giving Jack and me the mean side-eye when we walked through the halls holding hands. Jack’s flushed look of embarrassment. I sat up, drew my legs together. “It’s okay,” I said. “I wanted to make you feel good,” Jack said. “Don’t worry,” I said. “You did.” Jack came and lay beside me and rested his head on my shoulder. He fell asleep within minutes, tired from playing soccer all day. As I stared up at the ceiling, I thought about college, about how, when I left this place, I could shop at whatever hip boutiques I wanted, not just at the mall. How someday I would get the most amazing haircut. My braces would come off, my skin would clear. I’d meet a guy, and he’d tell me I was really hot. But now that my jaw was weird I didn’t know if it would be possible. I lifted myself from Jack’s arms and went into the family room. On the bookshelf was a stack of board games—Whoops! and Peril— games I always lost to the Larkins, who were good at math and logic. I walked upstairs. In the kitchen, Mrs. Larkin was standing by the window with a cup of tea, looking out on the yard. “Can’t sleep?” she said. “Me neither.” I sat at the kitchen island in the center of the room. There was a dirty cutting board left out from dinner—some onion skins, and the lid of a red pepper. A venus flytrap sat in a small pot in the middle of the counter, its mouth oozing white goo over whatever it had caught. “I should go home,” I said. “My mother doesn’t know I’m here.” Mrs. Larkin looked at me, and I saw her understand. “I’ll drive you,” she said. “I don’t mind.” We walked onto the porch. Above us, friendly stars twinkled. “They’re putting in more over there,” Mrs. Larkin said, pointing to
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a dense section of trees. “I’ve complained to the county, but of course they won’t do anything.” To the west of the farm, bright light from a construction site punctured the darkness. I could see the skeletal shells of the new buildings, a strip mall that promised a grocery store and a movie theater. Mrs. Larkin had grown up on this land. It was her family that owned the farm before a chunk of it had been redeveloped in the name of community. I followed her down to her car, a pert blue sedan. The interior smelled like flowers, and a little like sweat. In the back was a yoga mat, and a crate full of essential oils. My mother’s car was full of coffee cups and catalogs with curling pages. I remembered how Mrs. Larkin had told me she started a business because she couldn’t imagine working for anyone but herself. “Are you alright?” she said. “You seem quiet.” “Sorry,” I said, through my teeth. “My mouth hurts.” “That’s okay,” she said. “You don’t have to talk to please me.” Out on the empty highway, Mrs. Larkin knew how to catch the green lights. All she had to do was slow down a little before the
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A L LY W H I T E A L LY W H I T E
Horse Head, acrylic and collage on panel, 8 x 10 inches Alligator Whisper, acrylic and collage on panel, 40 x 48 inches
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reds and they would change to let her through. Jack knew how to do it, too. So many nights when he had driven me home, he had made a game of it. “I deal with unhappiness all day long,” Mrs. Larkin said, cutting through the silence. “Sometimes I can fix the problem using surface-level suggestions. Where we live is really terrible for health, and people don’t see it. I say, ‘Perhaps you would feel better if you didn’t sit at a desk for eight hours a day, and two hours in traffic. Perhaps you would feel better if you stopped eating meals on-the-go: too many carbs and trans fats.’ But sometimes that doesn’t work, and I realize that maybe the client doesn’t feel well due to depression. Problems at home, lack of self-confidence—the disparaging things that people tell themselves—a barrage of daily insults that work horrors on the immune system. What you went through was really hard. You must have so many questions. Why did this happen to me? Will I still look like me? You might even feel depressed because of poor nutrition—nothing but milkshakes. What’s even in industrial milkshakes? And your mother is no help. She’s not a bad person, but from what Jack’s told me, she seems difficult. Do you think she’s ever considered therapy? It could give her some helpful strategies for coping rather than what she does now: put it all on you.” I pictured my mother at a therapist, who would look like Mrs. Larkin, but a little dressier, in a pale pink cardigan. She would say to my mother, “Can you phrase that as an ‘I’ statement? Like, ‘I feel…’?” and my mother would say, ‘I feel like my boss is a twerp. I feel like my daughter is selfish. I feel like the traffic was insane today.” “If you ever wanted me to talk to her,” Mrs. Larkin said. “I could try.” “She’s been taking good care of me,” I lied. “But thanks.” “I just want you to be happy,” she said. “I know my son has a habit of chasing every impulse. I don’t know if you know her, but Jack’s last girlfriend was a lot to handle. Very pretty, and very sharp, but just not someone who makes good decisions. I have tried to encourage Jack to like strong women—for their minds, not their bodies. I know he really cares for you. He said he loves how
A L L Y W H I T E Tongue Thruster, acrylic and collage on panel, 10 x 10 inches
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reasonable you are, and how smart. I can’t think of better compliments.” We had reached the last traffic light before my house, the one with the dysfunctional sensor. So many nights, Jack and I had watched cars passing infinitely from the other direction, the light never changing to let us through. I didn’t mind the wait because it meant a few extra moments with Jack, a few extra moments before going home and finding my mother snoring on the couch, where she often fell asleep, quite early, exhausted from long days doing customer service for Telecorp, and waking her, trying to convince her to go to her bed, where she’d sleep better. “What’s the matter here?” Mrs. Larkin said, drumming the steering wheel anxiously. “What the heck?” She flashed her headlights, and the light blinked to green. She drove up across from my house, put the car in idle. “Get some rest,” she whispered, patting my knee. “We’ll see you soon.”
