Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Sixty-one

Ben was sixty-one in September the year the towers were brought down, a mess of smoke and rubble too tragic to serve as metaphor to his own aging. When his wife woke him that morning there was something new in her voice, she was saying “good morning” and “happy birthday” and other greetings he only half-heard, a menagerie of dull sounds marking the morning. He opened his eyes to see his wife’s smile, blurry until he reached for his glasses on the side table. Her face was old. It was essentially the same, but still different with the passing of time, with lines carved into her like rings in a tree.

They had been afraid of growing old from what they had seen of it. It was hard to imagine each other being gray, hunched over with the weight of years, carrying pill cases with the days of the week written on the top. They discussed these fears together in the early years of marriage, as if they could stop time. They learned that fear postponed nothing.

After wishing him a happy birthday she said, “There’s been an attack.”

The news says “terrorism”, the news says thousands dead and shows people jumping from buildings with the wild hope they might sprout wings and keep going until they brush the ground gently, having saved themselves.

Terrorism is a new and strange word to Ben’s tongue, like the taste of a girl the first time he kisses her: like the taste of Emily in the darkness where the shadows of their houses met. When he kissed her the first time he was newly fourteen but she looked older, taking out a pack of her mother's Parliaments and hitting the top against her palm. She offered him one with her own cigarette burning in the center of her lips. He declined.

That summer, the summer he loved her first, was bright and filled with adventures had by boys anticipating the strife of adulthood, sealing the story of their childhood with scraped knees from climbing the big oak on the edge of the wood. Bridging his boyhood with his manhood was the body of a woman, and that summer Emily whispered into his neck that she didn't believe in God anymore, and every night he prayed for her.

After the disclosure of her godlessness, he did not speak to her but in dreams, and these dreams were always the same. He is in church beside his mother, and she is singing the hymn and then Emily is there in place of her, but she is wearing nothing but beads of sweat down her back. Her breasts hang heavy and her pink nipples are pointed and she touches herself, her mouth is wide and Ben cannot reach for her, his mouth spills hymns but he wants to touch her. Ben wakes, ashamed, and prays for himself.

Longing and denial proved to be routine for a month, and on his fifteenth birthday she came to him. Sticky with the taste of oranges, her lips apologized to his lips, apologized to his skin, her hands apologized to places they shouldn't have until he stopped her short of truly making amends. Fall came, and he noticed the cross that hung in the secret divide between her breasts, and then he noticed the divide more than the cross.

He could count the bruises, blossoming swollen on the backs of her thighs, he could read them like Braille but never knew what they said. Her father slept on the sofa like a giant hulking monster and she learned to climb out windows and down the drainpipe with a deft kind of shimmy. In the half-light of the moon he kissed where her skin was dark and sore, where her lips were rough and tasted like copper and blood.

Some nights he saw her silhouette on the window shade, watched her engulfed by a different darkness, a shadow that knew her skin the way he did and he finished all over his hand, sweat running down and stinging his eyes.

"Oh God," he prayed over and over into the softness of his pillow, the darkness of his room. "Oh God, oh God, oh God."

He took her to the courthouse three Octobers after. In bed, her smile shook and her eyes swam in water like two sinking boats, her gaze sailing elsewhere. He traced freckles to burns to bruises and she moaned in a Morse code that matched the shape of her scars.

They had four children, all boys with strong arms and legs, except for the youngest who was lanky and angular, the geometry of his body awkward and incorrect. The older three called him Runt in the way only brothers could, threatening other boys with all kinds of childish defamation should they use the nickname.

Runt loved a girl who smoked on her back porch with her skirt hiked up around her thighs because of the heat.

Runt loved a girl who died the summer he made love to her, the doctors a solemn chorus of "we did all we could" and they brought a tuna casserole to the wake. Runt stayed in her bedroom, a cathedral filled with the ghosts of first love, and breathed in the scent of her dresses, picking up her hairbrush, her scarf, one holy artifact after another. He cut some of her bed sheets with the scissors she used in school and sewed it into his jacket.

That year he trained for the army but went into investment banking instead. His small stature and constant fear when he thought too deeply kept him from war, but he watched the news night after night in his small apartment and dreamed of enemies and snipers and M16's and all the things young boys dream when they play pretend with green plastic army men.

"Ben?" Emily asked of the soft brightness of morning that fell onto her face along with the TV's harsh blue light. He let the words move through his head and he knew they were bred of sadness though the emotion sounded awkward in her voice, like a child in the arms of someone else's mother.

The news reports were dominated by smoke and unpronounceable names and every attempt at a body count dug itself deeper into Ben because every empty number, every anonymous limp body on the TV screen was Runt, over and over again: Runt being carried from the buildings, Runt being pulled from the rubble, Runt jumping from the highest windows.

