Issue #6

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6
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Rind Literary Magazine
Issue 6
June 2014
rindliterarymagazine.com
All Works © Respective Authors, 2014
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Editor in Chief:
Stephen Williams
Fiction Editors:
Johnathan Etchart
Jenny Lin
Melinda Smith
Shaymaa Mahmoud
Nonfiction Editors:
Collette Curran
Owen Torres
William Ellars
Anastasia Zamora
Webmaster:
Omar Masri
Blog Manager:
Dylan Gascon
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Contents
Acknowledgements 5
Contributors 62
Fiction:
The Boy Who Turned Himself into a Statue/P. J. McNeil 6
The Moths/Harry Youtt 12
Cabin Pressure/Claire Kole 27
Poets and Killers/Wendy Scott 29
The 3 A.M. Litter ateur /Tony Conaway 38
Ringlet and Pinky/Jo Heath 42
My Father’s Children/Ryan Link 45
X-Ray Blanket/Megan Dobkin 57
How She Fell For Her Captor/Megan Dobkin 58
Open House/Megan Dobkin 59
Rock Show/Megan Dobkin 60
The Juror/Megan Dobkin 61
Nonfiction:
Climbing That Mountain Again/Jeff Nazzaro 14
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Acknowledgements
Thanks to all of our contributors, past and present, because without you this publication
wouldn’t exist. We are the octopus, you are the tentacles, let’s go eat some sharks together.
We’re also indebted to the creative writing faculty of the University of California Riverside,
Mount San Antonio College, Rio Hondo College, and Riverside Community College. Thank you for
supporting us the same way vitamin c supports the immune system.
Did you paint the next Mona Lisa and are dying to premiere it in a literary magazine? If so,
please send us your artwork and photography. Feel free to contact us with any ideas or queries you
might have.
Please support the San Gabriel Valley Literary Festival because they are the loveliest people.
You can find out more about them at http://www.sgvlitfest.com.
Check us out on Duotrope, Facebook, and Twitter. For updates and general shenanigans, head
over to our blog at http://www.thegrovebyrind.wordpress.com. Do you stay up at night, staring at your
ceiling, visualizing your name spelled out in orange lights? Then become a contributor! Send your
submissions to rindliterarymagazine@gmail.com.
-The Rind Staff
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The Boy Who Turned Himself into a Statue
P.J. McNeil
Since the beginning of the school year, regular as daily prayer, Gerard “Pitou” Blette,
imagined kissing Celeste Angelle. She sat in the front. Her father was a lawyer and they lived in one
of the big new houses at the end of School Street. Sometimes he’d be aroused and he’d look left and
right at his classmates sitting next to him to see if they noticed. But how could they, since he was
dutifully seated at his desk like everyone else.
By spring, Sister Mary Stephen of the Stoning told his seventh-grade class that all thoughts
about sex are a sin. She further advised them against attending the Friday night dances at the
American Legion Hall now that they were of age, because, she said “when you enter that dance hall
door, your guardian angel abandons you and the devil takes over.”
This warning about sex, the only one on the subject made by his teacher all year and the only
one spoken thus far during his education entrusted into the capable hands of the Soeurs de Bon
Pasteur (Sisters of the Good Shepherd) at St. Rapier’s School, pushed Pitou over the edge. Was he
being taken over by the devil? Were his thoughts of kissing Celeste the dreaded ‘thoughts about sex’?
That was the day he decided to turn himself into a statue.
Statues were a big part of his life, a big part of the adult world in which he lived and in which
he had very little say. His earliest memory of a beautiful statue was the Blessed Virgin on her
pedestal in church towering over a little stadium of candles flickering in glass cups the color of blood.
When Pitou and three of his cousins made their First Communion, their parents assembled
them in their finery like wedding cake dolls and marched them to the grotto behind their pepe’s house
to pose for pictures in front of pepe’s statue of the Blessed Virgin. Most people had Mary enshrined
in a bathtub planted on the lawn. His pepe had built his Mary shrine to imitate Lourdes, one of the
places where she appeared to young children. It was deep in the back yard on the edge of the woods.
She was housed in an arch of mortar and stone. His pepe even diverted a little stream to go trickling
past like the miraculous water of Lourdes.
Pitou’s wasn’t sure how or if he could turn himself into a statue. He’d been raised in a church
that reveled in saints and miracles, so he believed pretty much anything was possible, if it was done
for the glory of God. Did he want to become a statue to glorify God? Not really. He needed a time out
from all this sex stuff. It would be like a magic trick.
That night, he stood by his bed in his pajamas and rattled off continuous Hail Mary’s in a
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hurry to get each one over with, the words stumbling, mumbling out as if he were speaking in
tongues. He became dizzy and feverish.
He didn’t realize he’d actually done it, didn’t know an entire night had passed, until his
mother’s terrified scream the next morning. Pitou felt bad right away about scaring the daylights out
of her. He thought of Mary, being greatly troubled when the angel Gabriel told her she would be the
Mother of God. He didn’t think Mary screamed like crazy the way his mother did when she
discovered his little miracle.
Pitou immediately considered turning himself back into a boy, but then he’d have to confess
why he did it. He wasn’t ready for that. When his mother stopped screaming, she fell to her knees,
bent over and hugged herself and sobbed. He braced himself when he heard his father come bounding
up the stairs. His father was a carpenter, like St. Joseph. Unlike St. Joseph, he liked his cans of beer
in multiples and his mother had to continually shush his blue language.
“What the hell is it?” he yelled shoving open the door against his prostrate, sobbing wife.
Pitou’s mother got on her hands and knees and scuttled out of the way, allowing him to open
the door wide.
“Jesus Christ Almighty!” he yelled as Pitou’s mother pointed a trembling hand to the place
by the bed where Pitou had positioned himself the night before.
“Pitou? Pitou?” his astonished father asked, resting his coffee cup on Pitou’s dresser.
“Pitou! Pitou!” his father yelled as if saying his son’s name loud and angry enough would put
everything in order.
He braced one hand on his kneeling wife’s shoulder and took a step closer toward Pitou. As
his father’s outstretched hand got closer, Pitou wanted badly to blink or somehow signal his parents
he was still alive. His father patted the top of Pitou’s head twice. Then he pulled back, dropped to his
knees and put his arms around his wife without taking his eyes off his son.
By then Pitou realized he still had most of his senses. He could smell his father’s coffee, see
and hear both his parents. He’d felt his father’s hand on his head. But he remained a plaster,
inanimate statue. It was if he were there, but hiding, like the nuns tried to explain the presence of
God.
“What should we do?” his father asked. Pitou had never seen his father so tamed.
“I’ll call Father Bellechance,” she answered, looking up at Pitou. She pushed herself up from
her knees without taking her eyes off Pitou. She was calmed. She wiped her tears with her apron,
took a couple of steps back, turned and left.
Pitou’s father stayed on his knees, then looked down at himself as if he were embarrassed to
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find himself kneeling in front of his son. He jumped up and bolted after his wife and slammed the
door shut.
Pitou spent the next hour or so (he’d lost his human sense of time completely) regretting what
a huge mistake he’d made. All he’d thought of beforehand was how wonderful statues were and how
everybody loved them. He hadn’t wanted to scare his parents. He’d not even considered how he
would turn myself back into a twelve-year-old boy. He supposed it would require wanting to be a boy
again as much as he’d wanted to be a statue.
As this weighed on Pitou, he heard the hollow uneven sounds of many pairs of feet coming up
the stairs. The door opened and Fr. Norman Bellechance’s considerable bulk occupied the doorway.
The pastor’s B.O. wafted in and Pitou wanted badly to raise a hand and pinch his nose.
The priest stood open-mouthed, panting to catch his breath from the climb, a bit of drool
escaping the corner of his pale lips. His normally gray, tired slits of eyes widened with shock.
Fr. Bellechance, without blinking, reached into his pocket and pulled out a handkerchief.
Transfixed, he dabbed the spit from his chin, held his breath, and approached the statue of Pitou. He
removed his black fedora with one hand and reached out toward Pitou with the handkerchief in the
other. Pitou wanted to turn away from being touched by that handkerchief. The old priest made a fist
around the handkerchief and slowly knocked twice on Pitou’s plaster head.
He backed off and pulled a little plastic bottle of holy water from his breast pocket, squirted
some into the palm of his hand and tossed it at Pitou, not making the sign of the cross or anything,
just tossing as if he were feeding ducks on a pond.
Finally Fr. Bellechance stood erect, his face nearly as white as the plaster that Pitou had
become. He pronounced with the authority of an expert, ‘Yes, I’m afraid he is a statue.’
The housekeeper at the rectory overheard Fr. Bellechance on the phone talking to the bishop
about Pitou Blette. She listened intently as the old priest’s impatience with the bishop rose to a
shocking level.
“I’m telling you I have verified it with my own hand!” the pastor said, then, calmly, backing
off, “No, your excellency, he appears to have done it by himself.” He concluded the call: “Yes, your
excellency, I look forward to your visit.”
The housekeeper did not hesitate to spread the juicy gossip by calling her cousin Estelle who
called her cousins and aunts and sisters and, like a flash flood, word that little Pitou Blette had turned
himself into a statue buzzed in the ears of every Catholic in town and plenty of non-Catholics too.
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Soon the neighbors, relatives, friends, and total strangers formed a line outside the Blette
home, a humble two-story apartment in a block of six mill housing apartments called a “sexplex”.
The police came to direct traffic. Cars with out-of-state plates were parked as far as three blocks
away.
The first visitor was his Aunt Simone who placed a small wicker basket at Pitou’s feet with a
cardboard sign “DONATIONS”. She also set up a burgundy velvet rope and two gold stands she’d
borrowed from the funeral parlor in order to keep pilgrims from getting close enough to touch her
nephew. Many people came and went, Pitou’s parents allowing groups of no more than five to crowd
into the little upstairs bedroom on a non-descript house in Melanville that was being transformed into
a shrine. People lined up for blocks, debated if it was it a miracle. Some brought young children,
eager to expose them to the Church’s tradition of miracles. They were careful to keep them from
going beyond the velvet rope. Visitors would kneel briefly and close their eyes, but couldn’t keep
them closed long, so eager to stare at this boy-statue as if waiting for something more to happen,
some further astonishment and determined not to miss a thing. They left money, flowers, rosaries,
pictures of their favorite saints. It was like the impromptu shrines that spring up on the highway at the
site of a fatal car accident.
A week went by. There was no attempt to move Pitou. Each evening, his mother and father
would be the last ones to visit his room. They’d sit quietly on two of the several metal folding chairs
someone had brought from the parish hall. He noticed they held hands when they sat there. He’d
never seen them do that. After a while Pitou’s father would empty the donation basket into a sack and
each of his parents would place a warm hand on his plaster head before they left and they’d tell him
they loved him. They were the only ones allowed to touch him.
The bishop pulled up in his big black car, emerged from the back seat and strode impatiently
toward the door of the Blette home while as his two attendant monsignors scurried to keep up with
him. As he mounted the steps, he yanked a purple stole from the pocket of his black suit coat and
draped it around his neck.
Pitou’s parents had cleared their home of all visitors except Fr. Bellechance in preparation for
the bishop’s visit. The old pastor answered the door.
“Welcome to the Blette home your excellency, this is Romeo Blette and his wife Darlene. The
boy is upstairs.”
The bishop shoved Pitou’s door open and all his hurry came to an abrupt halt when he finally
faced the statue. Pitou thought he recognized this new priest from the picture of the bishop that hangs
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in the school hallway at St. Rapier’s.
One of the priests who entered with the bishop unhooked one end of the velvet rope and let it
drop to the floor. He quickly looked around the room and then pulled a night table in front of Pitou
and placed a gold vial on it, then stood straight up with his hands clasped at his belt buckle. The
bishop opened the gold vial and poured what looked like cooking oil onto a couple of his fingers. The
bishop began a prayer in Latin and made the sign of the cross on Pitou’s head, eyes, nose, ears, and
chest. One of the monsignors moved the night table and re-attached the velvet rope.
The bishop turned to Pitou’s parents: “This is your son, you are sure of that?”
“Yes, your excellency,” they answered in unison looking at each other at such a dumb
question.
“You realize I will have to inform Rome,” said the bishop as if that were bad news. “There
will be an investigation.” he continued. He turned back toward Pitou. “It will take some time,” he
finished, sounding annoyed.
Pitou’s parents nodded and the bishop and his cohort left the room.
“Why did he give Pitou the last rights?” asked Pitou’s father as he and his wife sat alone with
Pitou. “He’s not dead!”
Pitou’s mother turned to her husband. “I’m not sure what he is,” as she began to sob.
After dark, after Pitou’s parents had shooed away the last pilgrims who’d come after the
bishop’s visit and they’d said goodnight to Pitou, he was enjoying his evening privacy and the door
of his room opened again. In stepped Celeste Angelle. He thought he was dreaming.
Her left hand on the doorknob, she stepped into Pitou’s bedroom, and like every other first-
time visitor, stared, her mouth slightly open. She moved toward him, and folded her hands in prayer.
She unhooked one end of the velvet rope and dropped it on the floor without taking her eyes off his.
Pitou wondered if she could feel him staring into her eyes the way she was staring into his. She
stepped beyond the rope, close enough so Pitou could feel her breath and smell her perfume.
“Everyone said you turned into a statue. When did you come back?” she asked.
