Crystal Ball

on a son’s 13th birthday

 

Before my daughters I hold an ornament,

a clear plum on my open palm and cold—

though light breaks through its bubble shell

 

so that we see inside the sphere another

half its size, and inside that one, two or three

more cells glisten and divide.

                                                Your brother must

 

have gone over twenty-nine miles per hour,

I tell his sisters.  He wouldn’t ever do that! they rejoin.

Then how, I beg to know, could droplets form

 

alive inside this glass? Only when a child has gone

too fast. . .Wasn’t the limit

twenty-nine miles per hour? 

                                                In our muteness

 

the ornament darkens, beckons: Wait for word.

Horse clouds lower their flat-iron heads,

sweep the field with shadows where we stand.

JoAnn Balingit’s poems have appeared in DIAGRAM, Salt Hill, Smartish Pace, and Best New Poets 2007. Her chapbook, Your Heart and How it Works, is forthcoming from Spire Press. She was appointed Delaware’s poet laureate in May 2008: http://www.artsdel.org/services/poetlaureate.shtml. She lives in Newark.

The Lip

When Julie left she took half their stuff. Leo found a checklist and a note under her key ring on the counter. Even with Mario’s help it must have taken most of the day. The note said she was leaving the car. He could make the payments or sell it, Julie’s way of being more than fair. There were several points he would have contested, but he had to admit she’d been generous. All Leo’s wives had been generous. It was small consolation.[img_assist|nid=5128|title=The Boy Had Enough by Andrea Ramirez © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=200|height=143]

 

            For days afterward Leo’s life was like a dream. He thought about Julie and Mario driving across the country. In his head they were always whooping it up. He wished them dead in the desert, their bodies black and bloated. The image so disturbed him he wished them back to life.

             To take his mind off things Leo went to a Phillies game. He brought his binoculars, a bag of salted peanuts, two joints and his Walkman. The left-hander Rivera was pitching for the Phills, big kid, clueless. Leo sat in one of the empty sections under the scoreboard. The binoculars gave him a bird’s eye view of the strike zone. From the first pitch Leo could tell the kid had it. Every fastball punched a dust-cloud from the catcher’s mitt just before the clap of leather reached him in center field. The big lug got hammered early, but for two and a half hours Leo didn’t think of Julie once.

            The following Sunday he drove to Rittenhouse Square and read the paper. The park was crowded but no one approached him. Julie would be in San Francisco by now, badmouthing him to their west coast friends. Funny, none of them had called. He pictured the other half of their stuff in a North Beach apartment, sun streaming in the windows, Chronicle spread over the sofa. He could see it clearly.

             That night Mario called. Julie had dumped him as soon as they hit the city.

            “Swear to God, Leo, I never laid a hand on her,” he insisted.

             “What are you calling me for?”

             “Hey man, I feel like a shit.”

             “You are a shit.”

             “I’m coming back, Leo. You can kill me if you want to but I can’t take it here.”

             “Come on back. I won’t kill you.”

            “Oh man, I feel like such a shit.”

            Mario showed up on Friday. Despite his rejection he looked much the same, half-drunk, pacing the kitchen berating himself.

            “I mean how could I do that to you?” he jabbed a finger in his own chest. “My best fucking friend! What the fuck is wrong with me?”

             “You’re a shit. You couldn’t help it.”

             “You’re right, Leo. You’ve always said it but now I believe it.”

            “Believe it.”

     He stayed three days then left to mooch off a cousin. Mario was related to half the wops in South Philly. Leo had never known him to have a place of his own. What had he expected to do in California?

   

            On Easter Sunday Leo walked to his mother’s. As always, he was taken by the photos on the walls, chronologically arranged portraits, Leo and his sister Gail, Gail and her two kids, over the mantel, the one of his dad in a straw hat. Gail divorced and moved to Florida two years ago leaving Leo to deal with the obligations. The tone never varied.

            “I don’t understand my own children,” his mother slipped a Camel from the pack on the table. “You father and I were married forty-five years!”

            “Thirty-five, mom, Dad died ten years ago,” Leo reminded her.

             “You should have grabbed Mrs. Ruggerio’s Eileen. She was always crazy about you.”

             “No moustaches ma. It’s where I draw the line.”

             She tilted her head back to work the bifocals “Oh sure, the neighborhood girls weren’t good enough for you.”

             He let her go on, wondering what it would be like when she died. He’d returned to Philly after her last stroke, determined to see her through to the end. Six years now and she never looked better.

             “Your father was right,” she handed him a beer from her little cooler. “You’re a bungler, Leo. You could have joined the business, but no. You had to go to California. You had to marry every floozie who came down the pike. And to think we almost gave you up for adoption.”

            Leo slid in beside her on the sofa. “You’re right, mom. I should have been a salesman. I should have married Eileen Ruggerio, but,” he held up a finger, “at least I didn’t murder my mother, like Richie Pettis.”

            “Richie was a little bastard, but he was no bungler,” she gave him a poke. “Besides, who was it sent your father to an early grave, aanh?”

             “He had emphysema, for cryin’ out loud!”

            “You know what I mean.” The bifocals gave her a haughty look. Leo didn’t know what she meant but he let it pass. The smoke from her cigarette curled into a perfect circle. He never came without a carton, hoping against hope.    

            The microwave chicken was raw on the inside. Leo could hear the clack of dentures over the talk show radio. Afterwards he did the dishes and put out the trash. Standing in her tiny yard he raised his eyes to the South Philly skies. One star, way over Jersey.

            “Star light, star bright, first star I see tonight,” he tried to remember the rest. The light circled slowly and descended to the airport. When he returned his mother was sound asleep in front of the TV. He leaned to kiss her forehead, slipped a twenty from her purse and let himself out.

    

            There was a postcard from Julie in the morning mail. “I love you but I don’t like you.”

 

            Benny was waiting for him at the diner. The Sheik, Julie called him, in reference to the doo, jet black and raked back like it was painted on. Not a good look for Benny, nearing sixty and putting on the pounds.

            “Where you been?” he hiked up his eyebrows. “I’m on a schedule here.”

            “What schedule?” Leo checked the clock. “The tit bars don’t open for hours.”

             “Yeah, okay, that’s funny. Sit down, would you? I got a kink,” Benny rubbed his neck.

            “Maybe you should give the girls a break for a while. Everything in moderation, eh Sheik?”

            “You only go around once, kid. Tell me a better way to spend the time?”

             Leo smiled. “Well, it’s good you found your niche.”

             “Tell me you got plasma, Leo.”

             “What I got is ceiling fans. Top of the line and in the box.“

            Benny’s eyebrows shot up higher. Everything was eyebrows with the Sheik.

             “What the fuck am I gonna do with ceiling fans? What about the TVs?”

            Leo tapped Benny’s pudgy little hand. “Next time, Benj. This time it’s ceiling fans.”

             “Jesus, Leo. Tell me it ain’t down to this.”

             “It’s down to this, Benny,” Leo flapped his hands around. “Hey it beats scalping tickets, right?”

            The Sheik sat there staring off. “I don’t know what happened. What the fuck happened?”

             “Prosperity, Benny,” Leo shrugged. “It’s a socio-economic thing.”

            “Jesus, I miss the old days. This, …” he shook his lacquered head.

            “Benny, hey, these are top of the line fans here. You want in?”

             He just kept shaking his head.

             “Tell you what,” Leo drummed his thumbs on the counter. “Give me two grand for the whole load. That’s one hundred units, plus remote.”

            “Units. God help us.”

             “I can deliver them or you can come pick them up. Your call.”

     The Sheik heaved a sigh and reached in his jacket. Leo waited but the hand just stayed there.

            “Look at you,” the old crook laughed. “Hey, this reminds me of the scene in that movie where the guy reaches for his wallet and pulls out his gun.”

            “What movie? What are you talking about, Benny?”

             “The movie where the hoods hijack a truckload of something, not ceiling fans. I forget.”

            “In or out, c’mon Benny.”

             “Coffins, that’s what it was,” Benny leaned in close. “Only some of them were occupied.”

            “Time’s up.” Leo stormed off, slowing slightly to give Benny an opening. When the bastard declined he pushed through the door and crossed the lot to his black SUV. He felt out of focus, not all there, a flash to the 80’s with his head full of Tester’s. Not like Benny to queer a deal. Sheik could move broken glass and at the lowball price he had to know Leo was desperate. What was it with the old guys that they got so goofy? The problem was who else can you go to?

            The other problem was what to do with them now. The ceiling fans. They were in Ludlow’s garage at the moment but his wife was squawking and his neighbor’s were nosey. Not to mention Leo’s cash flow problem.

            He watched Benny through the window, willing him to change his mind. For a second he thought it just might work, but the fucker sat there feeding his face.

 

            A Julie message on the machine.[img_assist|nid=5129|title=Pez Collection by Dorrie Rifkin © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=200|height=286]

             “I think you should resolve your conflict with your mother. She won’t be around much longer, you know. ”

            Leo wondered who she could be staying with and drew up a list of likely suspects. The thing that always bothered him was that he could picture Julie with almost anyone. She came late to the cheating game, but it didn’t take her long to get the hang of it. Catholic schoolgirl turning with a vengeance. He played the message a second time. The phone rang while he was looking at it.

            “Leo?”

             “Yeah Luds. I’m gonna move ‘em, don’t rip a stitch.”

            “That’s what I called about. They’re not here.”

            “What?”

            “The ceiling fans. I came home tonight and they were gone.”

             Leo pictured Ludlow’s garage, the space they took up.

             “I know you’ll think I’m getting over but someone stole them, Leo. I swear to fucking God.”

