"Well, the weather's fine tonight, honey."
It was Betty London talking to me, barefoot and in a self-made flower printed dress that went to mid-shin. She was creaking in her rocking chair and I sat on the floor next to her on the front porch. Above us were only stars and behind us, the house. I'd put the babies in the barn for the night.
"I know it's fine," I said.
Betty looked at me with one eye, a talent of hers that tended to scare people off. I pretended not to see and kept my eyes on the horizon. Wheat fields for miles was all I could see, covered up by the dark.
"You'll never guess who I saw the other day," she said. "Just walking around like he owned the place."
"Who's that?"
"Your River."
I should have guessed. I did guess. But the name went through me like a bolt of lightning when she said it. Two more seconds and I recovered.
"Oh?"
"Mmm-hmmm," she drawled. "What's he up to these days anyway, Agnes?"
"I don't know," I said and clenched my mouth shut. First River and now she insists on "Agnes".
"What do you mean you don't know?" she persisted.
"I haven't talked to River in two years, Betty. I'm not about to start now."
Betty clucked her tongue knowingly, a sure sign that the picture was falling into place for her like it always did without anyone trying to explain.
"He doesn't know, does he?"
Of course, her near-mind-reading abilities always meant she knew too much.
"Know what, Betty?"
"I'm not fool, Agnes. Don't try playing me one now."
I turned around and looked at her.
"He knows he's a monster," I said.
"Last I heard he was the best thing the world ever brought you."
I didn't answer for a moment, then: "Things change."
"He's just a man to you, Agnes. But he's more than that to those boys."
"Don't bring them into this. They have nothing to do with River."
Betty cocked one eyebrow up at me and studied me like I was a pane of glass. Maybe I am, still, transparent like a window. But what you can't cure you can learn to live with. And if there isn't a remedy there are other solutions. Opaque curtains have done a good job.
"They may have nothing to do with River, girl, but he's got everything but half to do with them."
"No. Leave River alone. The discussion is over. The boys have nothing to do with River, I told you."
"You don't mean to say they're Valentine's?"
"I don't mean to say they're anyone's but mine. That should suffice, Betty. You'll know what you need to when I want you to know it."
I stood up and slapped my hands against my jeans to rid them of the dirt.
"You're playing yourself like a fool, Agnes Silver! You can run all you want from the truth but in the end you'll see it's just slapped you in the face and you've gone numb. No one gets nowhere while running in place."
I whirled around to her.
"I never run in place, Miss Betty! River does that. I move and that's it. I accomplish distance and destination."
"Mmm, you believe that, do you?"
"I know it."
"What's that smell?" she said suddenly, her neck craning up.
I followed her gaze with my eyes and froze when I took in the sight.
"Oh my God," she said. "Quick!"
And without thinking, I ran.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Thursday, June 05, 2008
Phinnaeus:
I say, man, there be moments that affect you for your whole sadsilly life. Early, she says "Phinny boy" to me "what moments are those?" and I just keeps on telling her, man, that I can prove to her I remember the way I was born with that Judah screaming and hanging on to me like it was nothing short of a sin for me to come out first.
"Sin's baggage you don't need, Phinny."
"I know, Early, but you be setting me up and I know where I come out from, man."
"Speak like a person, Phinnaeus."
"I'll be speaking like a person, man, you think when you throw the Misters out of those Wheels and I don't have to be hanging out on the shoulder with Judah blocking out the whoo-whoos yes and aahs," I says to her. But Early turns away leaving me an old cold shoulder Early she does and I go on my way, man, trying to figure out which memory is from the past and which is from the future but I know ZERO is the midway-bidway point so I starts from there, man.
Now I comes out into this world, man, covered in a red satin curtain like I mean to be hid away forever in her guts where she stowed away and stuffed us through a chord woved of blood redandblue like a bridge-highway between her being and ours full of marzipan and elbow maccaroni and fruit and birds and leaves all mashed up broken down into fiber and proteins and saturated/trans/unsaturated fats and hydrogenated thisandthat. I remember it like yesterday covered up spat out like goo, man, because that's all we ever be in the end and it's life, so a miracle beautiful like a ribbon highway.
