Short Stories

May 10, 2007

The Collector

Sandra blamed John's unemployment for his confusion.

They were finally lonely together, like two birds mated for a season and subject to the mysterious light of autumn that would bid them go.  What she had seen in him, she still saw--the gentle and perceptive eyes, the large hands roughened by washing dishes at The Grill, the heart of one who sees things and cannot forget.  In fact the man was an endearing collection of memories, and it was sad to see him subdued by them when the drum of her own life beat loud.

He said he didn't understand how or why he had failed.  He had been as compromising and practical as it was possible for him to be, and, she agreed, didn't she, that his work was good, so what was the matter?  Of course, there was politics, but there were people much less politic than himself who were doing well . . . .

She listened.  She forgave him.  She believed that he knew what he was about, and it was really not his fault that he couldn't get hitched into the economy.  She told him that he would never have to apologize to her for what he did.

He said he would never, in any case, apologize to her.  He could not bring himself to do it, she wouldn't let him do it, and he seemed to understand through that just how very much she loved him.

"I want to stand with you," she had said, her arms full of the damp laundry she hung out on the line once a week, "but it's hard to believe in the future."  What she had meant was his future.  As he turned back to his work, her wreck of a heart made her wish she had said nothing, but she went bravely down the rickety back steps of their home and into the dirt yard where the clothes line was.  A cardinal perched amid the waxy leaves of a small holly whistled for a moment as if to draw her attention before its dark feathers spotted the air like blood and vanished in the cooling afternoon light.


Correspondence and Permissions: James S. Oppenheim


May 09, 2007

Shades of the Moon

He leaned across the bench seat to touch the curl of her damp collar and trace the waved line down to the first fastened button of her blouse. It was a warm night, dusty and moonlit, the opening curtain on summer, and she was married, but that was back in the bar.

"Don't be shy," she said.

He wasn't being shy, he thought, and it wasn't shyness that drew her to him or that made her firm in the smooth heat of his palm. It was the many blackbird questions set loose and flying away to the moment on the other side of this, their first kiss.

"He doesn't think about me," she said. "Don't you think about him."

He kissed her sweetly. "Does he own a gun?" he asked.

"I've never seen it," she said.

"How could he be tired of you?"

She looked aside even as his fingertips touched her chin and brought his eyes back to hers.

They kissed again and drew close.

"He travels too much," he said.

"Tell me."

"And I bet he's tired all the time, watches tv every night while you do what—cook, clean, write the checks, raise the kids. Who takes care of mama?"

"You just don't know."

"Oh, I think I do."

The two shadows grew small and rounded in the ascending moonlight.


Correspondence and Permissions: James S. Oppenheim


May 07, 2007

White Space

"Oh, baby, this is wonderful!"

"What planet?"

"Fingerpainted."

"Make it better for me? Let me do what you do?"

"It's too dangerous."

"Is not."

"You don't know."

"Please show me."

"It burns."

"I don't care. I want you to burn me."

"You won't be angry if it's different from what you thought?"

"Never!"

"Okay."

"Tie me up."

"Arm."

"It's tight."

"Flex."

"Put it in me. I want all of it. Every drop. Oh, that is so hot. It burns me, baby. It burns. And I'm swimming."

"Now you have it. Do you know?"

"Oh, yes, I know."

"What do you know?"

"I'm swimming."

*

Electric sky crackling egg shell white oh, master! Tree trunk harpoon, tickler branch, pleasure grass and beyond the highway swans gliding in gasaholic ballet all separate in their quiet cells. One drop more and fire! Two drops. Sleep. Three drops: infinity of white space.

*

Detective Smith sang to the rolling laboratory crew as it stepped one-by-one out of the van in colorless moon booties and scrubs: "Well, tie a yellow ribbon 'round the ol' crime scene it's been two whole hours, not a needle have I seen."

Sparrows hopped in the weedy fringe of the yard, and the noon sun stood still.


Correspondence and Permissions: James S. Oppenheim


The Beast at the Crossing

I seen a wasted old Dodge once in there off the Hopkins property, and once, a pile of old horse bones. Otherwise there ain't much--just the fences, fields, silos and barns, the ditches runnin' through the pastures, the river that don't go nowhere interestin', the roads that aren't much use if you don't drive a car and don't go nowhere anyway that ain't two hours away, and the hills which don't amount to much but oak, pine, ivy, and thicket.