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In my Chest
By
Stina Stjernkvist
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The Moths
Harry Youtt
“I don’t know what you think about them, but I disdain them all.” Charles was talking about
moths, making one of his sweeping proclamations. Gwen wasn’t responding. To say anything would
only encourage him. “Given the chance, all of them will seek closets and chests and have at the wool
of a jumper or a fine pair of trousers.” He rattled the ice in his drink by swirling the liquid with his
fingers. “The tiny ones will lead the way, but the larger ones will follow. And devour.” This is the
way Charles thinks, against the grain of reality, but why should that matter.
They’d been sitting at the rough wooden table, just outside on the patio at the edge of his tiny
garden — last night when the lights were lit inside. Charles had hurried to slide shut big glass door
that opened from the kitchen, against his imagined invasion of the dreaded fluttering beasts. She’d
been contemplating the stone wall at the back, and the new fig trees that had only just been planted,
so that you could see the dug earth fresh and banked against their roots.
In her silence, she was contemplating moths that carry souls of the dead seeking solace,
seeking light, some that flicker, some that flash, even only a glimmer that might points to some kind
of hope, inside and out of reach — frustration of a window screen, or a glass door to beat questing
wings against. The frustration!
Even the next morning, Charles continues about the moths, even though they were nowhere to
be seen, having stolen away to fix themselves among the branches to claim shade and quiet for the
day’s duration.
“You never know,” Charles tells her, sliding closed the door to the garden, this time from
inside.
Now they sit in Charles’ dark dining room. Another table, this one long and trestled. A plate
before her is about to be filled with something Charles prepares. She sees him in the kitchen. He
pulls a square package from a grocery bag and pops open the thin cellophane covering. Two cold
croissants nest inside and seem almost to rattle when he moves the package. Not that they are stale. It
is only that they seem never to have been fresh. Like this place, she’s thinking. They seem to have
been born inside some gray and brittle space, and there they continue to dwell, waiting dutifully and
moth-less to experience the fate of whatever is to be accomplished in this existence, in this case, to be
eaten.
He crinkles both croissants from the package and shovels them directly into a toaster oven.
He selects two and places them onto separate plates. “Do you take butter?”
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She nods.
From the corner of her eye, though she never says a word to him, she watches a quietly
fluttering two-winged thing as it crosses through the sunlit kitchen and seems to be meandering its
way up the stairs, and the shadows, to Charles’ bedroom.
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Climbing that Mountain Again
Jeff Nazzaro
Thereʼs a Japanese proverb that says something along the lines of “Everyone should climb
Mount Fuji once, but only a fool would do it twice.” My ex-wife told me this just before we got
married. In Japan, the formal marriage ceremony takes places at city hall, and, so long as everything
is in order and there is no wait, occupies all of ten minutes. Okay, so count on at least an hour, but
when everything is ready and your number is called, you donʼt have to say anything or even sign your
name—just use your inkan (personal rubber stamp) to seal the deal. Family registers (or register if, as
in our case, only one of you has one) will be updated and you will be officially married. At some
point thereafter, most young Japanese couples, like young couples anywhere, have lavish wedding
ceremonies and receptions. My new wife and I were not so young, added to which our families were
separated by half the globe and not rich. My father-in-law was a citrus farmer in Ehime Prefecture
and a card carrying member of the Communist Party of Japan, who made ends meet doing accounting
work for the local agricultural co-op. He would treat us to a nice little dinner party a few months
later, but for the time being we were on our own.
My idea was to take the Shinkansen to Shizuoka Prefecture after getting married at city hall in
Fukuyama, a mid-size city in Hiroshima Prefecture famous for roses and steel. We could stay in a
ryokan for a couple days and climb Japanʼs biggest and most famous mountain where atop which we
could exchange our wedding vows in a private ceremony. She loved the idea and relayed the proverb
about climbing Mount Fuji. Then she told me sheʼd already climbed the 12,000-foot peak three times.
I had no idea what Japanese wisdom might have to say about that, but I went through with it anyway.
“The desire to see the city preceded the means of satisfying it,” Michel de Certeau writes in
The Practice of Everyday Life. Of course the mountain, and the desire to see it, preceded by
thousands of years humans who could in fact see it, to say nothing of the very notion of the city. This
is undoubtedly one reason why views of Mount Fuji in art, photography and personal anecdote
probably outnumber views from Mount Fuji by at least a million to one. But another reason would
surely be sheer practicality. The traditional way to climb Mount Fuji is to start in the evening and
climb all night in order to reach the summit before daybreak. This carries with it an obvious aesthetic,
if not spiritual, payoff, albeit one predicated on the rather chancy condition that the weather is clear.
From the top of Mount Fuji on a clear day one can see the Korean peninsula, China, Russia, and of
course past Tokyo and out over the Pacific Ocean. It is a view, a culmination that thousands each
year suffer through an hours-long trek in the dark, a sleepless night, a prodigious drop in temperature,
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and aching muscles, to see.
Considered in terms of deep time, the mountainʼs existence on the planet is at most of minor
duration, while eventual human interaction with it would take up barely the blink of an eye. In terms
of symbolic importance to a people known as the Japanese, however, its presence is incalculable. It
was indeed, though I did not process it in such terms at the time, within these competing contexts that
I endeavored to climb the mountain. Marrying a Japanese woman had been for me one more step
towards staying in the country, towards submitting in substantial ways to the culture. What concerned
me even then was my ability to function within that culture, while also maintaining my own cultural
integrity and freedom. What better act, in what more appropriate setting could there be for the
consummation of this stage of my life than this most essentially Japanese act of scaling Mount Fuji?
We started around eight-thirty on a clear night that was, typical of a Japanese summer, hot
and humid. I carried a black Maglite flashlight made in Ontario, California and purchased at my
neighborhood Daiki home improvement center. My new wife wore a headlamp and hiking boots. We
both carried backpacks with water bottles, snacks, and extra layers of clothing to throw on as we
made our ascent in weather that would change from muggy to cold. Interestingly enough, though I
had lived in Japan for more than two years at that point, I had never actually seen Mount Fuji. I
always flew in and out of Kansai International Airport in Osaka for my trips to and from the United
States, taking the Shinkansen southwest to Fukuyama. On the only occasions I had had to pass within
viewing range of the mountain, it had been too cloudy, though once I apparently dozed through a
clear opportunity on a Shinkansen ride to Tokyo. Even on this post-nuptial trip to Shizuoka by train
and then bus to the usual climbing embarkation point a third of the way up the mountain, oddities of
geography and simply being too close prevented me from seeing the thing in its cone-shaped majesty.
Thus it was that roughly eleven hours after starting my climb, I would be able to say that I had been
up and down, on top of and all around Mount Fuji, but had never actually seen it. It has never eluded
me that this could, in some way, serve as a metaphor for the eventual twelve years in total that I spent
in Japan.
On the way up the mountain, not too far from the summit, the single file path wending its way
through the rocky alpine terrain suddenly ground to a halt. And there I was, at three oʼclock in the
morning, stuck in a human traffic jam on the side of a 12,000-foot dormant volcano. De Certeau
might be interested to know I was once also stuck in a human traffic jam on a Manhattan sidewalk—
it was rush hour on a cold, snowy day and the concrete path had been reduced to single file through
the accumulated snow and ice. Only in New York, I thought then, though surely weather-related
pedestrian traffic jams happen in other cities from time to time—Toronto, Moscow? But three in the
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morning near the peak of a massive mountain? Surely this phenomenon is unique to Japan.
We had plenty of time to make it to the top before sunrise, however, and the traffic jam
provided me with an excellent opportunity to stop and look around. Prior to that we had trudged
onward and upward in order to ensure that we would not miss the big event, but now there was little
choice but to follow the pace of those in front of us—and that group consisted of a very large
contingent of elderly climbers. In a way not wholly dissimilar to de Certeauʼs description of viewing
Manhattan from the World Trade Center observatory, the view below showed an expanse of lights
that picked up force at a distance from the base of the mountain and then extended as a mass of traffic
lights, vehicle lights, shops, restaurants, corporations, advertisements—a mass of illumination
interrupted only by the intrusion of Tokyo Bay. The view was far older, more natural than that from
atop any manmade structure, and thus serene, not dizzying. The angle to that which was most
interesting to see was far less severe than that from the observation deck of the tower, which I did
many years ago have occasion to visit. What do I remember of it? The height? The view? Aside from
that extreme, really, and there are buildings of similar height, the experience can be replicated from
almost any tall building in any city in the world, and what remains with me today from that
experience is mostly the fact that those towers are gone.
Standing on the side of a very tall mountain with a view of a tremendous urban sprawl was
something else altogether. Aldous Huxley writes in Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow that
“nature is blessedly non-human; and insofar as we belong to the natural order, we too are blessedly
non-human.” From this we can readily conclude that nature is the desired state, and equally desired
would be a somehow non-human sensibility. Climbing Mount Fuji—stopped in flux on the side,
shivering in the cold, surrounded by darkness, part of a ritual, en route to take part in a personal
ceremony that is part of a far larger human ritual—I felt my humanity come face to face with what
Huxley might call my “blessed non-humanity.” This was a moment of clarity wherein I felt the power
and the beauty of my extreme geographical location, the peace and serenity of the escape from the
sounds of industrial and vehicular traffic, and through which I felt a distinct longing to be back in the
city. The sidewalks and the convenience stores beckoned—I could make out the distinct blue and
green bands of a Family Mart—offering freedom and warmth, hot coffee or cold tea and the distinct
pleasure of not being stuck in a line on the side of a mountain.
When we reached the top it was still dark. We had plenty of time to get a hot bowl of ramen
and relax a little, then find a spot on one of the many low wooden benches facing to the east. As
advertised, the sun rose from that direction and the collected souls gasped and cheered, ours among
them. We got a good few minutes with which to see the lit up Pacific and Lake Yamanaka, and then
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the sky clouded over to groans, a momentary lift in voices as the clouds thankfully relented, then a
group lament as everything washed out to a final grey. My wife and I did indeed exchange vows
shortly after sunrise. It felt forced and unofficial. It wasnʼt the kind of thing I usually went in for, and
she didnʼt seem to know what to make of my words, or what to say when her turn came. After, we
walked around the summit, my wife enlisting strangers to take our photograph at various spots. The
wind had really picked up by this point and it started to rain. I was exhausted and cold, shivering with
a headache, and just wanted off that sleeping old volcano. When men in windbreakers started waving
fluorescent flashlights, announcing that a typhoon was rolling in and imploring everyone to start back
down, I was ready. My wife wanted to stay, however, take more pictures, see more things. What was
there to see? How many pictures did we need? Ahead of us we had a four-hour trudge down the
mountain in the driving wind and rain of a typhoon. I suppose in retrospect that fifteen or so more
minutes wouldnʼt have mattered, but, of course, neither would they have mattered. It was time to start
our blessedly human descent.
Unfortunately for my efforts to assimilate into everyday life in Japan, at least in some kind of
middle ground manner, culturally speaking, notions of deep time did not hold much currency in
everyday life for the average foreigner—which is what I was. My first child was born about eleven
months after that trek up and down Mount Fuji, and two more followed in three-year intervals. I
taught English conversation at a private university, buying and moving into a brand new house after
about the first five years. But I never got too comfortable, either with living in Japan, or with being
married and having children—at least not in the situation in which I lived.
“For modern man,” Huxley writes, “the really blessed thing about Nature is its otherness. In
their anxiety to find a cosmic basis for human values, our ancestors invented an emblematic botany, a
natural history composed of allegories and fables, an astronomy that told fortunes and illustrated the
dogmas of revealed religion.” This was the type of what I consider to be rather spurious endeavor that
Iʼd instigated with that trip to Mount Fuji and the exchanging of wedding vows, somehow trying to
force a livable existence on myself through someone trying to do the same thing from cross-purposes.
Iʼd stumbled into a battle of wills I had no way of winning. In fact, Iʼd wanted to leave Japan after
about six months, and had actually secured a new job at a university in Thailand. In the end, however,
I considered the level of comfort involved in both countries, the level of pay, and, since Iʼd met and
was communicating with my future wife, figured I could make a go of it in wealthier, safer Japan.
Still, whatever illusions Iʼd arrived in the country with were long gone.
In receiving my certificate in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages at the
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University of California, Riverside, I received no small amount of instruction geared towards making
me realize that my language, though the reigning international language of record, and my culture,
though the reigning international pop culture of record, were in no way superior to anyone elseʼs
language or culture. But if the implications behind the words forming the TESOL acronym werenʼt
enough, the sensibilities Iʼd acquired from a liberal arts education at a state university in
Massachusetts in the early 1990ʼs more than compensated. At UMass Lowell I minored in something
called Peace and Conflict Studies, an interdisciplinary program that allowed me to take classes on
subjects like the Vietnam War and Native American culture. Outside the classroom I had friends
whoʼd been born in Laos, Cambodia, Hungary, and Haiti, to name a few countries, all where English
language instruction was and remains in demand. While in Riverside I met, studied with, tutored,
taught and befriended folks from Korea, Japan, Brazil, Egypt, and Russia. True, all of this took place
in the U.S., but still I thought I was prepared for life abroad, for life in Japan. I was not. I was told
before I left that “they love Americans over there.” To put it simply, this was an oversimplification.