And I remember it like yesterday when she was alone but soon to have us crying around, man, and she felt her guts rejecting us parasites because we grow too big and too much for her take in one sitting. But sit she does all right and the guts contract and she's silent, my Early, because no coward ever dribbled from my mother's mouth or lurked up in her head, man. The body has a mind of its own not Early's not mine not Judah's and it screams but mindovermatter wins over 'cause it's Early here we're talking of and she silences that scream and channels energy God energy towards my head. That's right, man, my head.
Judah boy, he rebels and that twists fate up in confusion inside her. Words-not-words but emotion like a photon stream slice up and into my head and it's war. But the war, man, it don't last like for everybody else because inside her, man, Judah never saw me and once he opened his eyes and did, my first and his second arrival are forgotten.
I say, man, there be moments that affect you for your whole sadsilly life. Early, she says "Phinny boy" to me "what moments are those?" and I just keeps on telling her, man, that I can prove to her I remember the way I was born with that Judah screaming and hanging on to me like it was nothing short of a sin for me to come out first.
"Sin's baggage you don't need, Phinny."
"I know, Early, but you be setting me up and I know where I come out from, man."
"Speak like a person, Phinnaeus."
"I'll be speaking like a person, man, you think when you throw the Misters out of those Wheels and I don't have to be hanging out on the shoulder with Judah blocking out the whoo-whoos yes and aahs," I says to her. But Early turns away leaving me an old cold shoulder Early she does and I go on my way, man, trying to figure out which memory is from the past and which is from the future but I know ZERO is the midway-bidway point so I starts from there, man.
Now I comes out into this world, man, covered in a red satin curtain like I mean to be hid away forever in her guts where she stowed away and stuffed us through a chord woved of blood redandblue like a bridge-highway between her being and ours full of marzipan and elbow maccaroni and fruit and birds and leaves all mashed up broken down into fiber and proteins and saturated/trans/unsaturated fats and hydrogenated thisandthat. I remember it like yesterday covered up spat out like goo, man, because that's all we ever be in the end and it's life, so a miracle beautiful like a ribbon highway.
And I remember it like yesterday when she was alone but soon to have us crying around, man, and she felt her guts rejecting us parasites because we grow too big and too much for her take in one sitting. But sit she does all right and the guts contract and she's silent, my Early, because no coward ever dribbled from my mother's mouth or lurked up in her head, man. The body has a mind of its own not Early's not mine not Judah's and it screams but mindovermatter wins over 'cause it's Early here we're talking of and she silences that scream and channels energy God energy towards my head. That's right, man, my head.
Judah boy, he rebels and that twists fate up in confusion inside her. Words-not-words but emotion like a photon stream slice up and into my head and it's war. But the war, man, it don't last like for everybody else because inside her, man, Judah never saw me and once he opened his eyes and did, my first and his second arrival are forgotten.
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
I've been staring at a blank screen for a while now and still have nothing to say. As a writer, though, I tend to write more when I'm in a block because to get past it, you have to put yourself through torture and torture involves forcing words like these to come out. No, they don't sound so great. No, they're not very enlightening. But what can I say? They get the job done and if a picture is worth a thousand words and I make it my task to take at least one picture a day without a camera because I don't have one, then my job has been clearly laid out before me.
A little bit about today: rain everywhere. Everyone coming in with sopping umbrellas and moping. "What a disgusting day." I grew up in a drought and any day there's even one drop is a day for celebration. The sun isn't always good for everything. Too much of a good thing turns sour. I'll take the rain. It's misty at the moment, falling slowly, like snow in February. It made the spring end when it kicked all the blooms off the stalks and now the spring's rainbow-on-the-ground has transformed into the summer's every-shade-of-green. Green gets old, like white, but the clothing gets better. Maybe we should wear the bright colors in the winter to combat the seasonal distress and the dark ones in the summer because we have enough of everything else. Keep the balance.
Two days ago I was at work and the phone rang at the info desk. Just because I work at a desk labeled "information" does not constitute my (or any of my co-workers') needing to know the answer to the secret of life. But we have our label and that means to the average Joe that we're literally omniscient. Call information and you think it's the equivalent of calling God. Well, maybe it is. I guarantee you'll be disappointed.