Up north, there's Columbus and Mansfield, and to the west, Cincinnati and Dayton. But to the east, right here by the Scioto, south a bit of Chillicothe, all there is, is state forest, Indian mounds and places like Zann's Cors and Givens and Darwin and Chester seventy miles to the Pennsylvania line, and beyond that, there ain't much neither.

It sure is different comin' down here from Akron. For one thing, I can't smell the air, which is, I suppose, a good thing. And then there's not much in the way of other folk; every mornin', the catbird wakes me, and every evenin' the crickets get going', and, no mistakin' it, I miss the sound of a bus starting up or a siren driftin' over from the expressway. But it's healthy, I suppose. Back in Youngstown, I had the cramps real bad, like I would miss class and not see nobody, but here, what with the river and the long days and time passin' like nobody cared, it's easier to be a girl.

It's easier for daddy, too, now he's got some weight and don't seem as jump out of bed as he used to. It's a bet he's not up yet.

I wish I could sleep late like he does. It's for sure today's the same as yesterday and tomorrow's the same as today. If I could, I'd sleep right through it. I mean I got the same things to do--put the beer bottles in the trash and take the trash out, set the ladder against the side of the house, put an electric cord out the window and hook up the radio so we'll have something to listen to while we scrape the wood, go to the store and stand around looking at paint, come home, set myself in my room for a while then cook the dinner and watch tv, and go to sleep after the news. I know when my eyes open at sunries I'll be brushin' teeth at eleven-thirty and fallin' asleep listenin' to Carson comin' up from the parlor. And in the mornin' there'll be more bottles.

I got another cause for sleepin'--no close friends. Daddy only retired last year and moved us here just before school started. Everyone makes new friends, I suppose, but it's not like having the old ones. The new friends got their old friends and old things to talk about and it's hard to fit in. At least I'm liked okay.

Except for sex and bein' a beast, I'd sleep the summer through. As soon as the sun comes up, though, I'm up. But I like to lay awhile in bed listenin' to that damn bird. I swear I know how that bird feels singing "Wake up, crabapples!" the way it does. It's got chores too.

It's a nice thing to do, and it's just on waking, and maybe it has to do with having nothing here but the river and woods. In any case, I get out there with the bird, say good morning and what's it to you, and I like the feel of the breeze cutting around the corner of the house.

Down at the river, there's a path takes you all the way to Pine's Furnace, an hour and a half by foot, where there's a rail takes you over the river and through the fields. There's wheat planted now and the wind combs through it so it all bends the same way. I like getting out there too and walking with the sun flashing off the steel and heating the gravel. And I like feeling the beast.

The beast leans against the doorframe and says it don't give a damn how the coffee was done. It goes to the store and gets looks that make it bristle like a cat saying, "Don't mess with me." On the tracks, it lopes toward sunset, alone. At night, it tunes into the cries of other beasts coming in off the radio and it cries itself for another beast: Where are you? When will you get here? The beast wants flesh. It's hunger pushes it into the light, makes it leap for every chance of going out, sends it slouching through the weeds and tangles by the river, and makes it hunt on lean grounds.

This ain't no place to hunt, though. There ain't beasts enough for me here. It may be okay for daddy, what with them older folk finishing up at the veteran's hospital or the quarry, but I got to get out at the end of high school. I need my world too. Trouble is, the beast gets tired of waiting. It gets sour pacing back and forth in its bare room. It snarls walking to the mailbox down the lane. It gets so it turns purple and can't think and goes nasty on the trainer who makes the chalk squeal in the cage, and sometimes it breaks a rule and takes a beer down to the river and pulls it back on a rock mid-stream. That's when the hurrying goes away, and things settle out. The green smells on the wind and the cool splashing water give the beast all it wants. For a while.

*

This here's Krill's Corner. The moon's high and bright and makes the rails look like two ribbons of the magnesium wire you get to burn in high school chemistry. Strollin' out here gets me thinking about Jeffrey Chauson up in Akron. After he did himself in, everyone talked how obvious what he was thinking of doing was.