Ben remembered touching Emily in the relative quiet of a home with three young boys, nervous and imagining he could hear the soft breathing of sons in other rooms and when he became distracted Emily's mouth and hands brought him back to bed. That night Emily said she wanted another baby, kneading her stomach made soft from three babies before, and Ben laid his head on her chest and heard the sounds her heart made as it kept her alive and thought, How strange, so small and steady a sound, so far away and dull, and it keeps us moving, it keeps me beside her and keeps her warm.

He made love to her, her orgasm a silent shudder, a work of self-censorship, the way it always had been, as his wife and as the shadow in the window across the way.

Emily did not cry, though she was accustomed to tears. The older boys came home and stayed silent to disguise the lumps in their throats because their mother was hiding her own tears and strong boys do not cry. If they learned one thing from their father it was that men did not cry. And they saw that men did not cry, for their father never cried, not at the burial of the kitten they rescued the summer before the twins entered middle school, the cat they watched die and all three boys sobbed and even though they were nearly twelve they bent over their father's lap and received a belt-smack to the ass.

"Men do not cry," Ben reprimanded to his swollen-eyed boys, who nodded and went to cry into their pillows instead. But Runt never cried; he stroked the fur of the stiff, dead cat as they moved its body into the pillowcase it was buried in.

A foreign-voiced man answered the phone to confirm the cancellation of dinner, and Ben hated him. He held the phone in a tense fist and wished his youngest had joined the army and learned to hate as easily as his father did, standing in the kitchen and hating the voice of a stranger.

Though dinner was cancelled, there was still a cake, with brightly colored candles, but both candles were towers and he only imagined Runt's face in the flames, the floor a mess of blood because the logic of imagination is like the logic of dreams, and he saw Runt's face half-melted, arms reaching out for an eye or a bit of nose as he escaped the flame, teeth falling from his mouth so dark with blood that it seemed he was throwing up shadows on the soaked carpet.

"Blow out the candles, Dad," his oldest began with a little smile in the drafty kitchen when evening swooped down on the skyline and he looked at his wife across the table and noticed her smudged lipstick creeping into the wrinkles around her mouth and staining her skin, noticed the fear of God gone from her eyes, the cross gone from her neck.

He cried, and in that moment knew he was not a man, he was a child, fists striking the table, fists backed with the power of all his hatred, the force of his loss. He knew the sore feeling of the beginnings of bruises all along the sides of his hands, and he cried for sixty-one years of tears he had not cried, for every skinned knee and every time Emily snuck into his window and he could not make love to her, she would not let him make love to her, he could not, for the love of his God, of Jesus Christ his personal Lord and Savior—he could not touch her. He cried for every burn that still scarred the insides of Emily’s thighs, for every war lost and every fear he learned to be afraid of in time.

He cried for Emily and his family, the mistakes they make as humans, as failed soldiers and as bankers, as victims and as men.

Emily took the cake up with a quickness that extinguished the candles, and Ben cried at the table for every year he had loved her and never helped her, for the lives of his boys who loved each other, for the lives of the people on TV who cried for their children.

He cried for his children.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Untitled - December 2007

"Death will give us back to god just like the setting sun is returned to the lonesome ocean."
-Conor Oberst

/ /

After my brother's death, my mother and father retreated into the separate countries of their grief, observing the strange customs of these new lands in the wake of untimely loss. I can say nothing so eloquent about myself; I watched a lot of television, mostly things my brother would have watched.

It was 1968, and my brother was a hero in the way only war makes heroes, and I could have been next but I wasn't. I was fourteen and struggling with so suddenly becoming the oldest and the only. At the funeral I sat with my cousins who dropped baseball cards into the casket and talked too much, looking lost and getting high behind the funeral home.

In the months that followed everything was dull down to the knives at dinner, so when Mom left and the screen door slammed and shook against the house I didn't care until my father sat down at the kitchen table and cried.

The men in my family do not cry. This is not a personal choice but a biological irregularity, having less to do with tear ducts and more with brain receptors and whiskey. The sight of my father at the table with a sob stuck in his throat like a chicken bone that won't go down brought a strange kind of fear to the surface of my brain, and I realized I did not know what to do. My father defied biology and sat at the table and cried fat tears of shame and humiliation.

His wet eyes shone with embarrassment and failure, his hands trembled as he lit a Lucky Strike on a kitchen match. I remembered after a football game where I had fallen and sprained my ankle, my father dragged me upward and punched my shoulder, called me Pal and brought me a root beer. So I punched his shoulder, light and quick and because he was crying the unfamiliar sting of tears harrassed the backs of my eyes and I punched him harder, each meeting of fist and body asking Why have you betrayed me, Where is my mother, Why are we crying in the stark light of this room with the light swinging and the moon so silent above us? Why do you look at me with failure sketched on you so undeniably written and so obvious?