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art name
At my last visit, Dr. Fuller said I had healed beautifully. When he snipped the wires that held my teeth shut, I gulped air so fresh it seemed to burn. I went to the bathroom, where I drank water from the faucet and brushed my teeth three times until the rotten smell went away. In the mirror, I stared at myself. My teeth sat unevenly on top of one another, the top slanting over the bottom. My chin hung low, and to the right. Dr. Fuller said he wanted to take my photo for the Wall of Fame. He posed me against a white wall, just beneath the portrait of Brigitte, counted to three, and snapped. He shook the Polaroid dry A L L Y W H I T E Horse Girl ( Jenny), acrylic and collage on panel, 24 x 24 inches
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I stood in the street as she pulled around. She waved at me as she went by, a tickly little wave, and I felt it work on someone who was not me, as if someone beside me was falling in love. Her headlights faded as she turned the corner, and I was left in a soft, orange dark. Gnats swarmed beneath the streetlight, strobing flecks that might as well have been dust. I looked at my house from the road and saw the overgrown yard, the siding stained with rust from the saggy, weighted gutters. Once inside, I heard a strange sound, a metallic whir coming from somewhere. I followed the noise to the living room, where my mother lay on the sofa. She wore headphones, and I could hear that she was listening to a recording of one of her nights at Shenanigans, a tape she brought out sometimes. Her eyes were shut tight. Her flip-flopped feet tapped to the beat. On the coffee table was a drained bottle of wine. I went back to my bedroom. On the door was a note: “You sneak. Your lies have broke my heart. I know you (and those people) think I’m an asshole, but I’m not. I love you to death. From the first moment I saw you I never wanted you to feel any pain, and I hope you know I live to make you smile. LOVE, Mom.” The air in my bedroom was sour. I opened the window. I climbed into bed but couldn’t sleep. I retrieved one of the books Mrs. Larkin had given me, the one about the love affair in India. I read from a random page. “The next morning, she awoke tangled in silk sheets. ‘I never want to go back to Connecticut,’ she said.” I put the book aside.
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and tacked it to a corkboard next to a man named Walt, who also had a crooked jaw. “You’re famous,” my mother said. On the way home my mother and I stopped at the grocery store. She handed me twenty dollars and said I could get anything I wanted. While she went around the store doing our regular shopping, I went in search of all the foods I longed for: macaroni and cheese, pizza, hot dogs. I met my mother in line with a full basket under my arm. As we waited, I looked to my left and there she was, Therese, waiting in the express line holding a bottle of Flavo-water and a bag of corn chips. She was tan from the summer, her hair big, bleachy and indomitable. She saw me and squinted. I turned around, but I could still feel her staring, staring at my new jaw, and my stomach turned as I thought of what she’d say about me when school started in a month. I’d already broken up with Jack Larkin, golden boy of our high school, who cried after I said I would never join the Peace Corps. “What’s her problem?” my mother said. “God, this place is full of creeps.” Behind us, Therese moved through the express lane. I helped my mother with our purchases, sliding bag after bag of junk food up the conveyer belt.
Sister Wants to be Pink, acrylic and collage on panel, 40 x 48 inches A L LY W H I T E
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Be to Ruiz Alons o Sergiy Barchuk
First snow at Weinberg Park, Berlin
Big Sur, 2014 (right)
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T h o m a s P r io r
Untitled, 2014 117 • FICTION
Kathryn Donohue When we tell the story of us right now
we’ll use the words we’ve been given to describe time. Like we’re supposed to, we’ll say years ago, and not acknowledge how units flicker, elide, swell a decade into seconds and then it’s not a matter of how long, days into a barbed valley, so before and after are terrains that don’t touch. We’ll use a month with its attendant numbers, naming a moment remembered for how a tea kettle can sound so abrupt, how even stocking feet on old carpet make some soft noise.
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Ni c o l e S c h i l d e r
“Sink,” 2014
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