Jeffrey kept to himself, never sat with us at lunch, but he always said "hi" if you said "hi" to him first. He was quiet, polite, like someone at a party who feels he don't belong but don't want to make a fuss over it either. People like that just get along. But Jeffrey, who we didn't worry about, had this haunted look come over him about every Thursday or Friday and he'd answer somethin' like "How're you doing?" with "Not too good but let's not go into it, okay?" and nobody would "go into it." Everyone's got a right to be left alone, I suppose, but what about those who don't want to be alone but don't know not to kick when they're cozied Jeffrey's thing, see, was he didn't know how to take care of his beast. Somebody got into him and subdued it just when it should have been showing itself. You could tell by the way he never defended himself from much. I remember once in sixth grade a bunch of us girls pulled his pants down out back of the school. It was just to his underwear and I don't think it was as mean or humiliating a thing as it might have been were he a couple years older. But you never know how something like that's gonna fit in with all the other shit he's taking. I don't know what the boys did to him either. But there you are four years down the road with someone who won't talk to anyone, who hints at but won't level with any problems and then he starts talking about ropes and razor blades and if you look over at his notebook, you can see how he's made the margins black with doodles--you know, curlicues, hatchmarks, crosses, but who's friend is he? Who's supposed to do something? For the teachers, he's not a problem. He don't throw no bricks or puncture no tires. For us, the few who sat around him in class because that's how the seating turned out, he was less a friend than a curiosity. Anyway, he did what he did and we all saw it coming and I don't doubt a few of us thought it was for the best, but I think about him, because, really, when your mom skips out with her boyfriend and your daddy takes you away from what you knew to some quiet, do-nothing place, and you want so much to take to your own ways, then the difference between life and death comes down to having some choice as to how you take care of the beast.

This is the second time I've done this--come out here at night beyond the crossing and looked up at the stars and around at the barnyard lights of farms a quarter mile off both sides of the track. I'll try to get back by ten or eleven so my Dad don't worry. I don't think he'd worry anyhow 'cause I never gave him cause--I wasn't much of a problem in school and my friends are okay except for a beer now and then--and out here, we don't get swept up by perverts the way kids do in Cincinnati, say, or Cleveland. Another thing about my daddy: about all he's got on his mind this time of night is pissin'.

It wasn't always this way with him. When I was little, I remember him holding me on his lap, reading the comics out loud in front of the tv. I remember shopping and how firmly his warm old hand pinched my shoulder as I stood staring at a shelf full of Barbie Doll boxes and Barbie clothing and Barbie appliances, furniture, and jewelry. But then mom left and took her clothing and such and he couldn't play with her anymore and he'd come home and I'd want to play with him but he'd just stand near the window and look at the houses across the street. He'd stand there in his work overalls and wait for the neighbors to drive up and for lights to go on in the windows of those houses, and then he'd sit at the kitchen table with the day's mail and beer. I cooked for him then as I do now.

I don't like my being out here anymore than my daddy would if he were sober enough to take it into consideration. But this is the route I'm taking and if I scare now I won't get far when the time comes to make it real. It's just like Jeffrey making a joke about playing with razor blades and then really playing with them when no one was looking. Dying or running, you got to rehearse, and then you got to do what you were planning to do. Otherwise, you couldn't be sure it was you running your own life.

Even if I weren't fixing to leave, I'd come out here. It's just a way of breathing, which reminds me: I said I couldn't smell the air here the way I did in Akron. That's true enough for what the factories give out, but this air's got smells too. In the spring, farmers manure the fields and you can't hardly go outside your door without thinking you was living near a pig sty. Then in the summer, the air's so damp and heavy you can smell the thunder storms and tornadoes coming in though I admit I can't smell much this eve'n 'cause the pollen's stuffin' my nose. Even so, when I get back to the river tonight, I'll catch a whif of honeysuckle and fern, my favorite sweet smells, since the woods are so thick and heavy. They'll go away too come fall when rain gets the leaves to rot and cold nights set folk to burning wood for heat and sending smoke to hang in the tree tops.

I'm gonna miss this place. Heck, everyone says that when they leave someplace quiet where they weren't bothered. I do know I miss parts of city life, though.

I miss having my choice of movies.

I miss Mogadore Reservoir where my dad fished and visiting with the Burgess's and their son, Kenny, in Cuyahoga Falls, and shoppin' at the mall with mom.