But my father did not have answers for these questions left unasked at my tongue, he only had tears and the sloppy sounds accompanying them, stupid smoke signals I could not decipher rising from the cigarette perched in his stupid lips.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Old Writing (late 05 thru early 07)

out of doors
the world drips like an oil painting
on its side
rain falls down onto the roof
no end in sight

//

this is growing up,
the inconvenience of changed voices
and new bodies we don't
recognize
new terrain
strange to the touch

//

specks of dawn
in the folds of your dress
creeping down your back
slow insects

//

10/17/05

winter creeps
from its hollow-tree hiding place
and wraps its pale, glowing arms
around the landscape
in a blue embrace

//

there is daylight on the water
there are remnants here

//

your 3am eyes
look up at me
they are caved in and your
voice is cracked
witching hour has passed
and we are left alone
with the burnt out candles
and spells finished and cast

//

He was a creature of habit, as all old men are, brought up one certain way and then continued in the path of habit for so many years that to be anything but habitual would be alien, strange. For years, even before the death of his Alice in an accident that kept him from riding Ferris wheels at the state fair, Henry would wake early and in the darkness of morning jog the two-and-one-half miles that led to the graveyard. There were always graves to visit, bred from the long association with unhappy people eager to take the first available train to somewhere else.

//

We are parked on a street, the name of which I can never recall, the world closest to us visible only by the meager offerings of your headlights, and we are watching the lights on the pier shimmer in the ocean beneath them.
Your hand is cold, you unbutton my sweater and struggle with the ties on my blouse in a fumbling first attempt to touch me. I let you.

//

don't look at what they took from us

//

her wrists are fragile, made of air and wood and glass. in time, she will become a memory, as cold and colorless as the tide of the tropics remains to me now

//

It had been a few years. Karen wasn't entirely sure she remembered the number, or that the phone in the booth would even work. It would be characteristic of god to knock down phone lines or cause a black out in order for her call to not reach home.
Two quarters in the slot and trembling fingers dial a number remembered from the darkness of past years. Hesitant ringing, quiet prayer to a god not entirely believed in. A familiar voice, rough with age.
"Hello?"
"Daddy?"
Silence on the other end. Hope that the line has not gone dead. It has. A click.
Karen hung the phone onto its receiver, leaning back onto the glass wall of the booth. It's dark in Pittsburgh, darker than any darkness in the suburbs, where every corner is guarded by the harsh yellow light of a street lamp, keeping kids safe from the unforgiving choices made by Death. Here he sweeps his victims swiftly as if they never existed. Being here, it is possible they never did. It's darker than the corners of the school Kevin took her to make out after the football games, still sweaty in his uniform, pushing her pleated skirt higher up her thighs, tugging at the Tuesday panties she wore on Friday.
She had been class valedictorian, she had won scholarships and science fairs and the hearts of every boy she passed in the halls. She gave it up for Kevin, followed him out to Pennsylvania because he said they had a life together, they could have babies and a picket fence and whatever she wanted. She said she wanted garden gnomes and little babies and flowers on the window sill and a kitchen that looked out on a garden where her babies could play. He said Sure thing, babe.
Kevin had friends with money and a place to crash, so they stayed with Michelle and Jess for a year and Kevin worked delivering booze to restaurants.
Karen thought about this and looked at her watch. Counted the hours since Kevin threw her out on her ass. Three hours of unfamiliar streets and the kindness of strangers with a few bucks to spare.

//

Thursday, June 14, 2007

all the news reports recommended that i stay indoors

well, if you're feeling sinister

girl, fragmented 2005
he was on the verge of the atlantic
where the coast is lined with small
hotels and families on vacation

when he met her: smiling girl
with sun-browned limbs and
a curious, lopsided smile

he remembers her now only
in words, adjectives, snatches
of descriptions used in retrospect

("blue eyes" or "sand-colored hair")

he feels he might be able to form
a picture, part of her face or
possibly a more crude vision,
girl bent, fishing for a dropped
object in the waters of a hotel pool

spine prominent,
swimsuit white,
and wet,
nearly too small

and, if not in words, he remembers
the scenery surrounding them: palm trees
balmy night-air, ugly tourists with veined legs
and ugly swim caps

he remembers saying goodbye,
the way she squinted through
dollar-store sunglasses to maybe

catch a glimpse of him
in the backseat of his father's car
because he was waving

hoping he might embroider
upon his thoughts or eyelids
her image
but only remembers

"hand on hip"
"waving lazily"
"yawning, i think"

//

2005
a cautious journey
of your fingers begins
as they stumble
through the heat
and your hand chases
mine
through a bright
desert of castle ramparts
and tickles the sand
sleepwalking
through the sunlight
echoing off
the chrome
of my father's car

Saturday, June 9, 2007

like a stranger in the city of myself

tripped up
the stairs
on
my
way
down;
over shoulder
comment to
everyone
watching:
"i'm
just
a
bit misplaced"

//

she dreamed into me
filling me
with the ghosts
& memories
that still remained
tenants of her thoughts.
sometimes
i think i have a chance
of catching her
and then i hear
the faraway sound
of a dj
giving me the date
and time
and a top 40 hit
comes on the radio.
good fucking morning
to you too