I don't know where to get your W-2 forms. Perhaps your place of employment? The IRS? I don't know where a homeless lesbian can find food and shelter other than the Salvation Army or another kind of shelter that I looked up for you and I really don't think you should be picky about where you go considering you're homeless. It's not my fault that the line for the bathroom is over 45 people long. That's what happens when you're a woman. I don't know where your caretaker is because that's your responsibility, not mine, especially since I wasn't here yesterday and I don't live with you, am not related to you, and no one gives me the information I need to know off the top of my head to give to you because people don't believe in communication or efficiency but osmosis. If you don't like the policies of this school, don't apply here. And if you already have and got accepted, go somewhere else. Not my problem. I'm just information. But I usually don't have that because I'm only supposed to know about this building and to tell you the truth, this building is pretty small.
We'll take a break now, go outside and walk through the rain sing in the rain dance through the rain and the green will get greener and the colors will fade because when it rains (generally) the sky fades to gray and white and the blue gets hidden behind it. This is real life these days, whatever that means and I go home to my half-painted half-white half-yellow room and fill it up with the one thing I could ever fill anything up with. I go home to an empty room and blue curtains and yellow sheets and stained wood that I worked hard for and unfulfilled dreams that I'm trying trying trying to make into reality past present and future for me and I talk to no one out loud inside those walls to doors with no knobs and to windows that open down and I imagine a presence a friend a voice someone to lean on and laugh with and cry with but it all comes back to the beginning and my life is a labyrinthine entity. We go one way and it's down with no ladder up but motivation and no matter how much of that I get the Exit is just a dream. When I travel, I travel for a long time and one day, I'll hit the end of the world like a brick wall that stops us all. So I'll stretch it out for as long as possible, stretch it out for the interim.
But the phone rings off the hook with people calling God. I learned the lesson that won't get through their heads a long time ago. All they're doing is calling me and either way, the answer's disappointing.
A little bit about today: rain everywhere. Everyone coming in with sopping umbrellas and moping. "What a disgusting day." I grew up in a drought and any day there's even one drop is a day for celebration. The sun isn't always good for everything. Too much of a good thing turns sour. I'll take the rain. It's misty at the moment, falling slowly, like snow in February. It made the spring end when it kicked all the blooms off the stalks and now the spring's rainbow-on-the-ground has transformed into the summer's every-shade-of-green. Green gets old, like white, but the clothing gets better. Maybe we should wear the bright colors in the winter to combat the seasonal distress and the dark ones in the summer because we have enough of everything else. Keep the balance.
Two days ago I was at work and the phone rang at the info desk. Just because I work at a desk labeled "information" does not constitute my (or any of my co-workers') needing to know the answer to the secret of life. But we have our label and that means to the average Joe that we're literally omniscient. Call information and you think it's the equivalent of calling God. Well, maybe it is. I guarantee you'll be disappointed.
I don't know where to get your W-2 forms. Perhaps your place of employment? The IRS? I don't know where a homeless lesbian can find food and shelter other than the Salvation Army or another kind of shelter that I looked up for you and I really don't think you should be picky about where you go considering you're homeless. It's not my fault that the line for the bathroom is over 45 people long. That's what happens when you're a woman. I don't know where your caretaker is because that's your responsibility, not mine, especially since I wasn't here yesterday and I don't live with you, am not related to you, and no one gives me the information I need to know off the top of my head to give to you because people don't believe in communication or efficiency but osmosis. If you don't like the policies of this school, don't apply here. And if you already have and got accepted, go somewhere else. Not my problem. I'm just information. But I usually don't have that because I'm only supposed to know about this building and to tell you the truth, this building is pretty small.
We'll take a break now, go outside and walk through the rain sing in the rain dance through the rain and the green will get greener and the colors will fade because when it rains (generally) the sky fades to gray and white and the blue gets hidden behind it. This is real life these days, whatever that means and I go home to my half-painted half-white half-yellow room and fill it up with the one thing I could ever fill anything up with. I go home to an empty room and blue curtains and yellow sheets and stained wood that I worked hard for and unfulfilled dreams that I'm trying trying trying to make into reality past present and future for me and I talk to no one out loud inside those walls to doors with no knobs and to windows that open down and I imagine a presence a friend a voice someone to lean on and laugh with and cry with but it all comes back to the beginning and my life is a labyrinthine entity. We go one way and it's down with no ladder up but motivation and no matter how much of that I get the Exit is just a dream. When I travel, I travel for a long time and one day, I'll hit the end of the world like a brick wall that stops us all. So I'll stretch it out for as long as possible, stretch it out for the interim.
But the phone rings off the hook with people calling God. I learned the lesson that won't get through their heads a long time ago. All they're doing is calling me and either way, the answer's disappointing.
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