The education I received traveled through such seminal postcolonial texts as Edward Saidʼs
Orientalism and Robert Phillipsonʼs Linguistic Imperialism, neither of which, interestingly enough,
has much of anything to say about Japan, though Said at least mentions it. I was struck years later in
reading his definition of Orientalism, by the idea that if you make a few keyword swaps, like
“Japanese” for “European” and “non-Japanese” for “non-Europeans,” the text remains equally valid:
“the idea of [Japan is] a collective notion identifying ʻusʼ [Japanese] as against all ʻthoseʼ [non-
Japanese], and indeed it can be argued that the major component in [Japanese] culture is precisely
what made that culture hegemonic both in and outside [Japan]: the idea of [Japanese] identity as a
superior one in comparison with all the [non-Japanese] peoples and cultures.” The one difference
would be that to the extent Japan tried to export and exert its culture on others, its imperialistic
mission never achieved anywhere near the record as those of its European counterparts. To be fair,
European (and now American) culture has never achieved anything close to hegemony in Japan.
These are important points because, unbeknownst to me, I was heading into a world as hegemonic
and “culturally superior” as the one I was coming from, yet no one had seemed to relay the message
within Japan that such attitudes were no longer cool. The phrase “We Japanese” is a common
conversational preface, and everything from language to local produce is held up as fundamentally
different and superior to everything foreign at every turn. A colleague whoʼd invited me to his home
for dinner scoffed at my reluctance to eat my sukiyaki with a raw egg: “Japanese eggs are fresh,” he
said. There was clearly cultural disconnect, owing mostly to the importance of raw eggs in our
respective national diets, something I would grow used to. And while these instances were frequently
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benign, as in the case of the eggs (I grew to love raw egg as an accompaniment to many dishes),
whatever the ultimate political reality, the reality on the ground for the average, non-military
foreigner living in Japan is that of disenfranchised minority. The largely elevated statuses of the
individual Westerner, both in terms of where they come from and where they stand in Japan provide
good buffers, especially in terms of financial security, but constant reminders in the form of anything
from cultural slights to outright insults find a way of working themselves through this built-in
defense.
Perhaps not unsurprisingly, a lot of the slings and arrows I received revolved around food.
During the first of my twelve years living in Japan, being alone, I ate out quite a bit. Kaiten (or
conveyor belt) sushi was a staple, as were ramen and Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki. For most of this
time, however, I scrupulously avoided the most popular restaurant in the country, which is, here and
for the world, McDonaldʼs. One fall day, during one of my long weekend shopping excursions Iʼd
take by train and foot (shopping along with eating being one of those universal human activities
necessary for survival and requiring minimal linguistic and cultural skills), I did succumb to a certain
homesickness or nostalgia, some kind of craving for comfort that I knew the eternal consistency of
the humble yet mighty McDonaldʼs hamburger—that inimitable mix of salt and pepper, ketchup and
mustard, diced onion and sour pickle—would deliver. It had actually been several years since Iʼd
eaten at a McDonaldʼs, having forsworn the place for healthier, or at least more interesting, options,
but now I entered, placed my order in my heavily accented, deficient, but in this case passable
Japanese, and took a seat by a window.
For some reason, just prior to taking my first bite, I happened to glance up and out the
window, across a narrow concourse and into the window of a slightly upscale café that specialized in
tea and pastry and lunch-sized pasta dishes. Quite to my surprise, I noticed a woman, her two
teenaged children, and the children’s elderly grandmother all pointing and laughing at me. At first I
thought I must be mistaken, overly self-conscious or even paranoid, but as I kept watching I saw the
older of the children, a boy, holding his hands in front of his face as if gripping a hamburger, his
mouth agape as though ready to chomp; I saw his mother slapping the table, her other hand covering
her mouth; I saw his sister clapping her hands together and shaking her head back and forth; I saw his
grandmother throw her head back and howl. Then they saw me seeing. They laughed even harder.
Unbeknownst to them, the joke was doubly on me because Iʼd entered that McDonaldʼs
thinking something along the lines of: Iʼm gonna be all over this hamburger like Ralph Ellisonʼs
Invisible Man on a “hot, baked Carʼlina yam.” Iʼd put in my time. There were several McDonaldʼs
restaurants in the small city in which I lived, not to mention the many cities Iʼd visited, to say nothing
20
of the years back in the States in which I hadnʼt gone at all. Iʼd hardly touched any “American” food
since arriving in Japan. Sure I’d occasionally eat potato chips with my sushi, but they had interesting
flavors like wasabi beef and sour plum. Mostly I bought and prepared Japanese food. Iʼd watched
with some envy a few months before an American colleague order a burger and fries (it even came
with a miniature plastic Stars and Stripes mounted on a toothpick stuck in the bun, in case you’d
forgotten the country most famous for the hamburger sandwich) at a family restaurant while I got a
negitoro-don. This man had lived in Japan for ten years at that point, and was past caring about such
things, but I was actively creating my new identity, that of outsider doing his best to assimilate. So, as
Ellisonʼs famous protagonist had earlier in Invisible Man passed up the pork chops and grits breakfast
special at a diner, Iʼd added the raw egg ordered à la carte (Japanese eggs are fresh), swirled in some
soy sauce, added a squeeze of wasabi, and dug my chopsticks with gusto into that raw tuna belly,
rice, and green onions. Not so my burger. No freedom, no exhilaration, no nectar, as the Invisible
Man experiences walking down the sidewalk, munching his hot buttered yam. I felt the pinch of
shame at the back of my neck, my cheeks flush and my brow constrict because, unlike Ellisonʼs
narrator, I did have to worry about who saw me and what was proper—or stereotypically funny, as
the case was. Ellison sums it up with these deprecatory lines, which I imagine spare only those lucky
souls without any self-consciousness, or perhaps self-conscious souls lucky enough to live in a place
where their group decides what is funny: “What a group of people we were, [the Invisible Man]
thought. Why, you could cause us the greatest humiliation simply by confronting us with something
we liked. Not all of us, but so many.”
I count myself as an honorary member of that club. Coming from the dominant culture of not
only my only country, but arguably the world, shielded me from the more petty slights, what might in
todayʼs parlance be referred to as microaggressions—the numerous times I was told I liked
hamburgers or asked whether or not I ate them every day, for example; or constantly being
complimented on my ability to use chopsticks or eat raw fish. But the direct insults, the ones that
canʼt be excused even on the grounds of ignorance, hurt like I imagine Ralph Ellison, among millions
of others, knew all too well: the hurt of not only being “the other,” but of being taunted and ridiculed
for it.
I once went with my wife and children to the home of a man I played softball with. He invited
a friend who had lived for a time in the States and spoke excellent English. The man, who had
worked as a cook in Atlanta, prepared barbecued chicken wings and brought beer. “Letʼs drink!”
were the words he greeted me with. I sort of chuckled and apologized and told him I didnʼt drink. He
seemed hurt or embarrassed. “Is it because of God,” he finally asked me. When I laughed out loud
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and started to explain how I had given up alcohol for personal reasons, he cut me off with: “I donʼt
care about you,” and sulked. Later, when the chicken wings were nearly finished, he kept pushing the
plate towards me: have another, have another. When a single wing remained he became especially
insistent. I knew what he was doing. I knew it was considered rude to eat the last of anything unless it
was clear it would otherwise go to waste, at which point if you did indulge, you were to
apologetically excuse yourself. Partially to appease him, partially because he was somewhat
aggressively forcing the issue, and partially because in my culture if you are hungry and there is food
and no one else seems to want it you eat it, I ate it. “See?” he said, sitting back, “You like it.” I knew
from his tone and the look on his face he meant: American pig! You think you have self-control
because you refuse to drink alcohol with me, but I have proven you wrong. I have located your
weakness. You are helpless to control yourself when fried chicken wings are involved! Good thing I
didnʼt bring hamburgers as well. Youʼd have really made a fool of yourself!
I knew the whole thing started from a misunderstanding. In his excitement for the gathering,
perhaps a chance to speak in English of his experiences in the States (I did, after I polished off his
chicken wings, entertain some of his stories about living and working in the South, and touring the
States on a motorcycle) he’d overplayed his hand, was strangely direct and insistent, and felt
embarrassed by my rebuff. What bothered me much more than the fact that he would then resort to
such blatant insults and not allow me an opportunity to make up for what had transpired, was that
neither our mutual friend nor my wife intervened in any way. After the fact, my wife made it seem as
if nothing had happened at all, as if the man had been very polite and only wanted to offer me food.
This was the kind of thing I dealt with frequently in Japan, from my wife, from colleagues, superiors,
students—the idea that because I was other than Japanese, I couldnʼt possibly understand anything
that happened in Japan, or any of my dealings with Japanese people. If I had a problem, the problem
must be with me, including on the handful of occasions when people called me “stupid American”
right to my face.
Going back to that day sitting at McDonaldʼs, I was first stunned, then filled with rage, then I
just felt stupid and hurt. I ate with my head down while stifling the urge to flip the family off, smack
the café window and curse them out, or worse. As time wore on, as the insults piled up, I wouldnʼt
always be able to stifle or control violent urges. Most of these incidents were confined to verbal
outbursts in my university classroom, where I attempted to teach English conversation to often
unruly, uncooperative, and sometimes unfathomably insolent freshmen and sophomores. I once
balled out a young man in the train station after he stared at me for the duration of my thirty-five-
minute commute, aping my confused gestures when I grew frustrated with it. Worse than that I
22
pushed a pre-teen boy too hard (I knocked him to the ground, though thankfully he wasnʼt injured)
who as I ate dinner with my family harassed me through a window, undeterred by threatening glares,
amused by an angrily extended middle finger. Twice I pounded my fist on car hoods after vehicles
came dangerously (and intentionally) close to striking me in crosswalks. The second incident caught
up with me, as the young man driving the car noticed a tiny dent on his car and filed a report with the
police. An officer ambushed and arrested me on my way to work, and I was held at the police station
by detectives until my wife came and a settlement of approximately five hundred dollars was agreed
to. It didnʼt matter that it was his word against mine, that where I came from there would have been
no way to prove his case, no chance police would have even gotten involved, much less assigned a
uniformed officer to pull me off the street and a detective to coerce a confession and a signature on a
settlement out of me. I tried to argue that the driver should be cited for driving into the crosswalk
while I was walking in it, but apparently he had violated no traffic rules. I suppose I was lucky not to
have been killed, not to have been charged more money for damaging the car. Or maybe I should
have felt lucky that my wife handled most of the difficult stuff, including meeting and paying (with
my money) the young man; or that the young man was taking unpaid time from his hourly job while I
got a day off from my salaried position. These things offered no consolation, really, the bottom line
being that I was getting worse the longer I stayed, and that it was pointless to try to blame the entire
nation of Japan. For all intents and purposes it was all my fault, and the more I fought it the more I
became the worst version of myself. I was confirming the xenophobesʼ stereotype, that of a
screaming, snarling, violent foreigner, the barbarian from “over there” who canʼt understand or cope
with Japanese culture or Japanese ways. It is easy to empathize with James Baldwin, as noted by
Cora Kaplan and Bill Schwartz in their introduction to America and Beyond, that “his having to leave
America in 1948 was due to a fear that he might be killed, or kill himself, an apprehension that
should not be taken lightly.”
It is a fear I know well. I was always amazed by the degree to which people who had no
reason to fear me (old ladies on trains, single schoolgirls on the other side of the street) did, and those
who probably should have feared me (guys I outweighed by fifty pounds trying to stare me down on
trains or spitting on the sidewalk at my feet, obnoxious kids) absolutely did not. The quote from
America and Beyond above continues by citing Cheryl Wall later in the book suggesting that
“Baldwinʼs quarrel with America was ʻultimately personal.ʼ” And why shouldnʼt it be? He was born
there. But must one be born in a place to feel the sting of otherness? I donʼt think so. And what else
are such instances but ultimately personal? I told myself so many times not to let things bother me,
not to take it personally, and I largely succeeded; but as a human being who is also a person and
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0
wishes to remain one, how else but personally can you really take things?
What scared me the most I think was not the fear that I might hurt someone or be hurt myself,
but the personal place from where that fear emanated—the hatred I felt growing within me. I had
different ways of dealing with it. I had access to a small but rich collection of English language
literature in the university library, there was Major League Baseball via satellite TV in my apartment,
and I had an Internet connection. In my first year I fell in love with the J-Pops band Judy and Mary
and their cute-but-tough singer Yuki. The more I listened and the more Japanese I learned, the more I
picked up bits and pieces from the lyrics. I caught a staggering number of references to the wind and
the four seasons. But I didnʼt really understand and it didnʼt matter. Music is universal and transcends
lyrical comprehension. How else did Bennie and the Jets make it to number one? Listening to songs
like Sobakasu and Brand New Wave Upper Ground allowed me to connect to Japanese culture on my
own terms. In darker moments, though, I would go off on private rants, exploiting my nationʼs prior
military conquest of Japan and sometimes formulate in my mind horrific atomic diatribes laced with
bigotry to unload on would-be persecutors. (I never once resorted to racial attacks in any way, and
never “buck-toothed” or “slant-eyed” anyone, though I did on two occasions get “round-eyed,” a
truly unsettling reversal of racial othering).