            “Someone walked off with a truckload of ceiling fans?”

             “Fucking un-believable, right?”

            Lying rat-fuck son of a bitch.

             “You don’t want to do this, Ludlow. Couple of days, they’ll pop up, right?”

            “On my father’s fucking grave, Leo. Hey, I’m out just like you!”

             Leo thought he heard someone else talking, but he couldn’t be sure. He didn’t want to think about what was happening here. Ludlow meant to beat him on the load.

             “Couple of days. Ludsy. I’ll give you a call.”

 

            The Phillies were in a rebuilding year. Except for one championship season, that shining moment decades past, the Phils had been rebuilding for over a century. Once again pitching was the problem. Pitching was always the Phillies problem, except for the odd year when hitting was also the problem. Many like Leo saw the organization as genetically flawed, those fluke years in the 80’s, just a statistical anomaly. Throw the monkeys out on the diamond often enough, etc…

            Only not these monkeys. Their record was more than a matter of bad judgment. Touted prospects shed their talent as they moved through the system. High school phenoms left their confidence and their fastballs in Spartansburg and Wilkes-Barre. Management, depending on the year and level of hostility, made one of two wrong moves. Either they let this year’s wunderkind languish in the bush leagues, tying up time and money, or they rushed him into the rotation where he was promptly battered beyond recognition. Pick a year, same story.

            That night’s pitcher was a recent pickup from Houston. Front office couldn’t resist these guys, the one season whiz with a flakey reputation, career castoffs cycling down. All too often it ended with the Phillies.

            The first pitch was a strike, triggering visions of a strikeout. The season was young and hope springs eternal. The second pitch was a swinging strike and even the cynics allowed themselves to dream. Pitches three, four and five sailed up, up, and away and the rustle in the stands set the seasonal tone. After a confab with the catcher the castoff bore down, fucking beachball coming at ya. Leo could see the batter’s eyes light up then a white blur slicing down the right field line. The game quickly settled into a rout, brutal even by Phillie standards. The fans turned ugly early, taunting the castoff with death threats, burying him in boos when they yanked him in the second. Stunned by their rage he stumbled off the field, disappearing into a dugout from which he would never again emerge.

            A parade of relievers was promptly pounded.

            By the seventh the crowd sat in grim silence, reflecting on all things Philadelphian. Leo was aware of a disturbing parallel between the team’s fortunes and his own. It was no coincidence that he spent the glory year in California, watching on TV. The implications were clear and Leo vowed never to go home again. If that was the price he was willing to pay it. Julie, of course, had other ideas, his mom had her stroke and the rest was just history repeating itself. Of the teams who excelled at futility, none could touch those Fumblin’ Phils. Losers of more games than any team in any sport.

 

            They were new and splashy, but they were still row houses. Two where three used to be, bay windows facing out on the drycleaners. Leo parked behind a row of pickups and listened for Lanny’s blather.

            “What the fuck is this? I got fucking monkeys working for me!”

            Rear bedroom, upstairs. The front door was open, the downstairs rooms were bland and tasteless. Leo’s own house had the original woodwork, circa 1917. He’d bought it for a song before he met Julie. The thing about modern, it lacked the detail. He waited for windbag to take a breath but Lanny was on an ass-chewing roll.

             “Look at this! There’s more fucking paint on the carpet than there is on the fucking wall!”

            Leo watched from the doorway. A trio of Mexicans shrugged it all off.

            “Nice ceiling fans,” he called over.

            “Heyyy! Leo my man!” Lanny broke it off and clapped him on the shoulder. “Whaddya think? Federal Terrace, my piece de resistance!”

            “Where’d you get ‘em Lanny?”

            The big man took his arm and led him to the hallway “Yo Leo, you workin’ for L and I, or what?”

             Leo hated this shit. “Tell me now while I’m still in a good mood.”

            Lanny looked more puzzled than worried. “Some guy came around. I didn’t ask questions.”

            “Know something, boss?” Leo pointed with his chin. “Those amigos can’t understand a thing you’re saying.”

            Lanny looked in on the Mexicans and smiled. “Best fucking crew I ever had. They’d paint each other if I gave them the word.”

            “Tell me about this other guy. Do I know him?”

             “I wasn’t around. Maybe Pedro here can-“

             “Cut the crap, Irish.”

            Lanny looked right through him. “I gotta tell you man, the tough stuff doesn’t suit you.”

            He really hated this. Ludlow was making some kind of move and betting Leo would roll over. Ceiling fans, for Christ sake!

            “I got nothin’ to do with this.” Lanny stood his ground. “Hey, I’m just trying to make a living.”

            Leo left a footprint on the front door

            This was serious. Ludlow had always been flakey but they’d been at this for thirty years! Leo called and got the machine. He drove over but no one answered the door. After that he didn’t know what to do. Ludlow tended bar on the Ave. The place was a dive, mostly ironworkers and off-duty cops. Not a place to start something, but what did Leo plan to start, anyway?

            He went to McGrath’s to think it through, but they had the game on and Shank was there and the night got away from him. Next morning he spotted Ludlow’s truck in the diner lot. Leo signaled to turn but changed his mind, nearly clipping a roofing truck.

 

            Julie again. Leo didn’t even play it.

 

            “Whaddya mean whaddya do? You go after him!” Mario made a chopping motion. “You make him fucking pay!”

            Leo stared at his hands. “I’ve known Ludlow all my life.”   

            Mario stumbled to a chair, winded. “Everybody’s known him all their lives. What’s that got to do with it?”

             “I don’t want to hurt him.”

             “He’s a piece of shit!”

             “I don’t have the time for this.”

            Mario gave him a poke. “That’s what he’s counting on, dude. You blow it off, you’re out of business.”

            Leo looked at him. “What business? I’m peddling ceiling fans and eating at my mother’s!”

            Mario plopped his hands on the armrests. “I’m just saying, you take it from Luds, you take it from everyone. It’s a business liability.”

            “He’s a brick shithouse!”

            “So you pay somebody.” He bent into Leo’s line of vision. “Yo, pal, this is pretty basic stuff.”

            He tried the number for the hundredth time. Ludlow answered on the fifteenth ring.

            “Yeah what?”

             “It’s me, Leo.”

             He didn’t answer.

            “We gotta talk, Luds.”

            “We got nothing to talk about. I told you, Leo, the fans were boosted.”

             Leo looked to Mario. Mario looked away.

             “Mario says I should come after you.” Leo ducked an empty beer can.

            “Mario? That fucking lowlife?”

             “But I say we can work this out. Like gentlemen, whaddya think, Luds?”

            “Tell Mario to go fuck himself.”

            “I get my half and I forget all about it,” Leo talked the talk.

            “Come on, Lip, what are you gonna do? I say they were boosted they were boosted. You can think whatever Mario wants you to.”

            “Don’t do this, Ludsy.”

            “Gotta go.”      

  

            A rainout forced a double header. Leo sat away from the crowd. He liked the new stadium but it wasn’t his stadium. His stadium was the Vet, gone without a trace. He watched the game and thought about Luds and how he should have seen this coming. Ludlow was a crook. And Mario was right. Once word got out he’d be stiffed and all accounts would go into arrears. Leo couldn’t take a hit right now. He was living on credit cards as it was.

            The Phils scored in the first. He thought of dropping a dime on Luds then ruled it out. Then the cop are in and everyone’s pissed and he’s out of business anyway. Should have gone to college with the rest of the goobers. Should have joined the fucking business. Had to be a hustler, no nine to five for Leo the Lip. Now Ludlow wanted to muscle in. Who muscled in on ceiling fans?

     Pittsburgh scored three in the fifth and the Phils yanked the starter. Leo spotted Pete Newlin but pretended not to. Predictably, Pete waved his arms and started over.

            “HEY LEO! HEY, RIGHT HERE!”

            “Hey Newlin, I’m kinda busy right now.”

            “I just wanted to tell you, that Jackie Ludlow is an asshole.”

            “Thanks.”

            “I told Dooley and them. I said you’d beat the balls off him.”

            “Again, thanks.”

            “That fucker will rue the fucking day, yo!”

            Pittsburgh scored three more in the eighth. Leo didn’t stick around for game two.

 

            Luds’ truck was in the driveway. Leo circled the block a few times then parked in the church lot.

            “Okay, Now what?” he asked himself.

            Butch Isler had called offering his services. Not out of loyalty, he’d said, Ludlow just pissed people off. Leo said he’d get back to him but he knew he wouldn’t. Even if he wanted to he couldn’t afford it. Big Butchie was top of the line.

            By now the news was all over Pennsport. The early line gave Leo the nod with an assist to Butchie. Every passing minute made it worse. If the other shoe didn’t fall soon he wouldn’t be able to show his face.

            And Ludlow was crazy. Once Leo made a move it would be his turn and it wasn’t hard to guess where the money would go on that. Which left what?

            Dory answered the door, walked him to the yard like she didn’t have a clue. Who was she kidding? Ludlow sat at the picnic table talking on the phone. He saw Leo in the doorway and rolled his eyes.

            “Yeah, I know, that’s why I’m calling,” he growled into the phone. ”You’re damn right I’m pissed. Now how do you want to do it?”

            Leo sat opposite. Ludlow yacked and yacked. Leo reached over and pressed the button.

            “Hey Leo, what the fuck?”

            “Sit down, Luds. You’re neighbors are gawking.”

            “Fuck them and fuck you, too.”

            “What are you gonna do, hump around to every job site in the city?”