I miss the big newspaper on Sunday, the playground at the end of the block, playin' spin-the-bottle with Billy Jones and the old crew, the cars running on wet streets, dad getting up in the morning and burning the toast, and those fucking noisy, dirty, stinking son-of-a-bitch buses. Damn it all! I mostly miss the chances I had with boys and being close-by so many people.

I wouldn't go back 'cause it wouldn't and I wouldn't be the same. Without mom, there'd been no Burgess's. No one'd play spin-the-bottle or such foolishness no more 'cause they've got cars and the games are getting serious. I mean kissin'--so what? It's a bet life kicks you forward even when you'd rather lay back.

But ain't it nice anyway with a country of wide fields, open skies, and railroads that cut through places and run on near to forever?

They're my fields and sky. They're my share of the freedom I've got comin'.

*

Most people fear the woods at night.

Meeting somebody they don't want to is part of it; the other part's getting through the brush and stepping over roots, logs and rocks without breaking their necks.

The moon helps, but not much. The leaves on these old tree branches block its light so you can't hardly see the river 'cept as a dark space in the woods. As for the path, I stay with it by walkin' where the trees are more widely spaced and in a straighter line than if man hadn't been at them. Even so, I got to go by the heavier shadows of the trunks and it's often I get slapped by a low branch.

But for all that, I'm not scared.

I'm more scared of someday not bein' able to take myself off like this. A girl gets caught up with a boy or school or becoming something and forgets her own spirit. In these woods, I become the woman coming back from pegging salmon to drying racks off the Quenalt in Washington or from berry pickin' in the Smokies. I set pottery in the sun striking the stucco walls of a Zuni pueblo, and, close by this river, stitch deer hides to warm my Miami brothers.

I may be white with German-Polish ancestors, but it don't make no difference; the land makes changes in those who get close to it.

None of the girls I knew from my old home could do what I do and be so free and easy. They got their television and pop, their cassette players, their fashions and their boys. Drag them out here and all you'd get is a lot of whimpering about mesquitos and shadows. But I been out here a year, most of it alone, through rain, snow, and flood, and feel kin with the women who knew these paths and who had their kids squattin'. I sure ain't getting bent out of shape over the color of a pair of shoes or some screwball's new album. I just couldn't.

The woods ain't America, though. That's part of my problem. America's out there somewhere on the asphalt. It's on the tv and at the movies. It's what made my daddy retire three years before he thought he'd have to, and what made the mounds out here--buriel sites, maybe--museum pieces for egg-heads and air-heads. Nobody lives out here no more except those who live apart. For a girl, it's lonely. You come home to a home, not a village. Where this path comes out of the woods, for instance, there's a row of houses with crabgrass and gravel drives, some with new Cameros, Trans Ams or Toyota pick-ups parked out front (a way some folks show muscle when they're just as old and stuck here as anyone), and others with junked cars rustin' on blocks in the side yards. In any case, when I get there, a few folks will have their windows open for the night air and the chirpin' of crickets and few will have their tvs turned up, and a few will be arguing about love or the rent but there won't be no one but daddy depending on my getting back, and it's a bet I find him sleeping in front of the set.

It don't matter much where I go or what I do just so long as I go and do something. Even though I feel the past out here in a way it can't be felt up in Akron and I get a sense for who I am, I don't hardly know nothing about the world. This is the sort of place to leave when you're young and maybe get back to when you're old. So I won't stay. As soon as I get through high school, I'm walking to Krill's corner.


Correspondence and Permissions: James S. Oppenheim


Stones

A child's wheelbarrow lay on its side in the yard. Above it, the white undersides of maple leaves shimmered through warped window glass, and the whole lawn lay bare in the spottled shade.

The fight had started in the basement as a complaint about putting tools back where he had found them. And what was he using them for anyway? He was twelve years old. He didn't even know how to use tools, did he? And with that humiliation there at the bottom of the steps it should have ended.

Indeed, by mid-morning, the home was again quiet.

The front door, open to the living room, and the back, for taking trash out of the kitchen, were open for fresh air. His father had stormed out to the shed to change the oil in the mower and sharpen its blade for the season. So he had sulked on the couch in the living room, wondering when, if ever, he would run away to the Merchant Marines.

He had only wanted to round the edges off a two-by-four with a square of sandpaper.