I could have of course found a way to leave, even after Iʼd had a family, even after Iʼd bought
the house, but there was a reason I had gone there in the first place. I had a good job that I mostly
enjoyed and my otherness brought with it a lot of perks. I got positive attention I otherwise would not
have, and I got paid a lot of money just to sit and speak with people in their homes. I liked helping
people, or trying to, and I liked feeling different or even special. And thatʼs why I would get so mad
when people mocked me and laughed in my face, or threatened to hit me with their cars; and why I
didnʼt mind so much times like when an older woman stroked and plucked at my forearm hair on the
train and (not imagining for a second I could understand her very simple Japanese phrase) called me
disgusting. She spoke to me in a kind voice, engaged me personally, warmly, and it was easy to sort
of convince myself that maybe she was calling herself disgusting for intruding on my personal space,
for bothering me uninvited like that on a train. It was better, in any case, than some group of
teenagers shouting “hello!” from across the street and then breaking up into laughter when you turned
your head like a dog to a whistle.
As Baldwin states in the “Stranger in the Village” chapter of Notes of a Native Son, “The
black man insists, by whatever means he finds at his disposal, that the white man cease to regard him
as an exotic rarity and recognize him as a human being. This is a very charged and difficult moment,
for there is a great deal of will power involved in the white manʼs naiveté.” I find some interesting
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1
personal parallels here. Of course, the woman on the train was Japanese, and there is no way I was
the first white man she had seen; and in any case I was a very different sort of white man than the one
Baldwin writes of: “The white man takes the astonishment as tribute, for he arrives to conquer and to
convert the natives, whose inferiority in relation to himself is not even to be questioned.” No, after
my liberal education in the 1990s, though admittedly somewhere in between the two extremes, I was
more like how Baldwin describes himself: “I, without a thought of conquest, [found] myself among a
people whose culture controls me, has even, in a sense, created me, people who have cost me more in
anguish and rage than they will ever know, who yet do not even know of my existence.” Well,
beyond the fact that I like fried chicken wings and hamburgers and have hairy forearms.
I donʼt feel like I relate these things cynically. I encountered many people at work and at
academic conferences in Japan, sometimes Japanese, sometimes foreigners like myself, who tried to
play the “linguistic imperialism” card, and who offered no shortage of methods for the politically
correct way to teach English, but I think thereʼs a reason Phillipson doesnʼt touch on Japan in his
influential work. At the street level, every Japanese person I came into contact with who was
interested in learning English, wanted to learn first and foremost from a native speaker of one of the
“prestige brands,” of which American English topped the list. I did encounter resistance from college
students required to take English conversation, which I partially understood. I would have preferred
only students who wanted to study English, and felt all should be given the choice to study Chinese,
German or whatever foreign language they wished instead, how tough really is a year of mandatory
beginner level conversation study when you’ve had at least seven years of instruction already? For the
most part, everyone I encountered was secure in his or her cultural and linguistic identity, first world
citizens of the worldʼs second (later third) largest economy.
It is from twelve years of this perspective, after years of post-Said education that I first
encountered Orientalism, and while, given the title, I was surprised at the lack of reference to East
Asia in general, and Japan in particular, in reading the introduction it became clear as to why. Said
writes, “The exteriority of the representation is always governed by some version of the truism that if
the Orient could represent itself, it would; since it cannot, the representation does the job, for the
West, and faute de mieux, for the poor Orient.” As far as Japan goes, however, with its rich literary
and artistic traditions, and its own history as colonizer, I can only answer that it can and does
represent itself. Perhaps, as Said earlier in his introduction suggests, the Orientalist does make the
Orient speak. But who makes the Orientalist speak? The Orient! This is what Bruce Robbins picks up
on in his essay “Moralizing in Deep Time” when he notes that Said does not let Eastern cultures
represent themselves: “When these cultures do speak for themselves,” Robbins notes, “there is no
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2
guarantee that they will sound any more secular, or humanist, or humane in what they say about the
West, or about each other, than the West has sounded when it talked about them.” I read Orientalism
from the dual perspective of the academic and my own lived experience. For that reason I appreciate
both its vital function and its inherent limitations, and that realization causes me to look inward, and
recognize those things in myself as well.
Eventually, I succumbed to the pressure of being perpetually the Other. I lost my job, my
wife, my kids. I gave up my house and my home. I live in a small apartment in the Westchester
section of Los Angeles, not far from LAX. Seated at my desk I watch the planes make their final
descents into this metropolis teeming with diversity, sprawling from ocean to desert and mountains. I
talk to my children on the phone once a week, using a mix of simple English and poor Japanese and
imagine they will one day be on one of those planes flying in from Asia, bringing us together again, if
only for a few days. I imagine deep time as a violent and chaotic geographic struggle, plate tectonics
and volcanism, and life clinging fragilely for millennia in order to burst forth into its nail file stroke
of glory. Iʼm sure I am nothing but a fool, but it is with this image in mind that I start my climb back
up that mountain.
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3
Works Cited
Baldwin, James. Notes of a Native Son. New York: Penguin, 1998. Print.
Certeau, Michel. The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley: U of California P, 1984. Print.
Ellison, Ralph. Invisible Man. New York: Vintage, 1995. Print.
Huxley, Aldous. Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Other Essays. New York: Harper,

  1. Print.
    Kaplan, Cora and Bill Schwarz, eds. James Baldwin: America and Beyond. Ann Arbor: U of
    Michigan P, 2011. Print.
    Phillipson, Robert. Linguistic Imperialism. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1992. Print. Oxford Applied
    Linguistics.
    Robbins, Bruce. “Moralizing in Deep Time.” Postcolonialism and Ethics. MLA Annual
    Convention. Sheraton Hotel and Towers, Chicago. 10 January 2014. Address.
    Said, Edward. Orientalism. New York: Vintage, 1979. Print.
    27
    Cabin Pressure
    Claire Kole
    “Come on, it’ll be fun. You know you want to,” he teases.
    I roll my eyes. We’ve only been seeing each other for three weeks and if his parents hadn’t
    canceled their trip to San Diego at the last moment, leaving two free plane tickets at our disposal, I
    wouldn’t find myself here in seat 8C, by the window, sidestepping his raunchy idea.
    “It’s just so cliché,” I tell him.
    Having sex is not the problem. Squeezing ourselves into the miniscule airplane bathroom,
    which can barely hold one average-sized person on a good day, and finding a way to actively move in
    such a confining space (which happens to be right behind the cockpit) is the problem.
    “You see it in every movie. There’s a reason it’s called ‘the mile high club.’ It’s stereotypical!”
    I say.
    He can’t hear me over his enthusiasm for the idea which I think tickles him just as much as the
    promise of feeding his libido. He’s already unbuckling his seat belt.
    “Just follow me,” he whispers with a conspiratorial grin.
    He doesn’t notice my lack of smile or hear the unusually large breath I draw into my body,
    almost like a reverse sigh.
    So cliché, I think to myself. The bathroom at the back of the plane is too far not to render us
    conspicuous, so there’s really only one choice. I slip in first, unnoticed by the other passengers, now
    dozing or engrossed in their iPads. The flight attendants are ambling through the aisle, dispensing
    ginger ales and miniature pretzels.
    “You’re welcome,” they’ll chirp as they flash insincere smiles.
    I look ahead of me—beige. The lid of the toilet is up and though there’s nothing inside (where
    does it get suctioned off to anyway? When I was a teenager I pictured a shitstorm falling to earth) I
    start feeling queasy. With the tiniest edge of my fingertip I flip the lid and let it slam shut. To my
    right is the small scale sink and mirror. Tissues. Esta prohibido fumar. A bathroom for elves and their
    sprite girlfriends. Definitely not, however, made for two people who weigh over one hundred pounds
    each and who both eclipse five feet. I run the water briefly; brush my damp hands on my skinny
    jeans.
    Another cliché, I think, followed by, whatever. I’m on a roll now, I can’t stop.
    The door flies open and he steps in, still grinning, and slides the lock into place behind him.
    Ocupado. Our fronts are scrunched together like a peanut butter and honey sandwich and I find
    28
    myself silently wondering about the square footage of these cubicles. His eyes look shiny and I
    recognize the somehow careless intensity in his gaze, a look I’ve seen often in the past three weeks.
    Like someone who’s finally had the first bite of pie and is savoring it before devouring the rest of the
    piece. It says, I got what I wanted, but not all of it.
    Clumsily, we do-si-do around until he is sitting on the lid of the toilet, fly undone, air pressure
    clearly not constricting blood flow. Undressing in this bathroom that is smaller than an actual
    dressing room is challenging and I make minimal effort, leaving everything above my hip bone on as
    well as my sandals. The plane hits some unexpected turbulence, briefly, and to his pleasure, pushes
    me further down on him. I swallow and feel him driving through me, sharp, but not painful. The
    whole event takes no longer than ten minutes, so as not to arouse suspicion from the hundreds of eyes
    we’ll have to face after leaving the bathroom.
    At the end he lets out a shudder and growls, for the first time, into my ear, “I love you.”
    I inhale raggedly and, staring at the beige wall over his shoulder, whisper, “It’s just so cliché.”
    29
    Poets and Killers
    Wendy Scott
    New York, November, 1945
    “Hey Doll.”
    Eva stopped in her tracks on the sidewalk in front of Waxman’s Deli. There was only one
    person who always called her Doll, but it couldn’t be. She turned and took an involuntary step back
    when she saw who was standing right behind her. His slicked back hair and pitted face were exactly
    as she remembered them. Despite–or maybe because of–his somewhat sinister looks, there had
    always been something about him that that she found hard to turn away from.
    “Deke,” she said, as if it was inevitable for the two of them to run into each other despite
    having no contact for the last five years. She wondered what he wanted from her. Deke had always
    wanted something from everyone.
    “Heard you was a new widow,” he said, as direct as a bullet. “Figgured you might be
    interested in makin some extra dough now that your man’s not around to support you.”
    “How’d you know I’m a widow?” Her round blue eyes narrowed with suspicion. Deke was
    just about the last person she wanted knowing her business.
    “Word gets around,” he said with a shrug and a vague wave that managed to conjure up a
    network of informers in her mind. “My condolences, by the way,” he added with a smirk and a tip of
    his imaginary hat.
    She tucked a stray strand of blond hair back into her chignon and gave him a curt nod,
    figuring the less she said, the sooner he would go away. She waited, the silence between them
    building like a thunderhead, pushing away the noise of the traffic and shoes shuffling against the
    concrete and rumblings of other conversations until it was just the two of them, squaring off in the
    purpling twilight. His eyes slowly appraised her as if she were a horse at auction. Discomfort
    fluttered in her belly and she felt heat rise to her cheeks. The old Eva he had known with low-cut
    dresses and tight sweaters was no more. She pulled the edges of her coat together and tightened the
    belt.
    “I see you’re as charming and well-mannered as ever,” she said, her voice sharp in the chilly
    air. “I can’t say that I’ve missed you.” God, this man always did manage to provoke her.
    To her surprise, he laughed. “You always had brass. Glad to see that fancy pants you married
    didn’t take that away from you.”
    But Kit had taken plenty away from her before the war took him. Her mind’s eye filled with
    30
    images of his fists striking her and she could almost feel her flesh splitting and bruises blooming
    beneath her pale skin. She shuddered and saw Deke’s eyebrows rise. “Just a goose walking over my
    grave,” she said, damned if she would let Deke have the satisfaction of knowing what her marriage
    had cost her. Her trembling fingers snugged her coat a little more firmly around her, as if to ward off
    a chill. “I have to go, Deke,” she said. “See you around.”
    Slouching against the brick wall of the deli behind him, Deke ignored her farewell. “I heard
    you was back livin here in the old neighborhood.” He slowly picked something out of his teeth with a
    fingernail and gave it a quick glance before flicking it away. “I didn’t believe it but I guess it’s true,
    huh?”
    “So what?” She scowled at him.
    “Back when we was growin up, I always thought you’d make somethin of yourself, with your
    looks and smarts and all. When you ran off and married that swell, I figgured I had thought right.” He
    barked out a laugh. “But I guess that just proves what a fathead I was ‘cause here you are, back where
    you started. Like you never left. Like me, only I’m on the way up and you…” his thin lips curled in a
    smile as he took in her threadbare second-hand coat and scuffed shoes, “…well, from the looks of ya,
    you’re on the way down, Doll.”
    She stiffened at the insult and fought the urge to slap the smirk off his face. “At least I was
    something,” she leveled a withering glare at him, “but you’ve always been a nothing.”
    “A nothin, huh?” He smiled but something hard glittered in his obsidian eyes. “Y’know, it’s
    funny if you think about it. You coulda had a go-getter like me,” he said as he pointedly adjusted the
    band of his gold watch that peeked out below the cuff of his wool coat, “but instead you snared some
    rich guy who goes and gets himself killed and leaves you with nothin.”
    “He didn’t leave me with nothing,” she said, her chin jutting out in defiance. Her eyes took in
    the cut of his suit and the soft nap of his coat as she thought about her empty refrigerator and the past-
    due rent notice she had found taped to her apartment door the day before. She had spent her money–
    what little of it there was–on doctor’s bills and a second-hand crib. “What do you know anyway,
    Deke? I’ve got enough to get by.”
    “I know everything,” Deke said as he abruptly came away from the wall, his dark eyes turned
    dangerous. “For starters, I know you ain’t ‘gettin by’.” With one step, he was close enough for her to
    feel his hot breath on her face. Sparks of fear danced up and down her spine. “You always hafta make
    out like you’re better’n everyone else.” Looming over her, he looked down at her through narrowed
    eyes. An electric current of hostility crackled in the air. She took a step back, her guts twisting.
    “Admit it,” he snarled. “You’re flat broke.”