            Ludlow smirked. “Face it, Leo, you’ve lost the touch. You let that old dago, Bennie jerk you around for nickels on the dollar. I get forty a pop for ‘em.”

            “Okay, I see your point. Give me my grand and go peddle your wares.”

            “Or else what?”

            Leo watched a small bird hop across the driveway. He thought of Julie lying in the sun on Goat Rock Beach. He got up from the table and shoved his hands in his pockets. 

            “Yo Luds. That’s it?”

            “Hey, we can go around and around but basically, yeah.”

            Leo left by the side gate. He could hear the big fuck laughing on the phone as he crossed the street. In his head he saw himself go to the car and get his gun. One to the chest, one to the head was how you fixed these things. Only Leo didn’t have a gun. The only time he ever shot a gun was on the boardwalk in Wildwood. Plus, if he killed Ludlow he’d have to go to prison. No fucking way he was going to prison over ceiling fans.

            Still he thought about it.

            On the way home he passed Zero and Lou on the Quarthouse corner. They fell all over themselves pretending not to see him.

 

            In the morning Leo woke with a rock in his gut. He wondered about the way it was here, the deep end as the standard course of action. It wasn’t normal, it couldn’t be. This was as close to murder as Leo would get, but he knew it wasn’t all that close. He could handle himself in a spot but he didn’t have a murder in him. He knew it and Ludlow knew he knew it.

            If there was a way out Leo couldn’t find it.

    

            “So I’ve been thinking.” Julie paused.

             “Okay.”

            “We could try it again, Leo. I know now that I need you.”

             “To what? Help you move?”

            “Okay, I deserve that. I know I was a shit about Mario, but he’s so–”

            “You gotta stop calling Julie. Please.”

            “You miss me, Leo. Marianne told me you hardly ever come out of the house.”

            Leo unplugged the phone. The next day he sold the SUV.

 

            “Leo, hey! Jesus Christ! What’s it been, ten years?”

            “How are you Len? You look good.”

            “Hey! I heard you got married a while back. How’s it working out?”

            “It didn’t,” Leo shrugged. “I make a lousy husband.”

            “Tell me about it. I get a different set of kids every freaking weekend.”

             Leo took the chair across the desk. “I see your mug in the papers, real estate broker extraordinaire. You’ve done well, Len.”

            He gave his paunch a pat. “Well, I can’t complain. But you didn’t come all the way down here to sing my praises. What is it I can do for you, Leo?”

            “I want to sell.”

            Len looked offended. “Your place? It’s a jewel box, man. I can’t let you do it!”

             “Got to. I owe some money. Plus I think my ex has her eye on a slice.”

             “Well, she’ll get that, friend. Community property.”

             “Maybe not. It’s still in my name. ”

            Lenny’s gaze dropped to his shoes. “Jeez, I don’t know, Leo. It sounds unethical.”

             Leo pulled a wad from his pocket and slapped it on the desk. “One thousand up front. Plus five percent.”

             Len didn’t look at the money. “Maybe we can finagle something.”

            “It’s gotta be fast. All offers considered, I’ll take the hit. And I’d like it to be someone, you know, … responsible.”

            “I have that someone in mind as we speak.”

            “And no sign. It’s gotta be discrete.”

            “I think I can handle this for you without much problem, Leo.”

            “Like I said. Extraordinaire.”

 

            Leo walked away with 150 thou. Not bad for the old neighborhood, bless the Irish and their woodwork. He left a message on Gail’s machine and stashed 50 grand in his mother’s account. When he got settled in he’d send his address. Palm Beach, maybe, hustle the widows. Or Tempe. He heard it was nice in Tempe.

Tom  Larsen  was  a  journeyman  printer  for  twenty years before scrapping it all for the writer’s life. His work has appeared in Newsday, New Millennium Writing and Antietam Review. His short story "Lids" was  included  in Best American Mystery Stories – 2004. Tom and his wife Andree lived for ten years in the Pennsport section of South Philadelphia. "The Lip" is one of six stories from his South Philly collection "Downtown".   His  first novel "Flawed" will be released this fall.

They Don’t Mean To

Bridget is in the giftware section of the department store, running her fingers over the deeply discounted snow globes, when she feels [img_assist|nid=5124|title=Scooter by Thomas Johnson © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=200|height=133]the constriction in her chest—her first bodily evidence that the heart, indeed, is a muscle. A muscle, not some stationary white fist captured on an x-ray.  Not pain exactly, but a rude clamping down, like the cumbersome, post-coital weight of an inconsiderate lover– or the burden of an unhappy childhood.  

     Her breath is short, her thoughts fugitive. Help me, Help me. And then she imagines being helped by shoppers and clerks, who are surprised, annoyed, and then concerned, some hero among them quick to call 911.  The ride to the hospital, her hospital, would be humiliating– her shameful stretched-out bra, the chaos of her purse.  And to those in the store, she would be a nameless lady, crumpled among snow globes, a topic of Christmas Eve dinner conversation.  No, she is fine, fine–lub-Dub, lub-Dub, she urges her heart toward routine iambic beats.  Longevity on both sides, assorted cancers, not heart disease, cholesterol levels near perfection. I am only 54, she reminds her heart, though on some days that number has seemed excessive.

     She palms the glass snow globe on the display counter.  Inside, fake flakes have settled on a Hummel house and figurines, a Swiss boy and his Swiss dog, a Swiss sleigh.   Like Swiss cheese, she thinks, trite and maudlin and untrue.  Even her mother, the great pretender and for one desperate moment the intended recipient of the globe, would have to agree. The sign reads 80% OFF! The subtext, the pre-holiday chicanery, reads Economy in the doldrums, We understand, and the real price of the globe is printed below in a small, hum-drum font, the insult of which is enough to shock her heart into normal sinus rhythm. 

 

     Back at work, Bridget can’t deny the aftermath, the sensation like a bruise purpling in her chest. And earlier in her office, as she hung up her red coat, hadn’t she felt an ache in her jaw, tracked its radiance northward to settle into the crook of her T-M joint?   Working in a hospital predisposes one to hypochondria, she knows, and is alert to the condition.

     She is alone now, stamping and processing x-ray films the old-fashioned way, in a darkroom, and glad to be there among ghosts. Those are what she’d thought of thirty-three years ago when, as a student, she developed and then clipped a skull and hand series of radiographs to a view box. Ghosts.  She had created ghosts from living flesh, a conundrum that the inverse square law, calipers, and step-up transformers would later dispel. 

     Here, in the acrid, blue-lit blackness, she can gloat in private.  As Chief Radiology Technologist, she’d argued that the darkroom be maintained for instances just such as these, when the two automatic processors were on the fritz—one darkening the films into missed diagnoses, the other, the newer one, chewing them up. Dr. B was surprised at her bold insistence in the face of hospital administrators, in the face of He Himself, who wanted the darkroom turned into a doctors’ lounge—a tertiary diagnostic conference room, as he’d proposed it to the facilities planners.    No, she’d stood up for herself without anger or aggression, stood up for common sense, for the techs who but for her would now be loading heavy cassettes up five flights to the OR processor, which is jam prone itself. Yes, she supports the techs, treats them justly, but she is glad not to be among their ranks.  There they are, on the other sides of the darkroom, positioning bodies into painful angles.  Pain, physical, mental, she tends to take it all in these days, like she used to. No, she being one of the few who still know how a darkroom functions, is glad to be away from them, invisible. The lead-lined doors into which the techs deposit the cassettes into the black hole of the darkroom are sticky but functional.  For an afternoon, on the eve of Christmas Eve, she gets to bask in righteousness, in a rote job for once, slamming doors on all four sides of her, the process smooth and orderly, like blood flowing into a healthy heart.

 

     Bridget’s Center City townhouse is only a quick bus ride from the hospital.  In fine weather she often walks to keep in shape, but it is cold and damp, the twilight murky.  She dozes on the bus, misses her stop, has to backtrack two blocks on foot.  The wind is cold and painful.  How dare her heart have behaved so badly?  She walks, she exercises at the fitness club, not enough, but who does?  She buys expensive, organic produce and avoids fast food, most of the time.  

     Ahead, the lambent light from the marquis of the Ritz Theaters gives her an idea: movie tickets and a gift card for dinner at the Chadds Ford Inn.  Practical gifts, certainly, but for her parents, just as strange as the snow globe. Had they ever eaten in a restaurant together in peace?  She can imagine them sitting across from each other, observing the other diners, hating themselves, hating that reflection of self in the other.  But lately—

     Last week her mother had called and persuaded her to spend Christmas Eve with her and her father in Chadd’s Ford. 

     “I’ll make bacon—Canadian– and eggs in the morning, organic, and waffles with blueberries.  I bet you don’t make that for yourself, do you?     I wouldn’t.  And Christmas, you and Brian and Sheila, the kids, and Aunt Jane—eight of us.”  Bridget envisioned her mother counting on her wrinkled white fingers.

     “Filet Mignon, Shop-Rite has them on sale this week—scalloped potatoes, asparagus, salad, and turkey, of course. Whole grain bread cooked in clay pots. Did I tell you?  Your father went out and bought a turkey fryer?  On his own.  They say they make the moistest meat, though we don’t eat much meat these days.”

     For the first time in many years, Bridget’s circle of friends, mostly colleagues turned friends from the hospital, are all going out of town for the holidays, and she has to work the day after Christmas.  For her, there is no where else to go but home.

     Four brick steps lead up to her front door.  Bridget had festooned the wrought iron railing with swatches of evergreen and red velvet bows.  A fresh green wreath circles the pineapple knocker on her front door.

