Philadelphia Stories Winter 2017

Page 8

When the Leaf Bug Bites I'll Be Looking out the Window at You Smoking in the Rain Rachel Howe

On the hotel room balcony, Luke stood smoking cigarette after cigarette as I put the kids to bed. Their excitement at being in a hotel, at sharing a room with us, had them popping up like the moles in that arcade game where you hit ‘em with a mallet. I can’t deal with this, he told me as he closed the sliding glass door behind him. I watched him as he leaned against the railing, his hip pressing into the soft, splintering wood, his long torso leaning out into the crickety night, rain falling softly behind him, drops catching the light of the bare bulb every so often like falling stars against the black sky beyond. Esme fell asleep on my arm, which began to prick with pins and needles after a while. She always slept with her mouth open like a goldfish reaching for air. Every time I tried to move my arm, she stirred. Eventually I gave up and lay there, staring at the stained popcorn ceiling. In sleep as in life, Henry fidgeted, which was the reason I’d never let him sleep in bed with us at home. It always meant getting kicked in my belly or my back, and being half awake all night. Now he made little noises as he tugged the stiff floral bedspread on the opposite bed. Was he imagining himself a superhero? Or were his dreams as mundane and frustrating as my own, wrestling with toothpaste tubes that never released their goo or continuously sharpening pencils which would never write? I wrestled my arm free from Esme and went over to kiss Henry’s smooth forehead. He smelled of baby sweat, damp and sweet. I could smell my own body, too, as I leaned over, a deeper, pungent smell that comforted me in this strange environment. Luke, being what my parents call a real American– which is their way of saying an Annie Hall kind of WASP, is afraid of body odor. In fact, he is afraid of any odor. He generally strives for the neutral in his life - except in me. But maybe he strives to have it in me, too. The hotel called itself a resort. It had an indoor pool housed

in a room so over-bleached all the white was yellowing. There was a game room with checkers and a pinball machine, a bar that actually played Frank Sinatra (no irony) and only Frank Sinatra the whole time we were there, and a swing set with a slide in the back. It was Labor Day weekend, we had driven up from Philly to the Poconos on a whim, and this was the only room available for miles around. Our original plan had been to stay home Saturday and Monday, but spend Sunday at the Jersey shore with friends. At the last minute, Luke had suggested the mountains instead. I really preferred the beach, but I didn’t say so. I was afraid it would lead to yet another fight and ruin the weekend. Our fights were usually about how I always had to get my own way. “I just have to get out of the city, Liz,” he’d said, and I had agreed, tired of looking at my grimy basement filled with mismatched toys and socks. But we both knew what we really meant was, “We have to get away from each other.” There were a million things left unsaid between us these days. We used to argue like all get-out. There were broken glasses, spilled cans of paint, even a vacuum cleaner down the stairs one time. I still didn’t have all the attachments. But we’d started to hold it together when the kids came. Luke was never a fan of direct expression; he preferred the silent treatment. And all my screaming just made me seem like the crazy one, so I started to pull it together, to hold it together, to hold it in. And when Luke reached out for me - when his father died, when he got layed off from the bank - I was too busy holding myself in to reach back. In the morning, Henry captured a leaf bug on the balcony and brought it inside where it pinched him. Surprised, he dropped it and it floundered, panicked, around the synthetic brown/orange carpeting. It was still drizzling and fuzzy outside, but the sun was peeking through the clouds and beginning to burn off the blur. Henry ran back to the balcony to show Luke the drop of blood jeweled on his finger, and Luke let him lean against his leg awhile, the smoke from his cigarette mixing with the rising mist.

8


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Articles inside

WHY I BE WRITIN’ STUFF.........................................................................................................................JOSEPH EARL THOMAS

6min
pages 28-32

THE PEP TALK (column)..................................................................................................................................AIMEE LABRIE

4min
page 27

SOUNDS.................................................................................................................................................................WILSON ROBERTS

0
page 26

WHEN THE HARPSICHORD OF WATERCOLORS*.............................................................PAUL SIEGELL

10min
pages 14-17

ON THE DIVINE LORRAINE AND FALLING IN LOVE (non fiction) .................................SHANNON LORRAINE

8min
pages 18-19

EVENT PHOTO SPREAD

1min
pages 20-21

ROBIN BLACK INTERVIEW .....................................................................................................................JULIA MACDONNELL

13min
pages 22-25

CANOPY................................................................................................................................................................DAN ELMAN

5min
pages 12-13

WHEN THE LEAF BUG BITES I'LL BE LOOKING OUT THE

7min
pages 8-11

WHEN THE CITY FELL FROM THE SKY .......................................................................................LISA ALEXANDER BARON

0
page 7

AN HOURGLASS FULL OF SNOWFLAKES (fiction) .................................................................A.E. MILFORD

7min
pages 4-6
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