    31
    He took another step towards her and she cringed, throwing her hands up in front of her face
    and squeezing her eyes shut. Her heart hammered in her chest, the sound of her pulse whooshing in
    her ears as she waited for the blow to come. Seconds ticked by. She cautiously opened her eyes and
    lowered her hands, flinching when an icy blast of wind hit her face. She was relieved to see that Deke
    had moved back against the wall. Shivering, she slowly put a gloved hand up to her cold cheek, as if
    gingerly examining an injury. She took a deep shaking breath, reminding herself that Kit was gone,
    he was gone and never coming back.
    “So that’s how it was,” Deke said softly and she saw a cunning look of calculation dart across
    his face.
    “I-I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she said, hating the tremor that had crept into her
    voice. She needed to pull herself together, to be more like the old Eva. Giving Deke even a little bit
    of power could be a dangerous thing. Squaring her shoulders, she said, “I have to go.”
    She turned to walk away and he grabbed her arm, stopping her in her tracks. Her breath
    caught in her throat as his blunt fingers dug into the tender flesh at the crease of her elbow. “C’mon,
    Doll,” he said, his voice a soft caress. “I’m sorry if I came on too strong.” His grip loosened and his
    thumb rubbed lazy circles on the inside of her arm as he ventured a small smile. “Don’t leave just
    yet?”
    She felt the pull of his dark charm as he looked at her, his eyebrows raised in innocent inquiry
    and his head tilted slightly to the side like a little boy begging for a sweet. “I was thinkin us runnin
    into each other here, maybe we could be friends again.”
    “Friends?” Exhaustion was starting to seep in, leaving her mind feeling sluggish. She couldn’t
    summon the energy to play his games anymore. “What do you want from me, Deke?”
    “Who says I want somethin?”
    “You always want something.” She pulled his hand off of her arm. “Listen, I—“
    “What if I tell ya I got a business proposition for you, Doll?”
    “Not interested,” she said. “I-I really have to go. I’ve got someone waiting for me.”
    “What if I tell ya you can earn more money in a week with me than you can in a month at
    whatever sorry job you can get through the wants?”
    She paused. A month’s salary in a week? She thought about the yellowed linoleum in her
    miserable apartment, curling up at the corners. The scritch that whatever was living in her walls made
    at night. The ever-present sour smell of piss in the stairwell that she had to endure during the entire
    climb up to the fifth floor. She thought about the doors that had one by one closed in her face again
    today, each time with a regretful, “Sorry miss.” She thought of the near-empty Mason jar in the top
    32
    kitchen cabinet that held the last of her savings. But above all of that, she thought of her baby
    growing up in squalor, of her fear when his croupy cough had returned last month because she had no
    money to pay a doctor again, of his pitiful cries that tore at her heart when there wasn’t enough
    money for food or heat, of all of the opportunities she would never be able to give him. Her son’s
    sweet trusting face rose up in her mind. How old would he be when his trust in her faded away?
    When his smile disappeared into bitterness born of constant want?
    Eva turned back to Deke, one thin elegant eyebrow raised. “What did you have in mind?”
    “Whyn’t you and me go have a cup of coffee and I’ll explain.”
    The vinyl booth in Waxman’s Deli groaned in protest as they slid in on opposite sides of the
    scarred laminate tabletop. The vinegary tang of sauerkraut and spiced scent of salted meats hung in
    the air and Eva’s stomach rumbled in response. She tried not to think about how long it had been
    since her last meal as she pulled her gloves off, laying them carefully on the table to hide the hole in
    one of the fingertips. Deke signaled the waitress. “Hey Dolores, how ‘bout bringin me and this pretty
    lady some coffee?”
    “Sure thing, Deke,” Dolores said, then shuffled away to get the coffee, her orthopedic shoes
    squeaking on the waxed checkered floor.
    “You know her?” Eva asked, not bothering to mask her surprise. Deke didn’t seem the type
    to hang out with old ladies.
    “Dolores? Sure,” he said. “Used to come in here with my old man when I was a kid and get
    root beer floats every Saturday until the old man took a walk one day and never came back.” He
    looked out the plate glass window next to their booth as if he expected to see his father. “Yeah, the
    old man didn’t stick around, but Dolores, she’s been here forever.”
    The waitress returned with a tray and set down two cups and saucers with a rattle, along with
    the luxuries of real cream and sugar. Her knuckles were swollen with arthritis and her hand shook a
    bit as she poured. The pungent scent of strong black coffee made Eva’s mouth water and she could
    almost taste the thick cream as she poured a liberal dose into her cup followed by two heaping
    spoonfuls of sugar. A small sigh of satisfaction escaped her as she took a sip.
    “Getcha somethin else?” Dolores asked, scratching at her nest of gray hair.
    “Nah, just the coffee for now, Dolores,” Deke replied.
    “Alright. I’ll just leave you two alone for a bit,” she said with a wink, perhaps imaging they
    were on a date, and walked away.
    Eva waited until Dolores was out of earshot and then pounced on Deke. “So what’s this
    33
    business proposition?” She wrapped her hands around the warm mug, hoping it would still her
    shaking hands. “This better not be another one of your schemes, or so help me—“
    “Relax Doll,” Deke said. “All I’m askin you to do is hear me out. If you’re not interested,” he
    shrugged, “no harm done, right?”
    “I-I suppose.” Eva reluctantly nodded.
    “Good girl,” he said as he settled comfortably against the bench’s backrest. “Alright, so me
    and this lawyer, we served together and we got to be sorta friends, ya know? So he calls me up outta
    the blue one day and says ‘Deke, I gotta job for you’ and right away I tell him I’m interested–only
    job I could get after the war was in a lousy factory as an assembler.” He slurped his coffee from the
    thick white lip of the cup then set the cup back on the saucer. “Figgured the war didn’t cost me an
    arm or a leg, but that factory job just might. So I jumped at it, without even knowin what the job
    was.”
    “Could you get to the point already? I don’t have all night.” She had left her son with a sitter
    during her futile job search and she could almost feel the money slipping through her fingers the
    longer she sat there.
    “I’m gettin to it. Jesus.” He slurped some more coffee, then continued. “With the war over,
    business has been boomin and we’re expandin our operations. So when I saw you, it was like fate or
    somethin.”
    “What business? What exactly is it that you do,” she asked, “and what does any of this have
    to do with me?”
    “What do we do?” He leaned in conspiratorially and his coffee and stale cigarette breath
    washed over her. “What we do, Doll, is set people free. And you,” he said, “you’re their key to
    freedom.”
    “I don’t understand.”
    “Lemme explain. See, in this great state of New York, you can’t get a divorce unless you have
    one of two things: a lot of money to go to a place like Nevada or proof of adultery. Our clients can’t
    or don’t wanna go out of state,” he shrugged matter-of-factly, “so we help them with the other.” He
    leaned back in the booth and stretched his arms across the seat back, as if to let his revelation soak in.
    “I see,” she said stiffly. She picked up her gloves and handbag, clenching her fists around
    them, and began sliding out of the booth. How dare he? What was it about men? Was she nothing
    more than something to use, to control? She had already let one man abuse her–two if she counted
    her father. And now another wanted to turn her into a whore.
    “No, no, you got it all wrong. No one’s askin you to do any cheatin.” Deke held up both hands
    34
    in a surrender gesture. “All we’re askin is for you to make it look like there’s cheatin. You pose for a
    couple a photos with the unhappy husband and me and my buddy, we work out the rest. Everybody’s
    a winner, Doll.”
    She hesitated at the edge of the seat. “I just pose for a few pictures and that earns me good
    money?” She could feel an angry heat rise to her cheeks. “Don’t try to play me for a fool. What’s the
    catch, Deke?”
    “There’s no catch, I swear. But I should probably mention that you’ll be wearing a little less
    in the photos than you are right now.”
    “You’re a real piece of work, stringing me along like this.” Her voice quivered with rage. “I
    knew I should have walked away before.” She could feel her fingernails cutting into her palms as her
    fists tightened around her purse strap. She slid out of the booth and stood up. “I don’t know what’s
    worse, you asking me to do this or you thinking I’d agree to it. Goodbye Deke.”
    “So that’s it? Guess I had you figgured wrong.” His gaze rooted her to the spot. “You’re just
    gonna be one a them, huh?”
    Against her better judgment, she paused. “One of what?”
    He leaned forward in his seat. “See, what I learned in the war is that in this world, there’s
    poets and there’s killers. People are one or the other. The ones who survive are the ones who are
    willin to do whatever it takes to win, the strong ones. The killers. Not the poets,” he sneered, “the
    weak sentimental saps who just take what they’re given and spend their time dreamin and hopin that
    this sick world will get better.”
    He looked over his shoulder at Dolores. “You wanna be like her, Doll? Workin for peanuts
    every day, strugglin to make ends meet? And for what? The satisfaction of knowin you did an honest
    day’s work, whatever that means? For goin home every night with sore feet and achin knees until
    you’re too old to be useful and they throw you out?” He had crumpled his paper napkin into a ball as
    he spoke and now he tossed it to the side where no doubt Dolores would pick it up later and dispose
    of it. “So how ‘bout it Doll? Do you have what it takes to be a killer? Or are you just another lousy
    poet?”
    She stood there, absorbing his words, trying to picture herself thirty or forty years from now,
    old and worn out. Her eyes fell on the napkin, as wrinkled and used up as Dolores, a throw-away just
    like her. It wasn’t fair. The whole damn thing just wasn’t fair. All she wanted was a chance to make a
    better life for her son–he deserved something better–but she couldn’t catch a break. Then a
    realization hit her: if the game was stacked against her, maybe it was time to make her own rules.
    “Alright Deke.” She slowly sank back into her seat, laying her gloves and handbag next to her. “Tell
    35
    me exactly what I need to do and how much it pays.”
    Exhaling slowly as a relieved smile spread across his face, Deke relaxed against the seat back,
    the vinyl creaking in commiseration. That’s when she realized that he needed her to say yes as badly
    as she needed the money. He needed her. For the first time in her life, she felt a small but tantalizing
    current of power fizzing though her.
    “That’s my girl.” He laid his hand on top of hers.
    “I’m not your girl, Deke.” She very deliberately pulled her hand away from his and leveled a
    steely gaze at him. “I’m not anybody’s girl. Not anymore.”
    She walked home after her meeting with Deke, slightly dazed. She thought about their
    discussion as she put her key in the outer door of her building, bracing herself for the smell that
    always hit her when she opened the door. As she slowly climbed the dimly lit stairs to her floor, she
    thought about the fickle hand of fate, giving and then capriciously taking away. She had been given
    an opportunity and was going to have to make the most of it while it lasted. She passed the door to
    her apartment and knocked on her neighbor’s door.
    “Who is it?” a querulous voice demanded.
    “It’s just me, Mrs. Kamisky.” Eva heard the snap and snick of locks being undone and the
    door opened, revealing a shriveled old woman holding a baby. The old woman handed her the baby,
    and just as Eva had a few months ago when he was born, she marveled at this tiny perfect creature in
    her arms. She held the baby close as she handed the old woman a few bills and thanked her.
    The old lady’s door closed behind her as she opened hers, breathing in the scent of her son’s
    hair. She felt the familiar tug of love that had been with her ever since she had found out she was
    pregnant not long after Kit had come home on his last leave. It had been her third pregnancy and she
    had been determined not to let Kit destroy another life growing inside her.
    She remembered the day almost a year ago that a uniformed man had knocked on the door
    with a telegram and condolences. With the telegram clutched in one trembling hand and the other
    hand curled protectively around her belly, she had realized that for her, the war was over. Kit was
    dead. She had been set free and most importantly, her baby was safe. They had survived. Her son was
    born five months later on VE Day, May 8, 1945. She named him Victor.
    Two Years Later – New York, November, 1947
    The hotel room door clicked shut behind her as Eva entered the room. The man–client, she
    mentally corrected herself–stood in the middle of the room looking uncomfortable in nothing more
    36
    than his boxers. Deke, with his fashionable fedora tipped back on his head, already had his camera
    trained on the man as she walked over to him. She gave the man a smile and a reassuring pat. “Just a
    couple of minutes and this will all be over,” she said, as much for him as for herself.
    She slipped off her fur-trimmed coat and laid it on the bed next to Deke’s. She took a deep
    breath and then, in a practiced motion, she let her dress slip to the floor. The strobe of the flash
    captured her nakedness on film, her hair a blonde waterfall tumbling down her back, the side of a
    breast as she turned to the camera. She counted the bursts of the flash, knowing how many shots
    Deke normally took. Only a few more to go.
    She was careful to keep her face turned away from the lens. Other than her body, her
    anonymity was her greatest asset. After all, it wouldn’t do for the same woman to appear in multiple
    divorce cases. The client’s identity was all that mattered–and that he was photographed with a naked
    woman who was not his wife, of course. The client stood still, stiff and awkward, as she moved
    closer and placed a hand on his shoulder and hooked a leg around his. He seemed unsure where to put
    his eyes or what to do with his hands during the last brief seconds while the shutter clicked and the
    flash popped. Then it was over.
    “Good work, Doll,” Deke said as he put down his camera. His eyes lingered on her for a
    moment too long even though he had seen her naked enough times to have memorized every feature.