     Inside, there is little evidence of Christmas. Her house is a solace to her, and she wants to keep it that way.  A few antiques, expert reproductions of pie tables and highboys, a modern kitchen.  The place was gutted during the Center City gentrification twenty years ago when she and her second ex-husband bought it cheap, and now even with the housing slump, its value is up.  More people than ever moving to the great old East Coast cities.  Every weekend and summer evenings, horse-drawn carriages clomp down her cobblestone street, suburban tourist craning for a glimpse into others’ lives. She usually keeps the drapes downstairs cracked an inch or so, but tonight she draws them tight.

     For dinner, a salad with balsamic vinaigrette and wild salmon.  Take that heart, she taunts it. After stacking her few dishes in the dishwasher, she takes her cup of green tea into the living room and settles on the sofa.  Her chest feels empty now.  Normal. 

     Most evenings she attends class or studies, but last week she handed in her portfolio—a chapbook of ten poems.  Supposedly she is on her way to a Masters of Science in Communications, but lately she has chosen rogue classes, for which the hospital might not reimburse her.  And so what?  She reminds herself she can afford it.  Professionals such as herself deserve to be compensated well—making more now than she ever thought possible when she began her career.   The hospital would not close its doors, as it threatened to do five years ago, the thought of which had sent her heart into palpitations.  Not like today, and those flutterings could as easily be attributed to peri-menopause as to loss of income.  She is beyond all that blood and money, she tells herself, though in her poetry class she’d written an ode to hot flashes, delighting the younger members of the class.  For other poems, she’d rummaged through the detritus of her unhappy childhood to rediscover and expose her parents in images.

     Her father, a mechanic, his face as grim and immobile as George Washington’s as he scribbles expenses on the back of an envelope at the kitchen table.  Every night, another envelope, more figuring, her father is an alchemist trying to change the rules of mathematics, and he tells his wife he is sorry he married.  Her mother is sanitized for the poem but still capable of calling her only daughter a lazy slut.

     Once, her father threw a burnt biscuit at her mother, but they normally battered each other with words—“You said,” “I never,” [img_assist|nid=5125|title=Altered State by Suzanne Comer © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=200|height=156]“You always,” their accusations crystallizing in the cold air of the large house, ricocheting off the windows and walls to hail down on the petrified bodies of their two children.

      For amusement, Bridget would sneak her mother’s hand mirror from her dresser and walk around with the house with the mirror pointing towards the ceiling and held close to her face.  The house was better, safer, somehow upside down.

     Instead of uniting against the onslaught, she and Brian mimicked their parents.  As adults, they got along by rarely speaking, gibes and eye rolls accessories in their awkward conversations. And now, out of nowhere, her parents’ battles seem to have ceased. To say they even bickered the last time she saw them—a year ago? –would be an exaggeration.  It has been going on for too long to ignore it—this, this mutual, gratuitous kindness.  She suspects dementia or Alzheimer’s, a reciprocal alignment of disease. Folie a deux.

     Tomorrow, she will have to make sure her father doesn’t set the house ablaze with the turkey fryer. She’ll suggest, subtly, that they book appointments for CT scans and have Dr. B, a great diagnostician, despite his bullying and pouting, take a look at them.

     Dr. B,  her relationship with him mirroring that of her first two husbands, mirroring that of her parents.  Passivity, first, playing house, pretending, like her mother, then, and also like her mother, for years an unleashing of the furies, though Bridget reversed the process with her husbands.  With the first, a resident in urology, she’d gone beyond nag, bellowed at every slight and then kicked him out of the apartment she’d had the good sense to lease in her name.  With the second, a dosimetrist in the radiation therapy department at a neighboring hospital, she’d caved and then caved some more, until she was hollow and hardly noticed his departure.  With Dr. B, a flimsy truce ruled now, borne out of exhaustion and perhaps even boredom, not forgiveness on either side, she knows. 

     She blames her parents for her difficulties more than is healthy, she fears now.

     Her thoughts drift back to the hospital where she has spent so much of her life. “To Forgive is to Heal,” reads a plaque she allowed one of the techs to hang in the Special Procedures room. Yes, but childhood traumas stay with one forever, reads the invisible plaque beside it, and then on the other side, forming a triptych of advice, Only so much damage can be undone, as the x-rays taken in this room will demonstrate. In fact, the very room attests to the difficulty of forgiveness.  The quagmire of steely instruments on metal trays, the looming X-ray tubes, and the cold hard table all hiss, rant, and bellow of the resentment that clogs the arteries and thickens the blood. And perhaps bitter anger is karmic justice, croaks some rusty voice from the haz-mat containers.

    Damn her parents to think they can sweet talk their way into her forgiveness.  After all, she reminds herself, if people forgave so easily, if she had turned out unscathed, why would people like her parents ever be motivated to change their ways?  To motivate others to change? If she has to die of a heart attack, she hopes it is in her old bed, where her parents will find her cold body on Christmas morning.  Think of it as a gift, she will write on a note beside the bed.  But they won’t get it.

     In her Jetta, Bridget eels along Route 1 towards Chadd’s Ford, past the Brandywine Battlefield where Cornwallis and Washington battled it out on a misty day. Unlike today, which is cold and bright.  Her parents live on the Knoll, a subdivision of colonials, in its heyday a rural Shangri-la for the upper middle classes.  They moved here from an apartment when Bridget was six but unlike the neighbors, they could not afford it.  The house was a major theme in the parents’ disputes.  At the end of month, at the paying of the bills, the specter of the poorhouse lurked in every room.  In her room, Bridget battled with sleep, dreamed her bed was poised at the edge of some rickety lean-to in the slums of Calcutta, where her father swore they were all headed. 

     Now, the mortgage is paid, and the last time she was here she noticed her parents were beginning to replace the second-hand furnishings.  Retired from their jobs—her mother had been a cashier at a gift shop—they spoke respectfully to each other, and to her.   Can everything be boiled down to money, she wonders incredulously, as she brakes down her parents’ sloping driveway.

      The garage door opens.  Her father, dressed in a light blue sweat suit, is standing by the turkey fryer, parked to one side of his old Impala.

     “Costs a pretty penny, too,” he yells, patting the fryer.  As he walks toward her car, she scans him for the listing, tell-tale gait of the demented.  But he is plumb, upright as an elm.  He takes her bag and puts a hand on her back, directing her past the turkey fryer and the Impala to the inside door, which he opens with one hand.  “Bridget’s here,” he calls into the house.

     Her mother, dressed in a white sweat suit, hugs her, her long arms vice-like in their grip.  “It’s been too long.  I’ve missed you,” she whispers into the hollow of Bridget’s neck. Her father stands behind them, grinning, rubbing Bridget’s arm.  

     Not so long ago, Bridget reminds herself, she would have carried her own bag into the house, and her mother would have stayed put in her comfortable chair, their daughter’s visit no big deal.  Did they know it was she?

     “We were just doing Tai-chi,” her mother says, pulling away.  “Let me show you the tree.”

      Her mother takes her hand and leads her up the three steps into the kitchen, where spaghetti sauce simmers on the stove, into the living room, scented with evergreen. Ribboned packages are tucked beneath a lush tree.  Tai Chi? 

     Her parents point out the ornaments, the old ones, the new.  The blue bells with silver stripes that Bridget can not remember.  The old red balls with the snowflake centers look vaguely familiar, but the trees of her childhood had been thin spindles dying in some cold corner.

     “These I got at Pier 1 last year,” her mother says about the bold colors and designs that speak of Mumbai, Tangiers, and Marrakech, Christmas balls of sienna, chartreuse ruby and ochre.

     “We can sit in here,” her father pipes in, pointing to a new sofa and chairs, “or we can go down to the rec room where I got a fire going.  What do you think?”  He looks to his wife and daughter for guidance in this matter of what to do with their bodies.

     Bridget notices for the first time that her mother has had her white hair cut in the trendy angled cut of news anchors. Her father’s hair is still mostly dark.

     “We could,” her mother answers after a pause, “but maybe Bridge wants to take a nap before dinner?  You look beautiful but a little tired.  The hospital is probably working her too hard, Herb.  Laying off people left and right in this economy and expecting others to work as if they’re three people.  But you know more about that than I do, Bridget.  Would you like to take a nap, dear?”

     She would.

     Up in her old room, she sinks into the twin bed and wonders how she can possibly sleep here, but her body remembers the old contours of the mattress.  A nap, so rare, would have been such an affront to her former mother. 

     She dreams of other houses, with hidden rooms and trap doors, people who morph into her parents, her friends, Dr. B, the custodian who solemnly cleans her office.

     It is one of the shortest days of the year, and she awakens to darkness.  Downstairs, she watches her father take a fork and fish a spaghetti noodle out of a boiling pot.  He breaks it in two and peers into the center. Who knew he could boil pasta? “Done,” he proclaims and then turns around.  “Oh, you’re up.  How did you like the new bed? Got it last week.  Still a twin cause your mother wants to put in a craft table. Dinner’s almost done though—you’ve got good timing.”

     “Not always,” she answers, though she could detect no snideness in his comment. She sits down at the same battered table that darkens her poems, though her mother has covered it with a cloth patterned with crimson poppies.

     “What do you mean?” her mother asks, coming into view now as she closes the refrigerator. “I always thought you had good timing.  You got a job right after—“

     “I mean you—both of you.  Like you are now, if it’s real.  This is the home I should’ve been born to.”

     Her parents exchanges glances of collusion.  She hates it when people do that.  Do they think you are blind?  Or are they aware you’ll notice and are belittling you without words?

     “Well, let’s eat now before the spaghetti goes starchy,” her mother finally says.  “I thought we’d eat in here tonight, tomorrow, of course, in the dining room.”