There had been no purpose in it other than using the materials down where he had heard the voices coming up through the ventilator shaft to his bedroom on the second floor. He had told no one about the voices. He had only felt drawn to the damp basement and comfortable at the workbench where his father had left a knocked out brier pipe and around the bowl's rim loose flecks of tobacco and ash rested weightless on the linseed finish. He could not say what he liked about being at the table, only that he did like it, and then too the dust from sanding, which rose in a suspended puff into the pale light afforded by a window well set above the bench.

His father, who had come down for a file, caught him with the wood and sandpaper and ripped him good.

He sulked on the living room couch until he heard the mower start, and then with the quick flash of movement best known to children, he was up the stairs, in his room, and on his side on his bed with a picture book of Scandinavia open by his elbow. He turned the pages to his earliest and still innocent love, Denmark's "Little Mermaid." It was not her thick braided hair, the slooped roundedness of her shoulders, or her breasts, which had been set firm, high, and wide by the sculptor, that attracted him (although for the first time something in him enjoyed simply looking), but a sadness in her that he took to be his own, and he looked at her and longed for her many minutes before flipping the pages to Sweden and windmills, fishing villages, starkly angular white brick churches, not unlike the Baptist one on the corner up the street from where he lived, and soft lighted farmhouse kitchens visually warmed by caramel pine and hunter green cabinets and tables.

Toward noon, the air in the room became warm, but with his window open and the doors open down the stairs, there was breeze enough to cool him even with his head sunk down into the crook of his elbow.

His father had promised to take him fishing later in the afternoon, and he was hoping it would happen although he knew better than to count on anything his father said, especially if one of his father's girlfriends called. Then anything could happen. Maybe they would go fishing. Maybe they would go to McDonald's. Maybe the three of them would walk around the aisles at Value Hardware. Maybe they would watch a video and later, when he was in bed, leave him alone in the house, and not come back for hours.

He lay on his bed in the warm air with his head down in his arms, the book set aside, his eyes closed, drowsing, thinking about these things that had been bothering him when he felt the air turn suddenly cool and the feint touch of fingers slicking back the shock of hair that fell across his forehead. He opened his eyes. There was no on else in the room. But his book had been closed and placed on his night stand. Then he heard his father coming up the stairs.

"Robby, get up."

His father stood in the doorway wearing his black steel-toed work shoes, gray dungarees, a drab oil-stained work shirt, and a baseball hat. He walked into the room.

"Look at this shit," he said, knocking the book from the night stand. "I'm not raising no goddamn wimp." He put one of his grease-stained hands on his son's shoulders and shook him. "I got some work for you."

Robby sat up.

"Come on."

He followed his father down the stairs, through the living room, and out the kitchen door to the steel landing leading down to the yard.

"I cleared this yard when we moved here," he said, "and now it's full of stones."

His father stared down hard at him.

Robby didn't know anything about the stones.

"I don't know who's throwing them," his father said, "but I damn sure know who's picking them up."

His father walked across the yard to the back where the shed was, went in for a moment, and came out with a thick burlap sack.

None of the stones were heavy but some were larger than a child could pick up with one hand, so stooping often with both hands wrapped around a rock, Robby worked his way back along the white pickets of the side fence, diligently putting each stone in the sack and dragging it a few yards to the next patch of uncleared lawn.

Robby's father looked on from the kitchen's steel black landing, the cold bottle of beer in his fist sweating out a fine mist on the dark green glass. If it hadn't been the boy throwing stones, it had to have been one of the neighbor's young punks, he thought. This wasn't New England. The frost didn't just heave them out of the ground. He went back into the kitchen, put the beer down on the kitchen table and ducked his head in the refrigerator to see what odd collection of solids had assembled there in the past week.

The refrigerator held more condiments than food.

Lea & Perrins' Worcestershire, A1's Bold, and Kraft's Bold and Spicy were in there on the door's bottom rack, entirely useless without the burger, chop, or steak, and there was no burger, chop, or steak--he would have to get to the store, or have Amy pick up something before she came by. Maybe, he thought, he could sell her on a backyard barbecue and she'd do the shopping and haul enough in to last them through the next weekend. Either that, or he'd take the boy to McDonald's, and afterward they'd pick up the chips and salsa, some fresh wheat bread, a few boxes of cereal, a couple cans of beans, hot dogs, hot dog buns, potato salad. In the meantime, he'd just have to do with what was in there that could be eaten--one or two slices of American cheese, each slice wrapped in plastic, a sliver of Vidalia onion, and a dry piece of last week's rye bread. He pulled these items from the fridge and turned to set them where his beer had been.