    She stepped back into her dress, pulling the straps back up over her shoulders, thinking that every
    time she got dressed, for Deke, it was like the curtain closing on his favorite show. She picked up her
    coat and put it back on, belting it closed firmly, and the client hastily dressed while Deke packed up
    his camera and snapped the case shut. The two men shook hands, and then she and Deke left. In a
    matter of minutes, another set of matrimonial bonds had been broken.
    Eva and Deke walked down the carpeted hall to the elevator bank and she pictured the client,
    alone in the hotel room, maybe wondering how things had come to this. Better than most, she
    understood how a marriage could become a cage. While she didn’t know if she would ever get used
    to what she was doing, she at least found solace in knowing that she was the key that unlocked the
    door for countless unhappy people. It was like Deke had once told her. They set people free.
    In the elevator, Deke peeled some bills off of the roll he took out of his trouser pocket and
    handed them to her. She took the money without a word, carefully tucking it into her handbag. The
    elevator arrived at the ground floor and the two exited, the image of respectability–she in her elegant
    coat and matching handbag and pumps and he in his tailored suit and silk tie. They crossed the
    marble-floored lobby, the high-pitched tap of her heels alternating with the low notes of his wingtips.
    He gestured for her to go through the revolving door ahead of him. The door started to turn and for a
    37
    brief moment, she was caught between two panes of glass, insulated from the ugliness on both sides
    of the door. But the door kept moving, inevitably spitting her out on the dirty sidewalk.
    She pulled the fur collar of her coat up against the chilled air as Deke emerged behind her.
    “Until next time,” he said. She inclined her head with a small smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes,
    then they headed their separate ways. It was early evening and the streets of New York were busy.
    The line of yellow taxis at the curb tempted her, but cab fare was an unnecessary indulgence. She
    made her way to the subway instead, the noise and exhaust fumes fading as she descended into the
    tunnels below the city. Although several men sent admiring glances her way, she noticed none of
    them. She was lost in her thoughts, picturing the soulful brown eyes, dimpled cheek, and mischievous
    smile of her little boy. She quickened her pace, eager to get home to see the one person who never
    failed to bring a genuine smile to her face.
    38
    The 3 a.m. Litterateur
    Tony Conaway
    The snow reflects the moonlight and the sound of my boots. “I am,” I mutter to myself,
    “Zhivago, tromping from Yuriatin back to Moscow in the unforgiving Russian winter.”
    She has a chain link fence around her place. It’s little more than waist-high; meant to keep
    her dogs in, not people out. In my condition, it only takes me about fifteen minutes to traverse it.
    After several attempts, I manage to fall on the inside of the fence.
    Now, how to awaken her but not her roommate?
    I am incapable of action unless I’ve first read about it. Words are my guide. In stories with
    similar situations, the protagonist usually hurls something at a bedroom window to wake up the
    occupant. For instance, in Brady Udall’s story “Night Raid,” the protagonist tears a tar shingle off of
    a doghouse and throws it like a Frisbee at a window. There was also a goat involved in that story, but
    I’m pretty sure he didn’t throw the goat.
    There’s no hard object handy, because there’s over a foot of snow on the ground. It takes me
    a few minutes to realize I can use the snow. I gather up a snowball and pitch it at her bedroom
    window.
    I have to hit her window three times before a light comes on. I’m not going to tell you how
    many snowballs it took for me to hit that target thrice.
    “Deanna,” I shout, forgetting my intention to be quiet. I go for Marlon Brando as Stanley
    Kowalski. Instead, I sound like Woody Allen whining. “De-ann-uh-huh-huh!”
    She opens her window, pokes her head out. She is a vision of loveliness in her lingerie. (If
    you can call a high-collared flannel nightgown lingerie.)
    “Tony?”
    “Deanna! I need you. I should never have broken up with you!”
    “I broke up with you, Tony. And you don’t need anything except your typewriter. That’s
    what you said, Mr. Profound-Observer-of-the-Human-Condition. Now go home and write about
    rejection.”
    “I can’t. I’m too drunk.”
    “You’re not drunk.”
    “Yes I am!”
    “You start vomiting after three beers.”
    “Which is why I had two beers and a Benadryl. AND a double espresso at Starbucks!”
    39
    “Great. Caffeine, alcohol, and an antihistamine. Stimulants and depressants. In a normal
    person, they’d cancel each other out.”
    “I’m not normal! I love you!”
    “SHUDDUP OVAH DERE!”
    The houses were close together. Apparently I’d awakened a neighbor. I shouted back to him:
    Dangerous Bolsheviks out here! We’re going to overthrow the Czar! Better call out the Militia!
    “Thanks, Tony. Like I need more trouble with my neighbors.”
    This wasn’t going according to plan. In my mind, I searched through dozens of stories about
    drinking. Maybe Robert Stone’s “Fun with Problems” would work. The protagonist gets an
    alcoholic to fall off the wagon so he can sleep with her.
    “Have a drink with me.”
    “You know I give up drinking for Lent. There’s no alcohol in the house.”
    “We’ll go out.”
    “It’s 3 am, Tony. The bars are closed.”
    “That after-hours club—“
    “The private club? They won’t let you back in. You’re banned.”
    “Just a misunderstanding—“
    “When you found out the club didn’t have any black members, you stood on the bar and gave
    your Atticus Finch speech!”
    “Did it work?”
    “No, the club is still segregated. But they got the local school board to remove To Kill a
    Mockingbird from the required reading list.”
    This isn’t going well. I try to think of something, anything. I remember a line Lorrie Moore
    wrote: people will do anything, anything, for a really nice laugh.
    I have a great laugh. I give her one of my best, a full basso-profundo. Santa Claus has
    nothing on me.
    My laugh has the usual effect: it awakens every dog in the neighborhood. Deanna’s own
    dogs, slug-a-beds though they are, can’t ignore this.
    “Better start running,” Deanna says as she closes the window.
    It’s fortunate that I’m wearing a winter coat with thick insulation. I lose some of the left
    sleeve to a ferocious beagle before I tumble back over the fence. On the way over, my face scrapes
    against something.
    Then I’m lying face down in the snow, bleeding from a small scrape. I search for a literary
    40
    precedent. Again, I think of Boris Pasternak’s Doctor Zhivago: the young revolutionary, Pavel
    Antipov, is left bleeding by the slash of a Cossack’s saber. Or was that just in the movie version?
    Well, those beagles definitely had a Cossacky look to them. I rise unsteadily. I’m filled with
    the desire to write. My prose can make this a noble defeat!
    Better yet, I’ll rewrite this as a victory. Which it will be, if I can manage to remember where I
    live.
    41
    Somewhere Over
    By
    Eunice Beck
    42
    Ringlet and Pinky
    Jo Heath
    Seen from across the room, they were obviously identical twins; what made it hard to
    believe they sprang from the same sperm and egg was that Ringlet feared nothing and Pinky had
    the courage of a strawberry. Their odd nicknames arose when their parents couldn’t tell the baby
    girls apart except that one was slightly pinker and the other had a curl at her nape. When the pink
    and curl disappeared, their parents learned to examine their facial expressions to see which was
    the daring extrovert, and which the cautious introvert.
    They were more than close. Once, in first grade, Ringlet had been kept in class to print, “I
    will behave,” one hundred times while Pinky played outside. Suddenly Ringlet felt her twin’s
    distress, and she ran outside to see a bully threatening Pinky. She positioned herself between
    them and dared the bully. “You hurt Pinky, you hurt me. Is that what you want to do?” The bully
    walked away and didn’t bother Pinky again.
    When the girls grew into women, Ringlet decided to become a policewoman. Pinkie,
    needing another protector when Ringlet entered the academy in Montgomery, married her on-
    again-off-again boyfriend Carl, who moved her to his trailer in north Alabama. Pinky and Carl
    never invited family to visit, but the twins exchanged emails almost daily.
    Ringlet loved guns, partly because she’d learned from watching movies that a woman with
    a gun could handle anything, and a woman without could only shriek for help. She practiced at
    the shooting range more than any other rookie, and by the time she graduated, she never missed
    the bull’s eye.
    Later, after five years of good solid police work, Ringlet was stunned and unprepared to
    learn from her doctor that the knot on her spine was cancer. She listened for hope, as the doctor
    described the long odds against her and the short time she had to live, but heard none.
    Knowing she was the only one in the world who could give Pinky the courage she would
    soon need, Ringlet decided she had to say goodbye in person. She had the day off, so Ringlet left
    immediately for the long drive to north Alabama.
    It was almost midnight when she arrived, uninvited of course, at Carl’s trailer. She parked
    behind their pickup truck and, moments later, knocked on their door. Pinky was delighted to see
    Ringlet and opened the door wide for her.
    Carl, right behind Pinky, grabbed her shoulder and threw her down. “What the hell are
    you doing?” he roared at Pinky. Pinky didn’t answer.
    43
    Then he turned to Ringlet who stood in the doorway. “Nobody invited you, girl,” he
    growled.
    To his surprise, Ringlet pushed him aggressively into the room. “Go sit in my car, Pinky,”
    Ringlet said. “Carl and I need to talk.”
    Avoiding Carl’s boots, Pinky scrambled across the floor to the door, and she said on the
    way out, “Be careful, Ringlet, he has a gun!”
    As she ran to the car, Pinky quivered and mumbled under her breath, “Oh no, oh no, oh
    no.” She climbed into the passenger seat and shook uncontrollably as she listened to her sister
    and husband yell at each other. Pinky tried to tame her trembling by holding her arms tight.
    The loud crack of a gunshot hit Pinky’s ears. She felt Ringlet’s agony, and Pinky howled
    in despair. Carl had shot her sister. Her other self was in pain. Pinky howled again, louder.
    Ringlet’s distress stopped cold. Pinky felt angry, and to her surprise, she felt calm and
    confident.
    She opened the glove compartment and removed the police gun before climbing out of the
    car. When she got to the living room, Ringlet’s still body lay in a large pool of blood.
    “Move ass, Pinky, we got to get out of here and fast,” Carl said. “Pack us some clothes
    and get the money out of the attic. Check the bitch’s pockets for cash too.”
    Pinky shot Carl squarely in the chest, and his body crumpled to the floor. Pinky put the gun,
    wiped clean of her fingerprints, into the right hand of Ringlet’s body, and sat down to think. The local
    police would assume husband and wife had a gunfight and both lost. The body on the floor looked
    exactly like Carl’s wife.
    “I know you’re in here with me, Ringlet, and I’m pleased to share this body,” Pinky said aloud
    to her sister. “This will be exciting.” She retrieved the money from the attic and wandered around the
    house collecting a few keepsakes before she returned to the car for the drive south.
    When Ringlet and Pinky got home, she reported her police gun stolen.
    44
    Watchers
    By
    Sherry Carter
    45
    My Father’s Children
    Ryan Link
    The stench of a dead man hung in the air. The house had probably remained sealed since the
    body of my father had been removed, so the odor had been given plenty of time to fester. I coughed
    and stepped outside for a moment. After readying myself for a second time, I dove back in.
    The kitchen spread out before me. It was odd to think that everything was as he had last left it,
    each item touched and placed in unknowable finality: a yellowed drinking glass on the counter, an
    outdated TV Guide on the breakfast table, a polished wooden cane leaning against one of the
    barstools. Would he have changed anything—cleaned the place up—if he had been told that he was
    about to die? Likely not; at that point, why bother? I smacked my mouth, trying to evict the staleness
    that had crept in. Everything just looked so old. Dust was ubiquitous, and squadrons of dead crickets
    lay scattered on the floor alongside the baseboards.
    Fighting the urge to sweep them up, I wandered into the living room. Thick brown carpet
    squished beneath my feet as I made my way to the center of the space. I stood there for a while,
    taking it in. Ten whole years had passed since I had last been in the house, and yet . . . nothing had
    changed.
    I could have easily stayed away longer, though, and without much remorse. In fact, my
    father’s death was the only reason I was there at all. I would have left it to my sister to sift what
    remained, but she cared little—even less than I did. When I had asked her to join me she had flatly
    refused. “Surely, you’re joking,” she had said. It seemed only right, though, that someone should be
    here to look through all of it at least once before we junked it.
    The house hummed in silence as I headed back to the master bedroom: his room. A bubble of
    nausea swelled up as I turned the corner and looked at the bed. That was where his neighbor had
    found him. The bed was unmade, sheets strewn about on the floor. There was still a dent in the pillow
    where his head had been. I hadn’t expected that. At the sight of it, I wanted to leave. It seemed a kind
    of death cast—a fossilized imprint of his demise; all that was missing was the body. The distaste I
    already harbored at the thought of sleeping in the house was amplified. I had committed to it, though.
    After all, it was only one night, and the nearest hotel was probably forty miles away.
    Setting to my task, I burned away the hours of the afternoon, sorting through years of
    accumulation packed away in the various dark cabinets and dulling furniture of the common rooms.
    Most everything I encountered I set aside as fodder for the liquidators. But a few items of my
    mother’s I kept—some jewelry I found in a broken music box, a dull leather bible, and a picture of
    46
    her.
    It was the picture that stirred me the most. In the image she was young, probably in her
    twenties, standing on the shore of an indigo lake. It was midday, and she shaded her eyes with her
    hand. A band of algae covered the worn-smooth rocks along the rim of the lake. Her hip was cocked
    up to one side, and the opposite leg was slightly bent at the knee. It could have easily been my sister;
    the likeness was stunning. But my mother was more beautiful—something in her eyes, or maybe the
    way she was standing, I couldn’t tell. I stared at the photo for a while, wishing—unforgivably, I am
    sure—that it had been her who had lived to old age instead of my father . . .