     With her husband’s help, her mother pours the sauce and the spaghetti into bowls and sets them on the table.  Their movements are harmonious, as if they’d been cooking side by side for decades. Her father sets a bowl of freshly grated cheese on the table and inserts a fancy spoon.  Also new.  Seldom cheese on the old naked table and if so, the generic kind shaken out of a green box, and her father bitching about how much even that cost.

     “Oh, the bread!” Her mother rises from the table in alarm. I baked it in clay pots, like I told you, Bridge. Whole grain.”  

    “Sit down, Susan, I’ll get it.”  Her father is up, places his palms on her mother’s back to ease her down.  He leans down and says “Excellent sauce, by the way. Perfect combo of sweet and spice.”

     “You helped.  Thank yourself, too.”

     “Okay.  Thanks to me, too.”  He grins at Bridget, and she fears for a moment he might wink at her.  It would be another first, and she is grateful he doesn’t.  Still, she wonders how she can possibly summon an appetite at this table.  Their behavior, both in the past and now, like a barbell dropped on her chest.

     But her father is right—the sauce is divine, caramelized with garlic, onion, morel mushrooms, and fresh basil, the spaghetti, whole wheat, cooked al dente.  The meatballs and sausages are crusted with a thin layer of flavor, olive oil, the meat inside moist and tender, the two textures mingling exquisitely on the tongue.  Her father cuts and lathers a slice of warm bread with herbed butter and places it on her bread plate. She eats it.

     For dessert, frozen pineapple mousse with a swirl of crème fraiche and shredded coconut on top.  Bridget can not turn it down. 

     “First time I made it—recipe in an old cookbook my mother gave me for our first wedding anniversary,” her mother explains.

     Bridget spoons the last dollop from her parfait glass.

     “Good?” Her father smiles, a proud boy of nearly 80.

     “You never—“  Bridget frowns at her mother.

     “I know,” her mother answers, her voice scratchy.

      Bridget looks at her father. “You always–”

     “I know,” he says, though she does not know how she is going to finish.  So how can he know?  She tries to summon anger about such easy confessions, their “I knows” usurping the ugly details of her complaints against them.  She blames her quietude on the postprandial lull that has dulled her senses.  They know, sure, and of course they didn’t mean to.

     “We know,” her mother says, “and we’d like to make it up to you.” 

     Her father pulls an envelope from the flannel shirt he has changed into for dinner.  “An early Christmas present.”    

     She opens it slowly.  Inside, is an airline voucher for a ticket to Spain.  How did they know?  When had she told them?

     “You said you wanted to go.  For you, not your brother, because you got the brunt of us,” her father says. “You being older.”  He scratches at a drip on the tablecloth.

      Her mother takes her hand and says, “And tomorrow, we’re giving everyone a ticket on a cruise, ourselves included—even Aunt Jane.  I thought we could work out the dates tomorrow.  You and Brian, I mean.  We’re free whenever. But we understand if you don’t want to accompany us.”  The collusive looks again, though her father nods at Bridget.

     “How can you afford it?”

     Her father has brought a tray set with cordial glasses and a bottle of crème de menthe to the table and pours for three.  He sits down again and looks down into his drink.  “I’m not sure myself.  For starters, we never lost money in the stock market like most of the people around here.  I never believed in it.”

     “We never spent much,” her mother adds.  “Not on you or your brother, like we should have—“

     “And then we both worked for years past retirement age, collecting social security.”

     “Your father left us a CD, too, don’t forget, Herb.” 

     “Well, yes, and the point is we forgot it and didn’t spend it, and there it was, in a box collecting 9% interest locked in for 20 years.  And your mother, your grandmother, left us the silver and all her awful—“

     “Ugliest, gaudiest jewelry you ever laid eyes on.  The house was just as awful.”

     “But profitable.  We sold when gold and silver and real estate were at the highest in a hundred years.”

     “So all of a sudden, we realize there is money, and the house is paid off.”

     “And then you decided you didn’t have to hate each other and your children anymore?”  Bridget notices her mother and father are both wearing red shirts.

     “Not at first,” her mother says.  “Though I never hated you.”

     “Took a while to settle down, to sink in,” her father adds.

     “And then we read this book.  Train Your Brain and End Your Pain. Only takes about two weeks.”

     “Two weeks only, and you can instill new habits.”

     “Diet and exercise, and new ways of thinking.  New pathways in the brain.”

     “Neural connections.”

     “Neurons in the brain make new connections.”

     “And your brain forgets the old ones.”

     “By not thinking about things the old way.  Replace them with new thoughts.”

     “We were forgetting about things anyway.  Who did what to whom, where I laid my glasses.”

     “So we decided to love each other again, because the alternative wasn’t working very well. Longevity on both sides of the family.  The thought of another twenty years—so, we rewrote our life, made a new narrative, as the book said.”

     “Who ever thought that loving could be a habit?”

     “Now, we work as partners. He wouldn’t want to live without me.”

     “And vice versa.”

     “We didn’t forget we weren’t good parents, though.  We were the worst. We want to make reparations.”

     “We got you the book for Christmas, too, so you understand.  For the first time in this house, there is a twinkle in Santa’s eye.”

     “We have more presents tomorrow. More surprises,” her mother sings and bounds up from the table to grab plates.  Her father joins her.  “Oh, and your father got a movie for tonight.  Something indie, well-reviewed.”

     “We’ll get this cleaned up, Bridget.  Go sit, relax in the rec room.  You work too hard, and we hardly work. You deserve a break.  The fire’s still going pretty strong.”

     One, two, three steps down to the rec room, where her father has preceded her and is stacking another log on the fire.

     “Relax,” he says, pointing to his comfortable chair. He trots back up the stairs, though she detects stiffness in the hinge of his hips.  She has seen spry men his age topple over, suddenly.

     Bridget falls into the sofa instead, her muscles relaxing in the heat, her mind beyond thought.  She slips off her shoes, sets a foot on the coffee table. On the end table is a travel magazine, opened to a view of the Caribbean.  Pages and pages of beach, sun and happiness. 

     She can hear them in the kitchen, a pair of magpies.

     She flips through the pages again and then closes her eyes, the dazzling water and skies seared onto the retinas.  She is skipping along a sandy pathway to the beach, a white-haired parent on either side of her.  It is a long stretch to the sea, though, and they all wander off the edge of the photograph. Her parents are soon exhausted, they’ve let go of her hands and she, too, is moving at a slower pace.  Still, she is the first to reach the water, warm as a baby’s bath.  Her parents trudge behind, growing feebler with every step.  She fears they will begin bickering soon.  And she lunges into the blue sea, her body going down, down, to cooler water, toward the murky gradations of water and ocean floor, cobalt and baby blue, the world turning around.

Pamela Main lives in Wilmington, Delaware and directs the Writing Center at Penn State Brandywine, where she also teaches creative writing.  Her previous publications include The Greensboro Review,  Louisiana Literature, and Puerto del Sol. One of her stories will also appear in Clapboard House in the fall.  She is working on a novel set on an imaginary island off the New Jersey coast.

In Memoriam: Denise Gess

It is with great sadness that we report that our friend and long-time Philadelphia Stories board member, Denise Gess, passed away on August 22.

If you were writing Denise Gess as a character in a story, you would have to grapple with extremes, wrestle with contradictions. Such a marvelous alluring character! You might have trouble maintaining any kind of authorial distance. You might have trouble making her convincing.

First clue to her character, her looks:  Slender as a ballerina; strong as a python. Even past the half-century mark  (such a paltry amount of time, it now seems), Denise could slip into her Size 2 skinny jeans, pointy-toed high heels, her sunglasses, and demand attention by just walking into the room. ("Smokin’!" one Rowan grad student declared about her.) Dark brown hair, smart and fierce brown eyes, a generous mouth, a sodium vapor smile, a low rumbling laugh (a sleek train speeding from a well-lit tunnel) that came easily and often, promised to go on forever. Who couldn’t pay attention? 

Denise had silky olive skin, a gift from her Sicilian ancestors, and she had a gorgeous clavicle, a creamy, unlined neck and throat. She worried that the part of her body she liked best would be forever scarred when the docs had to surgically insert a titanium catheter right there at the breast bone for the chemo, but she ended up loving the port, which rescued her from the puncture wounds of multiple IVs, the purple stains on her wrists and forearms after her first treatments.

Denise Gess, novelist, essayist, literary critic, a skilled and passionate writer in many genres, an editor of this magazine, a tenured associate professor at Rowan University. A list of accomplishments too long to list in this small space. Denise considered herself a Philadelphia writer — a significant distinction since Philadelphia was not the city of her birth, but her chosen home, crucial, she once told me, to her wellbeing. She loved it. She could not live elsewhere. She’d have withered in the ‘burbs. She knew; she’d tried it, she’d gotten out and did not go back.

Passionate, wise, intelligent, optimistic, witty, vivacious – qualities throughout Denise’s life that fought to claim dominance, but only succeeded in a rare synergistic creation, a uniquely engaged and energetic  writer, teacher, woman. She was self-made, an anomaly in her close-knit family. She began her work life as a nurse, maintained until the end her lifelong fascination with and understanding of all things medical.

Denise was a voracious reader, a hungry learner, an astute identifier of talent, and a tireless promoter of others’ work when she loved it, believed in it – her students and her writer friends. She once told me, however, that she hands-down loved being a mother even more than being a writer, could not have endured the rejections and frustrations of the literary life without the joys and satisfactions of motherhood, without her daughter to come home to.
 