For a moment, he just stared at the empty spot on the kitchen table.

Then he put down the groceries.

Through the doorway, he could see Robby on his knees far in the backyard with the burlap sack beside him. And then he saw the open Heinekin set down on the landing, its dewy sweat glistening in the sun that had just risen high enough over the eaves to strike it. He looked again at Robby, who was dragging the sack another yard toward the back of the lot. Well, maybe, he thought, he didn't put it on the table in the first place--but there was a ring of wet on the table, so he had put it there.

What he'd do, he thought, was bawl the boy out good. Don't fuck with my tools, is what he'd tell him, and keep your hands off my goddamn beer.

He stepped out the door to pick up his beer but jerked his hand away as over the lip appeared the white face of a hornet.

"Jesus H. Fucking Christ!" he cursed and kicked the bottle off the landing.

Robby looked back to see his father turn back into the kitchen. Then he went on picking up stones. His jeans were grass stained and soaked at the knees and his back hurt with scrunching over and lifting the stones one-by-one and popping them into the sack. They would all be picking up stones, he thought, if his mother were with them. He went on reaching for stones and thinking about what everyone told him was "the accent".

It was a car accent.

And she couldn't come home.

They didn't tell Robby anything else. He was six years old then, and now, six years later, he had figured out about the crash, the bottles in the refrigerator ("they'll kill me too," his father said when he took them out of their cartons and lined them up in soldierly order on the top rack), and the young women who for a time brought into their home laughter amid the dark scents of leather and perfume and who each time left a new absence and loneliness. Robby knelt on the lawn, picking up stones, feeling the sun warm him into a sweat, and feeling too the eyes of his father looking on from the kitchen.

The lawn was damp despite the direct springtime sun.

Even on the cloudless dry afternoons of mid-summer, it remained damp.

The yard sloped gently north to south, flowing with the contours of the hill on which the subdivision, an oil to pastel collection of Baltimore homes built independently from the 1920's forward, had been planted. At the top of the hill stood the white clapboard construction of Rosedale Baptist Church and right across the street the stone-built Rosedale Methodist Church and three doors down that block, Cavalry Catholic, a small stone building with cathedral-like arches, and all three had been perched on the generous knoll to compete for the souls and otherwise serve the varying faiths represented in the neighborhoods spreading beneath them. The three had also been built to take close advantage of a shallow underground spring that surged up from a great river flowing down the eastern seaboard five hundred feet beneath its surface. What anomaly in the rock opened that well no geologist could tell, but it had been there and known since settlement, and it had kept the hillside, even stripped of forest for building and open to the sun, green through drought for centuries.

Robby dragged the burlap sack, a quarter full of stones, beside him.

"That was some neat trick with the beer," his father said.

Robby looked up at the solid build of the sandy haired man who was his chief connection to the world inhabited by adults. No teacher could mean to a child what a father meant, however mean, neglectful, or unpredictable.

"You did it, didn't you?"

Robby picked up another stone. His father bent down and slapped it from his hand.

"Don't act like you don't know what I'm talking about."

Robby stood up slowly, his young back hurting as it straightened from better than an hour of obedient stooping.

"I don't want you playing with my tools, and you don't ever touch my beer."

"I didn't do nothing with your fucking beer," Robby said.

"Don't you cuss at me!" Robby's father stepped forward to backhand him and Robby stepped back. "Get in the house. I don't want to look at you."

Robby stomped off toward the house.

The father underscored his superiority to the child by chucking toward the shed the stones remaining on the lawn. That was the way he liked to do things--make them simple to do, reduce the labor, do them. In twenty minutes, dozens of stones had fallen to rest near the shed, and all went into the sack.

As a father, he wasn't angry with the boy, he thought: it had just been hard without her. This was his litany: out of high school, both working, scraping together the cash for a down payment on a run down home in an old neighborhood north of town, she getting pregnant, then the baby, and a few years of good times and bad, just the three of them, and then the accident.

The Accident.

The only accident that had ever happened to anyone.

The only one that had ever mattered to him.