    My eyes closed for a moment. Indeed, the past was a callous thing. I knew I couldn’t afford to
    linger, though; I had to shake it off and continue on. So, placing the chosen items in a corner of my
    suitcase, I did just that.
    By nine P.M. I had torn through a greater part of the daunting horde of stuff that filled the
    house. My eyes burned red, and my fingers were tacky with the surface grime of a thousand things.
    But I was glad at what I had achieved. Only two rooms still remained untouched; and though I
    approached it with especial dismay, I was bound to finish the most difficult of them that night.
    With a clenched jaw, I entered again into my father’s bedroom. It was only now, as the
    outside darkness peered in through the window, that I noticed that the blinds were missing. I felt
    suddenly vulnerable, as though I was being observed by some hidden onlookers, shrouded in the
    unseeable night. Distant forms, leering and snickering and plotting some nebulous harm took shape in
    my mind and danced on the dark canvas of the glass.
    I growled at my paranoia. What madness! The nearest neighbor was a half-mile away.
    Shaking my head, I strode to the closet door and yanked it open with renewed purpose.
    Maybe I was simply too tired, but my vigor faded instantly. Once more I was stalled by the
    hard grasp of the past. In front of me hung the full array of my father’s clothes—the same ones he
    had been wearing for decades. And near the front was the shirt I had last seen him in alive—a plaid
    dress shirt with shining pearl buttons. I felt at the fabric, cool and smooth, and I remembered the day
    of our final meeting: Thanksgiving, five years ago. My father and I had been the only two from our
    side of the family at my sister’s house that day, and it was only out of guilt, I believe, that she had
    invited us at all. Granted, the three of us had been friendly enough with each other throughout the
    day, but in the end, I had left with a lingering sadness. After my mother had died, our family had
    simply failed.
    Dropping my hands to my side, I decided then to call an end to my toil, and started for the
    47
    hallway. But as I passed my father’s desk, I noticed a set of loose Polaroids lying under his watch.
    There were four in all, each one nearly completely black. I studied them for a moment. In two I could
    barely make out tree tops, silhouetted against the deep purple of an evening sky. In the other two I
    saw only the image of a full moon.
    They were curious, to be sure, but I could garner nothing of their purpose. I was about to set
    them down when I flipped one over, almost as an afterthought. I halted, my jaw flexing to the side.
    My very own name was scrawled over the back in pencil along with a date—a day only four months
    prior. Two of the other photographs were similarly inscribed, and the final bore the name of my
    sister. I sat down at the desk and stared at the wall for a number of minutes. The feeling of being
    watched through the bare, inky glass across the room returned as I mulled what I had found. What
    had the old man been up to? Were these photos just a product of his dementia? At length, I forced
    myself to decide that that was, in fact, the case. My father must have been more mentally broken than
    I ever gave him credit for. With a snort, I closed my eyes and laid my head on the desk, facing the
    naked window.
    Fatigue overwhelmed me. The overhead light shone uncomfortably through the backs of my
    eyelids, and I thought to get up and go to bed. I promised myself that I would . . . in just a minute.
    Instead, I slept.
    The moment of my waking was separated from the moment of my terror by the smallest of
    margins. As I came to, I felt a tenderness in my cheek, a product of the hard wooden surface it had
    been pressed against. Then I opened my eyes. The sight that greeted me sent me reeling back from
    the desk, toppling over the chair and landing on my hands and knees. A child was standing at the
    window, looking in at me. Darkness surrounded the nude form—a boy. He was covered in a layer of
    dirt and filth, but his skin shone pale and glowed in the escaping light of the room.
    I reached out a hand and tried to speak. A withered shriek was all that emerged. Hearing that,
    the boy’s eyes widened and he fled, leaving an evaporating handprint on the glass. In the seconds
    following, I scrambled to my feet and dashed to the window. My face pressed against the pane. I
    struggled to see something—anything. I called out, “Hello! . . . Hello!” The words reverberated on
    the surface of the window, but no one answered.
    Still coming to grips with wakefulness, I turned and stumbled down the hall and through the
    kitchen. As I reached the back door, I swatted at the light switch for the outdoor floods, but nothing
    came on. So I dashed into the dark. Sticker burrs nipped at my feet as I ran around to the bedroom
    window from the outside. There, I called out again. My breathing slowed as I listened. Crickets
    48
    chirped in the lawn, and the breeze filtered softly through the trees, but any suggestion of the boy was
    gone.
    I turned to look in the bedroom window. Every detail within was clear. A stark uneasiness
    overwhelmed me as I stared at the spot that I had been sitting less than a minute before. How long
    had the child watched me? Had I even seen him? Had he really been there, or was he just some relic
    of my unconscious mind, pursuing me out of sleep? I searched the window and the immediate area,
    but found nothing to hint at another human being. Still, I felt the weight of his eyes—a distant but
    intense scrutiny. I faced the night.
    “This isn’t funny!” I cried out. But just as they emerged, I realized the absurdity of my words.
    It is a rare prankster that carries out his deeds in the nude—certainly not a child. And his expression
    had been so fearful . . . longing even, that I could not believe he was hoaxing me.
    There was little else that I could affect, however, especially at such a late hour; so I wandered
    dazedly, much like the victim of a car crash, back into the house, securing the door behind me. Only
    after an hour or so had I relaxed enough to lie down—and only then on the hard and lump-ridden bed
    in the guest room. I refused to return at all to the master bedroom even to extinguish the light. That
    night I slept little, and the rest that I did seize was fitful, marred by the lingering image of the boy.
    By midmorning the next day I was exhausted; yet I had achieved nothing. The hours since
    dawn had been spent sitting on the back porch, drinking coffee and thinking about the child. Bit by
    bit I had been convincing myself that I had seen nothing but a trick of the eye. As I sipped at the stale
    black fluid, I began again to rehash the encounter, highlighting in my own mind the utter absurdity of
    every detail.
    My endless reverie was broken, however, by an approaching visitor.
    A long baby-blue Lincoln rumbled down the driveway and kicked up a storm of dust in its
    wake. As the vehicle pulled alongside the house, I rose and shuffled over, waving tentatively. A tall
    man—much taller than me—stepped from the car and eased the door closed.
    “Hi, you Harold’s boy?” he asked, walking towards me. A bushy white mustache hung under
    his nose.
    “Yeah, what can I do for you?” I asked. He held out his hand, and I shook it.
    “I’m Charles,” he said, gripping with uncomfortable pressure. “I’m sorry about your dad, son.
    He was a kind man.”
    I smiled curtly. “Thanks.”
    Charles nodded. “You know, I was the one that found him.”
    49
    I almost cringed; I had hoped never to meet this person. “Oh, that must have been horrible.
    I’m sorry that happened to you.”
    He raised a plump, snowy eyebrow. “Yeah, well, not too many other folks came to see him—
    just me and the grocery lady. It had to be one of us two.”
    I thought I detected a note of contempt. He kept looking at me, unflinching. “I suppose you’re
    right,” I finally said.
    Charles scratched his chin. “Well, anyway, I saw the car in the drive, and I just came down to
    drop off the key to the house. I assume I won’t be needing it any more.”
    “Oh, sure. Thanks,” I said, reaching out my hand.
    “Him living alone and all, he wanted me to have it,” Charles said. He made no move to give
    me the key.
    I retracted my arm. “Yeah, that’s understandable,” I said, nodding.
    “Mmm hmm.” He turned his head for a moment, and then looked at me from the corners of
    his eyes. “Your father was not fit to be living alone. You know that?”
    The man in front of me was a stranger—he was no one to me—but, still, I felt exposed,
    embarrassed. I felt judged. Yes, of course I knew that my father had been unfit to live alone. But I
    had done nothing about it. I was an awful son. Is that what you wanted to hear, Charles? I pursed my
    lips and said, “No, I didn’t know . . . The last time I saw him he seemed fine.”
    “Yeah, well, things change over the course of a number of years,” Charles said. He softened
    slightly. “He talked about you a lot, you know?—you and your sister both.”
    “Oh really?” I asked with genuine surprise.
    “Sure did. Of course, by that time he was half crazy.” Charles laughed. “He kept saying how
    you were coming to visit, and he had to get you some apples. Said you couldn’t get enough of ‘em.
    Must have been something from your childhood that stuck in his mind.”
    I pursed my lips. “That’s odd. I don’t remember . . .”
    Charles waved his hands. “Ah, like I said, he was pretty far gone by then. Hell, he didn’t
    know who I was half the time.” He smiled and handed me the key. We shook hands again, and he
    started back for his Lincoln. “Anyway, take care. I’m real sorry about your dad.”
    I waved and said, “Thanks.” But just before Charles got in the car, I called out, “Hey, by the
    way, do you know of any kids that live near here? Young kids . . . maybe six or seven.”
    Charles took on a thoughtful expression. “No, I can’t say that I do. Nearest family I know of
    is up at the highway, but that’s a good ways off. Why?”
    I realized that I hadn’t thought of an excuse for asking. I was not about to recount my
    50
    experience to Charles; he already seemed to have a fairly low opinion of me. “Oh, I was just
    wondering . . .”
    Thankfully, he cut me off. “There was, a few years ago, a family living over behind your
    dad’s property in Mutt’s old cabin . . . but they skipped out of town a while back. They were
    transients, you know? Never did pay him for the last few months. But they had a couple of kids as I
    remember.”
    I smiled and waved again. “Doesn’t matter. Thanks for coming by, Charles,” I said.
    “Yep. Good luck to you.”
    That afternoon I pushed through fatigue and finished the final assessment of my father’s
    possessions. In the end I decided to keep little—just what I had saved the day before. Even as I
    looked over his most personal items—watch, money clip, glasses—I felt no need to preserve them.
    Only the dark photographs gave me pause.
    As evening approached, I sat down in the living room. With an extended exhale, I tipped
    backwards onto the couch. My self-ascribed mission was complete. I toyed with my car keys as I lay
    there, considering my moment of departure. The conversation with Charles had almost succeeded in
    persuading me that my experience the night before had been an illusion. I assured myself again that
    the child had been a phantom—a fabrication of my mind. There was no reason to linger. I could
    leave. Still, I decided to abide another night in the house. The drive was long and I was tired, but I
    knew deep within that I was not staying to avoid the trip back home.
    Late that night, I tossed about on the bed, only drifting to sleep in tortuously short intervals.
    Around two in the morning, I gave up, and in a stupor, made my way to the master bedroom. My
    finger fiddled with the light switch as I watched my reflection appear and disappear in the glass of the
    undressed window. Finally, I left the lights off and slumped into the chair at my father’s desk. I stared
    into the night. Distant tree-tops rocked in the breeze, shining in the silver light of the moon. I don’t
    know how long I kept awake.
    A sound roused me. The earliest hint of dawn lit the sky, painting it a deep violet. I listened
    . . .
    A voice!
    My heart leapt to my throat as I raced to the window and peered out. The child—and not only
    one but two—stood about fifty feet away, knee deep in the field grass. The second child was a girl,
    much smaller, at most five years old. She was likewise filthy and wore the tatters of an old T-shirt.
    51
    The boy cupped his mouth and called out again.
    I strained to hear. “Old Pa,” was it? I silently mouthed the words. The boy turned his head to
    look at the girl, leaving his hands hanging. She motioned, as if urging him to abandon his cries, but
    he yelled again.
    I pulled outward on the window latches, having to force them at first. They swung open
    simultaneously, affecting a loud crack. Both of the children crouched down at the noise. The little girl
    moved softly up behind the boy, like a preying cat, and placed her hand on his back. I eased the
    window open—enough so I could fit through. With little grace, I crawled outside and found my feet.
    As I stood, the children stood. We stared at each other in the cool humidity of the young
    dawn.
    “Hello,” I said after a moment. “What is your name?”
    They did not reply.
    “Where are your parents?” I asked, stepping towards them.
    They backed away in unison for a number of steps, and then they turned and ran.
    “Wait! I’m not going to hurt you!” I called out after them. The children didn’t look back but
    continued to flee toward the distant woods beyond the field. After a few halting starts, I committed to
    following them and broke into a run. The grass was cold, and the morning dew clung to my bare feet,
    nearly causing me to slip. A barbed wire fence confronted me at the edge of the lawn, and I bent and
    contorted my way through. A metal prong caught my ankle as I lurched into the field, leaving behind
    a warm trickle of blood. I grunted through it and kept going, doing my best to keep up with the
    children. They were fast, though, like a pair of jack rabbits.
    Reaching the woods first, the girl plunged into the darkness of the trees without an instant of
    hesitation. The boy, however, glanced behind. For a second he met my eyes, casting me a look of
    apprehension. I perceived, I thought, the slightest vacillation in his steps. But then, he too dove
    between the trunks of the towering oaks. After fifty or so strides, I followed.
    The meager light of the open field perished at once. For a moment I was running blind, and
    had to slow. I was guided only by the soft sounds of the children, weaving through the vegetation
    ahead of me. Gradually, my eyes adjusted to the dim shreds of dawn sifting through the canopy, and I
    increased my pace. Limbs and leaves swatted at my face and arms. By this time, I was breathing
    heavily.
    Ahead, I caught sight of the phantom form of the boy, lithe and agile, flickering between the
    trees. The girl was a ghost, even further ahead. She flitted in and out of my vision like the glint from
    a polished stone, a pale gray flash among the leaves and trunks. I was wearing out; my lungs burned
    52
    and my feet throbbed from the pounding. Still, I carried on, falling behind the children little by little.