Last September – Denise lived exactly one year after her diagnosis of Stage 4 lung cancer – I was with Denise for her last radiation treatment at HUP. The radiation targeted lesions on her brain, and for it, she’d been fitted with a custom radiation mask, a horrifying things of plastic and webbing to protect her face and neck from the killer rays pointed on those lesions. Afterward, she asked if she could keep it, and of course she could. It wouldn’t do anyone else any good. That day, for lunch, she managed to down an egg and an English muffin. Then we went upstairs to the lady’s cancer boutique to buy wigs since she’d soon be bald. Tucked beneath her arm was the odd sculpture, her radiation mask. Wall art, she told anyone who asked, and one or two who didn’t. Everybody laughed, most of all Denise. The frightening mask was for her a talisman of what she could endure, what she would do for another shot at life.

Denise Gess, a woman of hemispheric contradictions —  a bone-thin foodie with the spirit of a shaman and the sharp, shiny, ever-working mind of an engineer, the exotic looks of an actress. A tireless toiler in the fields of literary writing, a well-published, though rarely applauded, writer. Yes, she loved applause, but understood that it didn’t really matter. Not to her, anyway. She loved the writing process, loved writing, and knew that in the end, it was the writing itself, not the fame or glory it might garner, that mattered. She revered written language, and lived to put words down on the page, the sentences stretching out, one after the other, in an endless unbroken chain. Those of us who love her must light candles now in hope that her copious, yet-to-be-published work will find its way to print or cyberspace, so that we, and others, will be enriched by it.

Denise, darling friend and colleague, oh, writerly writer, you, you will not be missed, because you are here and will abide here, the words you spoke, and those you’ve written, woven deeply into the fabric of my life and the lives of all countless others you have touched.

Julia MacDonnell Chang, essay editor of Philadelphia Stories, teaches in the Writing Arts Program at Rowan University. She is a novelist, short story writer, journalist, essayist and book reviewer with graduate degrees in journalism from Columbia University, and one in creative writing from Temple University. 

Denise’s essay on writing essays can be found here, and her terrific essay, Not Tony and Tina, can be found here.

                                             ____ 

In lieu of flowers, Denise’s family requests donations to the National Lung Cancer Partnership at www.nationallungpartnership.org or to the Wissahickon Hospice, 150 Monument Rd., Suite 300, Bala Cynwyd, PA.

Local Author Profile: Lise Funderburg

[img_assist|nid=5090|title=Pig Candy|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=150|height=231]In preparation for Philadelphia Stories’ Push to Publish workshop, keynote speaker and freelance journalist Lise Funderburg spoke with me about her new book, Pig Candy, the ups and downs of writing, and why she wouldn’t be good at writing fiction. Her memoir, Pig Candy, tells the story of Funderburg’s quest to get to know her father through a series of trips down to his hometown in rural Georgia. Her work has been featured in the New York Times, O, The Oprah Magazine, and Time.  Pig Candy was released in paperback this past May by Free Press, an imprint of Simon and Schuster.

What inspired you to write Pig Candy?

As a journalist I make my living getting people to pay me to answer questions I am curious about. And I was curious as to who my father was as a man and as a part of history, American history, apart from being my father — which was how I looked at him for most of my life. I think this is a natural curiosity that arises when you get to a certain age. Usually it is mortality that forces you to wake up and get more perspective. I was getting older and my father got sick from something that he later recovered from, but I realized my father was not going to live forever. And so I felt a kind of urgency to fill in the gaps. I realized there was so much I didn’t know about my dad because of the kind of man he was. So I thought under the guise of being a journalist I could get him to open up and talk about himself.  Since I am a freelance journalist– and especially because to him, and probably to a lot of other people, the word freelance means unemployed   I think he thought whatever he could do to help me out he would do, so he agreed to let me interview him.

You speak of a ‘decoding ring’ that you felt you needed when you were in your father’s hometown. Did you use any research or interviews to aid you in learning the subtleties of your father’s southern small town?

Research was a big part of it, I was fortunate that there were still a lot of people to talk with who knew him, the town he was from and the era. I did a lot in-depth reporting; I would talk to stone fruit peach experts at the agricultural extensions of various universities, I traveled to Michigan to look in the library archives there to find out more about the job he had waiting tables on cruise ships that went across the Great Lakes, now an extinct industry. I read books, found experts in different fields that spoke to his past and really, just being in the place he was from was a kind of in-depth reporting, to eat the food, which was a big part of the book, and to be in that rural landscape, was really a big part of my research.

How long did it take you to write Pig Candy?

Seven years. It took me a while to figure out the way I wanted to do this book. It wasn’t intended to be a relationship story about me and my dad; it was trying to put a person into context, which is a big task to take on. I had to find the right narrative stance, to be both honestly his daughter and the reporter I wanted to be. In the beginning I was writing a history of his jobs. I came back from the trip to Michigan and I wrote a chapter about his work on night boats. A colleague of mine read it and he said, “You know, this reads like you’re showing us you’ve done your homework.” I winced at that but I thought he was right. In a way, what set me in the right direction, sadly, was that my father became ill again and this time it was a terminal diagnosis of prostate cancer. That made it easier to write the book the way I wanted to write it. It took away the sense of obligation and I just wrote what I cared about, and it ended up being the book that I wanted in the first place.

Pig Candy is very relatable in the sense that every person has to ‘relearn’ who their parents are. How was your relationship with your father affected by your writing this memoir?

You do relearn who your parents are, when you get to that point of maturity and capacity and are able to look at them in their full dimension and not just as the child who needs them. That never goes away, and I don’t think it should ever go away, that you need your parents. But for me, my sense of my father was greatly enriched by doing this research. And to learn about the times and place he was from explained him in a way that was very satisfying, enlightening and comforting.

What was your favorite scene in Pig Candy?

 My favorite parts of the book are the parts that are always more than one thing. They might be, for example, the scene where I take my father to his doctor appointment and I let him drive, even though he had a stroke and was probably about to lose his license. The scene is funny and sad and informative. It was a bittersweet experience, the last couple of years of his life. There would be hilarity, grief, pride and grace all bundled together and they often came at points of great challenge. The scene in the car was one of them, and when we busted him out of hospice care to drive him down to Georgia one last time is one as well. One part that’s most moving to me is when I have to tell him his prognosis: a lot depends on him acknowledging something that he didn’t really want to acknowledge and I have to make choices about whether it’s my right to tell him this. That scene means a lot to me.

As the keynote speaker for Push to Publish, you will be sharing your advice and experience with aspiring writers. What was the best piece of advice you received when you first started writing?

One of my professors really impressed upon me the need to step away from your work as you craft it, whether that means putting in a drawer overnight, or walking away for twenty minutes.  Stepping away can give you perspective on your work and aid you in the revision process. That piece of advice has sustained me for a long time and I’m constantly amazed at how going away and coming back will make clear what was so unclear before.

Another piece of advice is when you’re ready to go out into the world and publish,  you have to follow the ‘lotto motto’: you have to be in it to win it. Instead of ‘all it takes is a dollar and a dream’, you could say ‘all it takes is a stamp and a dream.’ For many people, it’s like there is this giant wall between being published and not, and it’s frightening to submit things but you just have to make yourself do it. You have to fake confidence until you have confidence, you just have to. So I think you have to be in it to win it- you have to put yourself out there. There’s so much rejection built into this profession and you have to find a way to protect your ego and sometimes that means having more than ball in the air, sending it out to more than one place. I think there are instances when it isn’t appropriate to send out multiple submissions, but for most of us, we should have the high class problem of having the New Yorker and The Atlantic both wanting to run our piece and being in the embarrassing position of having to tell them they selected the same work. It’s good to be pursuing several avenues at once, so when one rejection letter comes in it’s not that bad.

Have you ever considered delving into fiction writing?

I’m afraid I wouldn’t be very good at it, in fact I took a workshop a couple years ago for fun and wrote a short story and I have to say it is the most plotless, flat piece of writing. Though it’s well written, it just doesn’t have momentum. For me, nonfiction offers up a lot of the satisfactions that fiction does: narrative nonfiction challenges you to shape a plot, develop characters, and to dig into the writers toolbox that is the same toolbox that fiction writers use. Setting scenes, tensions, pacing– all those things are essential in my work, and they are the defining aspects of fiction as well. I like the challenge of something that is real and shaping it into something that has grace and elegance. I’m fascinated by the real world and the many things happening around me .  Writing helps me to make sense of them and answer those questions and curiosities that I have.

Under the Bagel Volcano

In the Bagel Omnibus, Sweeney pumps his fourth mug of mocha java with his fist. On the walls loom pictures of surfers in dune buggies with bagel tires, lovers leaping into bagel volcanoes, and more trick photos that show lean physiques and lots of dough, suggesting you can eat all the cream-cheese-slathered goods in the place and not gain a pound. Sweeney comes here every day to write the Great American Creative Nonfiction Novel, which will win him the love of millions who yearn for enlightenment in this techno-dystopian world, and secure his status as the Global Village Bard.

He returns to his favorite table and trusts zoom of pen over page without stopping or reading what he writes or sweating punctuation grammar syntax or pedantic rules like when to use lie and when to use lay and boy, would he love to get laid, it’s been a long time, this dry spell he equates with the African Sahel drought from over-cropping, to ironically imply man’s rape of Big Mama Gaia!

But Sweeney doesn’t rely too much on metaphor, not wanting his future readers to mistake his moon-aimed finger for the moon. Clearly, Sweeney does not stink of Zen. Though he stunk of it once, he doesn’t stink of it now.