They should have buried him too because that was it. After a few months of brooding, he went to work at being happy again, but the company of drinking buddies got old, and he found other women didn't understand him and the way he refused to change things. In fact, they all told him to sell the house. They said, more or less, it was destroying him by keeping him in the long shadow of another life's memories, but he didn't see the point if the problems were all emotional. For the dollars, he knew he wouldn't find better, and, he thought, feelings died down and memories always faded.

And he was right about the house.

It was Robby, the little boy that was growing up, that kept alive not only the memory of his wife but his unhappiness with the marriage itself. The things he loved about her--her looks, her smell, her hell-on-wheels attitude, her frailty--were things he had come to despise in her. It seemed the baby changed him more than it changed her. When the coroner reported significant levels of alcohol and cocaine in her blood at the time of death, he went crazy. So she had not been a PTA mom, he thought then, but what kind of mother runs around coked and drunk with a six-year-old boy and a working husband waiting for her at home? What could she have been thinking about when the Mustang was spitting gravel off the shoulder and then swiping the guard rail for seventy-five yards before hitting head-on the concrete bridge abutment?

The shed was cool in the oak shade beneath the early afternoon sun. The father sat at the bench, this one used for gardening as well as lawnmower work, and lit a cigarette to pass a few minutes time before firing up the mower in earnest and walking it around the backyard.

While his father made time pass in twists of smoke, Robby lay staring up at the ceiling from his bed. He had tried being good, but he couldn't be--everything he did turned out wrong. Maybe if he didn't do anything, he thought, his father wouldn't get mad at him. So he lay perfectly still looking up at the ceiling in the warm room. After a while, he could hear the man and woman whispering in the basement, and the man was saying, "Let him go." The rest of the conversation was obscured by the sound of running water. Was his father back in the house? He didn't care to get up to check, but another thought followed: what if his father couldn't find him in the house? Maybe, he thought, he wouldn't be so mad. He could hide somewhere--under the bed, in the farthest corner of the closet, or somewhere else.

Robby sat up.

His father was in the house.

He listened to his father's footsteps on the stairs and then coming down the hallway, followed by a brief pause at his closed door, and then moving up the hallway, and then nothing. He waited several minutes for a door to close or open, for the sound of the shower running, or the audio of the television in his father's bedroom. But it was quiet except for the whispers coming up through the ventilation grill and, down there, the sound of water gurgling.

When Robby opened his bedroom door, he saw the attic stairway pulled down. He had not been in the attic for years. Maybe his father was up there, he thought, and not mad at him anymore. He called up the stairs, "Dad?"

Robby's father stubbed out his cigarette on the bench, stepped off the stool, and stood behind the mower to push it out the door, but in front of the mower was the burlap sack, and it was empty. This time, he flushed. He wasn't mad at the boy. He was scared.

"Robby?" He raised his voice. "Robby?"

He stepped around the mower and looked across the yard. The stones had been scattered everywhere. Even from where he stood, he could see stones on the kitchen landing and above it, more stones scattered across the green shingles of the roof.

And up in the attic, Robby believed he had found a swing set hanging from a cross brace, and he was swaying, looking out the window toward the front lawn, looking at the white undersides of maple leaves, his kicking legs dangling carelessly several feet above the floor.


Correspondence and Permissions: James S. Oppenheim


May 04, 2007

Tandem

The lovers were in bed, and the party was over.

A trio of white and blue helium-filled balloons nestled in the shadowed corner above the door frame while a fourth had fallen, its trailer of red ribbon tangled over the back of the chair before her vanity.

The man said, "That one's gotten old."

"It's only deflated."

"It has stretch marks."

They lay there like that.

The woman said, "You're not playing fair."

The man said she smelled wonderful and burrowed his wide forehead into the curve of her neck.

"It will be limp by morning," she said.  "And the others will be there, higher than it, stronger."  The woman was looking at the balloons shifting on currents above the door frame.

"So?" the man said.

The woman petted the hair behind his ears and told him how awful he was, but he was warm and sleepy and hardly heard her.  He was thinking of a girl whose hair spilled across her back in long strands of braided honey.  She had been very thin, and he had made fun of her breasts, which were like a boy's, only tipped with soft, brown nipples.  Now he missed her.  He thought about not knowing her last name by marriage--he imagined her married--or where she lived, and it seemed odd to him that they had never kissed.

"I should take your head off," the woman said, kissing him, his head cradled firmly against her swollen chest.

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Correspondence and Permissions: James S. Oppenheim