    After what seemed an endless slog through the woods, a slit of purple sky opened up ahead. A
    few moments more and I emerged from the trees, stumbling from the gloom and into a clearing. In
    the center stood a cabin of sorts, a sad weathered rectangle of wood that leaned in on itself. I bent
    over and placed my hands on my knees, gulping at the air. Sweat dripped from multiple points along
    my brow. My ankle burned, and debris clung to the matted trails of blood leading from my wound. In
    the distance the children slowed and stopped, turning to watch me. I could pursue them no longer.
    At length, I stood upright and walked toward the cabin. The roof was little more than a
    layered collection of corrugated metal sheets, some of them rusted through in irregular shapes. The
    walls of the dwelling were fashioned from rough-cut logs, piled on top of one another. In one spot
    there was a cutout for a window, but the glass was missing. As I approached I looped around to the
    short side of the structure. There, I found a doorway, which, like the window, was only a shape hewn
    out of the logs. Before I stepped inside, I glanced back at the children. They were watching me still,
    from a considerable distance, unmoving but keenly observant.
    The floor of the cabin was dirt, peppered with broken chunks of concrete. Along one side, I
    found a blackened stone hearth and a few wooden chairs, rotting from the ground up. The smell was
    musty and earthen, but not foul. Above, the sky peeked through the holes in the roof. In the opposite
    corner, I saw a bed—a dried-out heap of grass, really. I noticed that there were footprints in the dirt;
    they were small, the footprints of children.
    I turned and walked back outside, looking at where they had been, but they were gone.
    Around me day was breaking, and the sky was turning blue. The ghastly pallor that had presided over
    my dash through the woods was falling away. Limping slightly, I made my way around to the far side
    of the cabin. There I saw that a long hole had been dug about six feet out from the wall. Mounds of
    apple cores and a few plastic packages littered the trough. I knelt down for a closer look, finding a
    multitude of broken acorn shells and the bones of various small creatures mingled throughout.
    As I stared, I noticed a lightly worn path leading from the cabin into the woods near where the
    children had stood. With grim curiosity, I followed its lead. The path took me across the clearing and
    beyond, a number of steps into the woods where it emptied into a bald patch of ground. At the far end
    of the patch, about six feet from me, lay two small mounds of stones, set four feet apart. A single
    stick had been wedged into the center of each, clearly a sort of marker. Despite its humble trappings,
    I knew I looked upon a gravesite.
    I sat down at the dining table and laid my head in my arms. The midmorning sun set the
    53
    drapes aglow, casting a warm, diffuse light on the room. My walk back to the house had been long;
    many times, I worried that I had lost my way in the woods, as my path had been indirect at best. But
    eventually, to my relief, I arrived at the familiar field behind the house.
    My feet had taken a considerable beating, however. They were raw and bruised and cried out
    in pain, even on the carpet. My cut was deeper than I had thought and continued to weep through the
    bandage I had affixed. A lifetime of wearing shoes had softened me, it seemed. I rubbed my heels,
    thinking about the children.
    During my trek back, I had firmly resolved to call the police, but once faced with the reality
    of it, I had found myself unable to. It felt an uncaring thing to do, even cold-hearted. What a trauma
    to be plucked from your home—surroundings, rather—and thrust into a strange world—a world that
    would no doubt be filled with people in uniforms and scrubs and strange machinery. I struggled to
    search out an alternative.
    Brooding, I drifted about the house, lingering here and there in front of a piece of furniture or
    a hanging photograph. Inside the dusty, nicked frames I saw myself, my sister, and my mother and
    father all looking back at me, suspended in time. I wondered what my father had thought when he last
    looked on them. Had these images haunted him? Had they reminded him of his own useless pride?
    Had he felt the same shame that I did now?—the shame of the gulf left between us. It could never be
    bridged . . . we had waited too long. A heavy weight descended on my heart as I roamed the silent
    rooms.
    Guided, I suppose, by my own remorse, I found myself again at his desk, the dark
    photographs in front of me…pictures of his children. I flipped through them over and over, and in
    that mundane action, my decision took form. Though I didn’t know what I would do tomorrow, or
    any day after, I knew then what I would do that night.
    I waited outside near the bedroom window as evening approached, sitting on an overturned
    plastic bucket. The air was still, and the heat of the day had ebbed. Every movement of the grass or
    lower reaches of the woods captivated me in uneasy anticipation. I sat and watched until twilight had
    stolen all but the most prominent features of the landscape.
    It was then, at the final moment before nightfall, that a form rose up from the grass just
    beyond the fence. I could tell it was the boy. Somehow, in total shadow, he appeared even thinner
    and more skeletal. I stood up and raised my hand in greeting. He moved toward me warily, seeming
    to hover just above the field as if borne by the air itself. Once he reached the fence, he hopped over in
    one swift motion, leveraging off a post. We stood about thirty feet apart.
    54
    0
    “Where’s Old Pa?” he said in a strong but trembling voice.
    I thought a moment and said, “Old Pa is gone . . . he died.”
    The boy looked down and thought for a minute. “Like my mom and dad?” he asked.
    “Yeah, like them,” I said. He must have watched me as I had stood over the graves. “My
    parents are dead too, you know?”
    “Who are you?” he asked abruptly.
    “Well, I’m Old Pa’s son; he was my dad,” I said. “Did you visit Old Pa?”
    “Sometimes. But then he stopped coming out to see us.”
    Movement, yards behind the boy, caught my eye. It was the tiny shape of the girl-child,
    gliding toward us through the swaying field-grass. At the edge of the lawn, she took to her belly and
    rolled under the lowest rung of the fence. Standing, she cleared her hair from her face and stole over
    to the boy. Their hands slid together as a key in a lock.
    “Hi,” I said, looking at her, but the little girl remained silent.
    “She only talks a few words,” the boy said. I nodded.
    “Did Old Pa give you food?” I asked.
    “Yeah,” the boy said, stepping forward one pace.
    “Are you hungry now?”
    “Yeah.”
    I lifted up an apple and a package of hot dogs. “I’ve got some food you may like.”
    The boy turned to the girl, knelt down and whispered into her ear. She nodded once, and then
    the pair walked toward me, stopping at a distance of about ten feet. I could see their faces now, in the
    light of the bedroom. Their cheekbones cast deep shadows that grew and shrank with every move of
    their heads. The girl peered around the boy with wide, nocturnal eyes.
    I threw the apple. The boy caught it with the swift motion of a single hand and gave it to the
    little girl, who bit into it without pause.
    “You must be Stephen,” I said. “My name is Stephen, too.” I looked to the little girl. “And
    you’re Anne . . . I have a sister named Anne.”
    The boy smiled. “Yeah, that’s what Old Pa called us. But my real name is Boy.” He jiggled
    the girl’s hand, looking down at her. “My sister, she ain’t got no name.”
    My lower lip began to shake. “Well, she can have Anne if she wants. Do you like that name?”
    The boy nodded, but the girl still did not respond. By now, she had almost finished the apple.
    “Do you want to come inside here tonight?” I asked, motioning behind me.
    The boy thought for a long moment. I wondered if he understood, but finally, he said simply,
    55
    1
    “OK.”
    I led the two around the side of the house to the back entrance. They followed, but at a good
    distance, and they halted when I stopped and opened the door. Stepping into the house, I motioned
    for them to come. The children turned to each other in a wordless exchange. Then, the boy came
    forward, his sister clutching his arm as she followed behind.
    56
    End of the Road
    By
    Sherry Carter
    57
    X-Ray Blanket
    Megan Dobkin
    Lena always had a thing for X-ray blankets. All that heft and weight laid on top of her body made her
    feel contained and safe. She doesn’t imagine that her leg is broken this time. She really has to come
    up with a better story than “tripped over a manhole.” Maybe something about saving some kids from
    a burning church. The technician lays the X-ray blanket on top of her and she closes her eyes and
    once again goes back to the night she lost her virginity. It was a school night. She always thought that
    made her seem naughtier than she actually was. Her boyfriend at the time was a nice boy. She noticed
    that night that being naked under the covers with a boy can sometimes feel like flying.
    58
    How She Fell for Her Captor
    Megan Dobkin
    Her Hero Good Guy told her it would be safe to go into her childhood home. But as soon as they
    entered, they saw the pack of wild hooligans ravishing the place. Her Hero Good Guy abandoned her
    there. He just didn’t have the strength to protect her. She was brought to the leader of the hooligans, a
    slight but menacing man with stubble and a receding hairline. He had set up camp in what used to be
    her backyard. In exactly the place that she and her little friend once planted chocolate to grow a
    chocolate tree. She knew that, after passing her around for a bit, the hooligans would most likely kill
    her, so she decided to take a tactic with the leader. “I cannot wait to submit to you. I belong to you
    and you alone.” He looked up from the raw chicken he was slicing up and eating. He motioned to the
    house and replied: “There is darkness here. Can’t you see it?”
    59
    Open House
    Megan Dobkin
    Marcus wonders what it is about real estate agents that make them think we give a rat’s ass what
    they look like. He takes a store bought cookie and explains that the two bedrooms would be for his
    kids, who he will have every other weekend. Today he started his search. Marcus’ parents were
    architects, so he feels at home in open houses. Wandering through other people’s spaces was
    actually a Sunday morning family ritual. His sister and he would rush to look at the pools, while his
    parents tried not to think about where they spent their Saturday night.
    60
    Rock Show
    Megan Dobkin
    “Of course this would happen to me,” Astrid notices how filthy she is getting, sandwiched between
    the parking lot cement and the underside of this car. “Riot” isn’t the term that most would use to
    describe what happened in the parking lot after the rock show—the event that separated Astrid from
    the group that had invited her out. But, it will not stop Astrid from referring to it this way. The
    incident of the riot-at-the-rock-show will be the impetus to countless nights at home eating pizza and
    smoking weed out of a Diet Coke can with punched holes in it. She will put herself in debt due to the
    rock show. She will be unable to get a job in this recession due to the rock show. After the high
    school reunion she missed due to the rock show, Astrid’s fellow concert-goer shot her an e-mail
    asking after her and reminiscing about the most exciting night of her young life.
    61
    The Juror
    Megan Dobkin
    Everyone who reported that morning was scrambling to find the reason why they would be a bad
    match for the case. Everyone except Ilene, that is. Ever since her youngest told her that his therapist
    said he needed to draw some boundaries and move out, Ilene has had to re-assess her daily rituals.
    Drawing some boundaries seems to Ilene like code for “skirt obligations.” She is his mother. She has
    always been there for her son for free, not for $150/hour. It feels nice to Ilene to have something
    present itself that she feels she could excel in.
    62
    Contributors
    Claire Kole is the author of one book and has been published in several
    magazines and journals. She holds a BA in English and is finishing her MFA in
    Creative Writing in June 2014.
    Harry Youtt is a frequently published poet and writer of fiction and non-fiction.
    He’s the author of nine collections of poetry, including What My Father Never Knew I
    Learned From Him, Even the Autumn Leaves, and I’ll Always Be from Lorain. Harry
    is a long-time instructor in the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program, where he teaches
    courses and workshops in fiction writing and documentary narrative non-fiction. He is
    also a member of the Editorial Board of the peer-reviewed international Journal of
    Consciousness, Literature and the Arts.
    Originally from the Boston area, Jeff Nazzaro lived in Japan for twelve years
    before moving to Los Angeles, where he is pursuing an M.A. in English at Loyola
    Marymount University. In addition to his girlfriend and two cats, he loves hamburgers
    and fried chicken wings.
    Jo Wharton Heath was once a math professor and is now a writer, as
    evidenced by her novel “Sarah and Alice.” She lives with her husband Bob in a house
    in the woods just across the interstate from Auburn, Alabama.
    It wouldn’t be the first time that Megan Dobkin over-thought things, but she is
    secretly concerned about the day her small boys ask what Mommy writes about. For,
    one day, they will learn to read. And to Google. And they may very well trip across the
    various literary journals and anthologies in which Mommy is published. If you want to
    see for yourself the other dark matter that Mommy works through during carpool drop
    off, you can find some at megandobkin.com.
    P. J. McNeil is a cuddly curmudgeon father of eight, pepe of eight, plus one on
    the way and a recovering French-Canadian/Irish/Scottish Catholic peace activist.
    Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Tony Conaway has written, co-written, and
    ghostwritten everything from blogs to books. His fiction has been published in two
    anthologies and numerous publications, including Clever, Danse Macabre, Linguistic
    Erosion, qarrtsiluni, and the Rusty Nail.
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    Ryan Link is a native Texan who lives in Houston with his wife of eleven
    years. He works as a modeling and simulation analyst in the energy industry and holds
    a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the University of Houston. Some of his
    favorite authors and influences are Frank Herbert, Alastair Reynolds, George R. R.
    Martin, and H. P. Lovecraft. You can visit him for more at:
    https://sites.google.com/site/rlinkauthor/
    Wendy Scott has always had a story in her head or in her hands since she can
    remember. A voracious reader and self-described Renaissance soul, her eclectic
    interests are reflected in her fiction. Her most recent short story was published in the
    anthology It’s a Crime. She lives in Florida and writes from there or wherever her
    travels take her.
    Untitled
    By
    Chandler Mead
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    rindliterarymagazine.com