     A very pretty girl enters and sits at the table in front of him, blocking his view of The Hula Bagel Chicks Get Down. Sweeney takes one look at her and knows he won’t try to describe her for fear of stretching his mythopoetic member from his lap to hers. He recalls Hemingway in A Moveable Feast, when Hem sat writing in a Paris café and a very pretty girl entered and Hem wished he could put her in his Michigan story. Oh the frissons of lust Hem felt but largely omitted, forcing readers to surmise the subtext! But unlike Hem, Sweeney won’t stingily compare his very pretty girl’s face and hair with a newly minted coin and crow’s wing, for he’s got the bigheartedness to let her divine aura flavor his magnum opus—besides, she’s a redhead.

Nevertheless, he partly steels himself to the telepathic kudos she sends him through the curling steam of her latte. She smiles and bites into her bagel. He chugs his mocha and hurries to the men’s room.

    Now Sweeney is one to piss largely, having never divided his Rabelaisian visceral gusto from his transcendentally attuned Emersonian life, thus avoiding duality. But the trickle from his throbbing member drowns his union with the cosmos . . . Cosmos? Cosmos, indeed! He, Sweeney, will shake the last drops from his cock—Cock? No, DOWSING WAND OF THE IMMINENT RACE OF EARTH STEWARDS!—and march back out with a Buddha smile at his very pretty girl and everyone else. He will write his composed compassionate ass off, singing his story, her story, and the stories of all living beings in a marriage of body and soul that’ll make Billy Blake cheer from his grave.

    Sweeney sits at his table, pushes his cup aside, and takes up his pen . . . Oh God, his very pretty girl is shooting him the sex eye, the ravish-me-on-the-spot eye, but she’s so young and vestal, no that’s not right. Rather she’s so beguiling in an insouciant sort of way that-that—hell, that’s not it either! Time for his Writer’s Block-Busting Mantra—

    The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy zebra. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy zebra. The quick brown fox almost jumps over the lazy zebra, but almosts don’t count. The quick brown fox lands on the lazy zebra where it’s black and white but better than a zoo. Goddammit, his mantra’s not working!

    He looks up, she winks, and he dives back into the page. The quick red fox and the lazy zebra breed a black-and-white-with-a-slash-of-red unicorn. NO! The pole-vaulting fox clears the rearing giraffe, then examines his pole with the help of a huge mirror. NO! The caped fox flies over King Kong as he straddles the Empire State Building, flailing his fists and eating Air Force machine-gun bullets. NO! NO! NO!

Holy shit, she’s standing before him now, asking questions, so unlike Big Mama Gaia!

    “Hi. Whatcha writing?”
    “Baby zebra humps red fox,” Sweeney mutters, bent to his notebook.
    “Erotica?” she giggles.
“Bestiality,” Sweeney says. His tongue burns, his heart pounds in his throat. He swallows hard and tries with all his might to stop his pen and look up at her.

Robert Hambling Davis has published his work in The Sun, Antietam Review, Homestead Review, Aura Literary Arts Review, Memoir (and), Santa Monica Review, Yoga Journal, and elsewhere.  Bob has received three Delaware Division of the Arts Individual Artist fellowship grants, two for fiction in 1989 and 2002, and one for creative nonfiction in 2009. He was a semifinalist in the 2002 William Faulkner Creative Writing Contest, and his story, “Death of a Deer,” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize and published in On the Mason-Dixon Line: An Anthology of Contemporary Delaware Writers. Bob lives on his family’s farm in Newark, Delaware, where he teaches yoga and leads a monthly writing critique group. He looks forward to using his Philadelphia Stories prize certificate at the Belgian Café.

Excerpt from the Novel Monkey See

[img_assist|nid=4680|title=|desc=|link=url|url=http://www.bigmonkeytalk.com/|align=right|width=150|height=235]When Ed got home, he turned on the late talk and fixed himself a bowl of ice cream. He slumped on the couch and let the vanilla melt as he flipped, finding nothing comprehensible. Humans in ties laughed or insulted each other but he could not get the earlier argument out of his head.  If it had been his dining room, he never would have let Chekchek through the door.

Out his window, next to the tv, a streetlight burned at eye level, washing out the moon he’d passed on the way home.

He could see, in the shadows, other Improved Apes in the trees, crouched, sitting, staring at the same moon that rolled above Africa, Madagascar, Ceylon. He could walk out this window and join them, but he wouldn’t be sure he had joined them. There was no way to tell if this new language meant the same to all of them.

He lifted his spoon and swallowed his ice cream like a good boy.

 

Chekchek sat in the tree in his backyard, fuming at the mortgage rates around here. Backyard trees had become a hot commodity since the neighborhood went Ape. Still, he liked his ranch house, and it was convenient to Interstate 95.

The moon seemed another trick to him now that the humans had explained what it was an airless ball of quiet dust, chipped in a thousand places by other chips of rock and ice. He could not articulate to himself what he thought it was before the operations, but it was better than that.

In the next house he could see that the good professor’s wife had gone up to bed. The professor himself seemed to be stalling in the kitchen, weakly filling ice trays.  He kept meaning to climb over and see what happens behind the upstairs curtains, but he resisted, not wanting to risk trouble with the human police before he had a chance to complete his plans. When the time came, he imagined the joy of tearing down those ugly brown-flower curtains and scaring the bejabbers out of Cogitomni and his wife. He bit into another of his fresh-baked madeleines and chewed silently, lost in thoughts of his plots and remembrance of what was half known in the first place.

 

Harold Pryce Cogitomni, Doctor of Gerontology, Professor of Cellular Biology, Doctor of Large Animal Veterinary, Professor of Tweaked DNA at Princeton, filled the ice cube trays very slowly from a tight trickle of pure spring water out the jug dispenser in his kitchen and thought, too aware of the obvious metaphor, of how impure the world was, of how he had muddied the waters between the species. They did not need ice, but he was the only one to ever fill it, and he was grateful for the small responsibility, the incredible insignificance of the work.

He pulled his robe tight. There was a chill in the vinyl tiles under his feet. Fall approached. The night rustled. He looked to the full moon out the window, above the trees he assumed were filled with his new neighbors, though he rarely spotted them even in daylight. Someone had proposed banning tree-climbing at a neighborhood meeting, but legal questions aside there seemed no practical way to enforce it. His wife had hung thick curtains over all the windows except for this small one over the kitchen sink, and he found himself drawn to it now on these nights when he could tell himself he knew his audience was out there, watching him, judging him, struggling for a verdict and then a punishment.

He poured himself a glass of water from the plastic jug and added one of the fresh ice cubes he’d popped from the trays. He told himself he could taste the purity, though of course he could not; there is a taste to impurity, and it is sometimes what we want.

 

He heard a sound beyond the curtains and he moved to the french doors to see a great silverback gorilla, almost white as the moon and streetlights reflected, leap from tree to tree. He had stripped off his human clothes, playing in the night’s yard. The apes wore human clothes not out of humiliation or vanity but because they had come to understand it gave them portable shelter in a cold climate, and all the freedom pockets can bring. But in the night, in the undressed distances, in the proper lighting, they could not stand to ape us. They remembered what we had made them think unimportant. We wanted them to type, we wanted them to speak, and we did not care about trees to their way of thinking. Cogitomni watched the great muscled back disappear into a pine and thought We cannot explain ourselves to them either.

 

From the Editors

[img_assist|nid=4644|title=The Singular Exploits of Wonder Mom and Party Girl by Marc Schuster|desc=|link=url|url=http://www.philadelphiastories.org/singular-exploits-wonder-mom-and-party-girl-marc-schuster-0|align=right|width=150|height=225]As usual, things rarely slow down for us at Philadelphia Stories, and this spring was no exception. With the introduction of our successful fiction writing workshops, taught by Aimee LaBrie and Marc Schuster , we’ve branched out into another area of professional development—one that we hope will continue to thrive.

This spring also saw the launch of our second title from PS Books, Marc Schuster’s The Singular Exploits of Wonder Mom and Party Girl at our Spring Fling on May 9th at the Swedish Historical Society. The event was another fun day of live music, Chinese Auction Items, and good food and company. The Spring Fling was also the culminating event in our spring fundraising campaign, which began with our online auction. This year we raised over $4,000 at the auction and another $2,000 at the Fling. This will help us to continue to publish a few more issues of Philadelphia Stories, but we still need your help. If you are not already a member , please consider becoming one today. As little as $20 gets you home delivery of Philadelphia Stories—and know that you are doing your part to help support the Delaware Valley’s vibrant writing community (become a member here).

This summer will be just as busy. In June, Philadelphia Stories will co-host the second annual Rosemont Writer’s Retreat at Rosemont College and the free Philadelphia StoriesWriter’s and Readers Series (sponsored in part by the Pennsylvania Humanities Council). In July, Philadelphia Stories will also host a variety of workshops and readings as part of the Chestnut Hill Book Festival.

And finally, we are pleased to announce our first serious prize for fiction. The Marguerite McGlinn Prize will be awarded to any American author for a work of short fiction up to 8,000 words. Submissions will be read between June 15-October 15, 2009 and the winning piece will be published in the Winter 2009/10 Issue. There is a $10 reading fee for each work submitted and the prize is $1,000. Elise Juska, author of Getting Over Jack Wagoner, The Hazards of Sleeping Alone, and One for Sorrow, Two for Joy will judge. Complete details on the fiction contest are available here.

We hope that you have a happy and productive summer.

All the best,
Carla & Christine

Excerpt from the novel When Love Was Clean Underwear

Chapter One

 

Lucy took the oxygen tubes out of her mother’s nose and turned off the tank so they could share a last cigarette together. Marge’s last cigarette.  It was October 30, Mischief Night, the day her mother Marge had chosen in the hope of being buried on All Souls’ Day.  She chose the time, around 11:15 p.m., so that she could watch the lead story on the 11:00 news; she no longer cared to hear the five-day forecast.

They sat in the dining room, which had been converted into a makeshift hospital room with an adjustable bed, a commode, a TV tray covered with prescription bottles, and the oxygen tanks.  Lucy held the brown cigarette to her mother’s mouth.  The smoke hung about Marge’s face.  Her lungs could barely pull it in or force it out, but she still enjoyed the smell and taste.

The lead news story had proven a disappointment.  The “werewolf boy” from South America had plastic surgery at Children’s Hospital to remove the thick hair covering one side of his face; skin grafts were required.  Instead of after pictures of the boy’s face following the procedure, they aired pre-surgery video.  Dr. Eugene McCormick, a man in his early fifties wearing wire-rimmed glasses and a white medical jacket, outlined an area of the boy’s face with a black marker, while the anchorwoman stated that the boy was recuperating and in stable condition.

“He is the same,” Marge said through parched lips, as she turned her face away.

She had motioned to Lucy that it was time.  Reluctantly, Lucy let go of the aluminum foil-covered antenna of their old television.  She didn’t want to kill her mother.  She didn’t know whether she could kill her mother.

Lucy took a drag and then offered the cigarette to her mother again.  Closing her eyes, Marge parted her lips and sucked ever so slightly on the filter.  She opened her mouth to let the last of the smoke escape and studied its rise.

Then Lucy tapped out the cigarette in the ashtray until every ember was extinguished.  She went into the kitchen to empty and wash the ashtray, a ritual Marge insisted upon after each cigarette.  One that Lucy was grateful for now; it gave her a just few more minutes.   “Smoking doesn’t have to be a dirty habit,” Marge would say.

As Lucy returned to the dining room, Marge pointed to her purse.  Lucy knew what she wanted-the index cards with Marge’s final to-do list.  Each step of her mother’s death was printed clearly, ingrained in blue ink, on its own index card.  In the past few weeks, she’d meticulously jotted down notes while watching reruns of Columbo and other detective shows. From these notes, she created the concise, detailed to-do list.  For as long as Lucy could remember, index cards were how Marge ordered the days, weeks, and seasons of her life.  She kept all but these final ones in a recipe box on the kitchen windowsill.  Mostly they were instructions on keeping house, some recipes-Marge’s parting gift to Lucy “so she wouldn’t have to reinvent the wheel every morning.”

Protest was futile.  Lucy cautiously brought up that some in the Church might consider it a mortal sin.  Marge said, “I’ve got that covered.”  Lucy pleaded that she wasn’t up to the task, maybe there was someone else, perhaps Marge could do it on her own?

“I gave birth to you.  This is the least you could do for your poor dying mother,” Marge replied. The conversations ended always with Marge’s standard end-of-discussion scowl.

Lucy sat next to her mother and when Marge nodded, she read from the first card:  “Number one.  Place pillow over my face and apply firm but gentle pressure for a minimum of five minutes.”

Marge reached for the pillow behind her head.  Lucy took it with one hand and looked for a place to set the stack of index cards.  Finally, she decided to put them on Marge’s lap, then she stood.  She wanted to say something or do something meaningful but Marge seemed eager to get on with it. Afraid she’d fail her mother, Lucy started, “Mom . . .”

Marge calmly waved her off and motioned for the pillow.  Lucy took a deep swallow, put the pillow over Marge’s face, bending its ends around her head, and held it tight.  Her mother’s body became rigid.  Her fists pushed into the mattress.  Marge had warned Lucy not to break her nose.  People would suspect foul play.  And she didn’t want black eyes for her funeral.  “It’s not that I’m vain,” she’d said, “I just want to be presentable.”

After a few moments, Lucy’s hands were wet with perspiration; her joints ached from the pressure, the tension.  Her mother lay still.  Lucy had forgotten to check the time before starting.  How did she get stuck doing this?  Who else would do it?  Her father was dead.  Her sister Anne would never have agreed to this; and Marge would never have asked her.

Lucy lifted the pillow.

“Mom, are you there?”

Marge’s eyes opened, startling Lucy, then Marge began coughing.

“Are you okay?” asked Lucy.

Her mother moved her head.  Lucy couldn’t decipher if she was shaking it or nodding.

“Do you want a glass of water?”

Marge’s coughing subsided and she glared at Lucy.

“Get the egg timer,” she whispered with what was left of her voice.

When Lucy returned, Marge set the timer for five minutes.  Pushing aside prescription bottles, she positioned it on the TV tray next to her.  Then, she pressed the button to recline the bed.  She motioned for Lucy to place the pillow over her head again.

“I’m not sure I want to do this!”  Lucy started crying.  Marge patted her daughter’s shoulder and reset the timer.  She pushed the pillow to Lucy.

“Okay, okay,” Lucy mouthed.  Right before she put the pillow over her mother’s face for the second time, she noticed Marge blowing air out of her mouth.  Her hands lay across her chest, her gnarled fingers neatly intertwined and pressing down.  Death could not come fast enough for Marge.

Her mother had been ready for death since her husband Joseph died twelve years ago.  She’d curled into herself like a pill bug only her armor left showing.  Marge never forgave Joseph for dying so unexpectedly, so poetically, and so well before her.  His dying was not in the plan.  He’d broken their agreement.  He’d abandoned her.

Joseph Pescitelli was a house framer.  One day on the job, he stopped hammering, clutched his chest, and slid down a wood stud until his tool belt clunked against the plywood floor.  It was all one fluid motion.  He died with one hand on his chest and the other still holding his hammer.

Theirs had been a May-December romance.  Joseph was twenty-two years older and a confirmed bachelor when he met Marge.  But he had always acted younger than his age and she, older.  It was as if, in marrying Joseph despite her family’s disapproval, Marge O’Connell had committed her one act of youthful passion and been done with it.  At the young age of fifty, Marge seemed to welcome the cancer, having grown bored and frustrated with living.  She was furious that she was confined to a hospital bed with oxygen tubes up her nose, peeing in a pot in the middle of the very same dining room in which she conducted Christmas and Easter celebrations for thirty some years.  Her dying was neither poetic nor quick.

The egg timer ticked the seconds.  Lucy stared at the white pillow covering her mother’s face until she saw spots.  Then she looked to the window and saw the reflection of the simple circular chandelier, hovering in the darkness.  A lone white feather that must have escaped the pillow slowly swayed back and forth making its way to the bed until Lucy blew it away.  Marge’s body was tense and shook slightly.  Lucy stood, her arms straight, pushing down.  Her elbows and knuckles ached.  The dark hair on her arms stood on edge in contrast to the brightness in the room.  Everything seemed alive and watchful.  The egg timer, the feather, the chandelier-all witnesses.  Lucy turned her face away and stared at the twisted zigzag lines of the television screen.  Her vision was already blurred with tears as she tried not to notice her mother’s feet twitching under the blankets like two land-bound fish.  Voices from another channel cut in and out.  She couldn’t make out what they were selling.  The health reporter spoke with great earnestness about the merits of drinking tea.  The elderly British people she interviewed proclaimed that their religious consumption of tea was the reason for their longevity.  Many had grandparents who had lived well into their nineties.  The Pescitellis were coffee drinkers.  Marge’s body jolted, once, twice, three times.  Lucy held tight onto the pillow letting her tears fall from her jaw.  Her throat ached, trying to release a cry.  She swallowed.  Next up on the news was a man who had invented a device for yanking trapped plastic bags from tree limbs.  The news took a break to advertise the following day’s 6:00 news.  The egg timer buzzed, rattling against the metal TV tray.

Lucy lifted the pillow and held it against her chest.  Marge’s milky blue eyes were open.  Lucy hadn’t expected that.  She waved her hand in front of them; they didn’t blink.

“Mom?  Mom?  Are you there?”

Nothing.

“Are you dead, Mom?”

Number Two:  Make absolutely sure I am dead.

            Lucy lay her head on her mother’s chest.  Sometimes when she was little, Lucy woke up to the sound of her father snoring in the front bedroom and the noise of the television downstairs.  There her mother had fallen asleep in her recliner, the flickering light on her still body.  Quietly, Lucy climbed on her lap and listened to her mother’s heart beating, her soft murmuring in her sleep.  Now, there was no sound, no motion.

As instructed, Lucy placed a hand-held mirror in front of Marge’s nose and mouth.  It didn’t fog up.  She couldn’t make the call to the doctor unless she was absolutely sure Marge was dead; her mother had emphasized that several times.  Lucy checked for a pulse in her mother’s wrist.

“Mom?  Are you there?”  Lucy stood above her and gently shook her shoulders.  Marge’s body was limp.  Lucy placed Marge’s hands on her chest, as they did at the funeral home where she worked.  Her mother’s hands were rough.  The perpetual cycle of scrubbing, washing and scouring had left her hands with the swollen, bruised look of a fisherman’s face after decades of exposure to salt air.

Number Three:  Place pillow under my head.

            After closely inspecting the pillow for any traces of bodily fluid, Lucy returned it to its place under Marge’s head.  She straightened Marge’s faded strawberry blond hair with traces of gray.  The muscles in Marge’s face were relaxed, but Lucy could still see the line between her eyes.  Oddly, in death Marge appeared younger.  For a moment, Lucy considered holding her mother in her arms, embracing her, but her mother’s eyes were still watching.  Instead, she quickly kissed her forehead, something she would never have done while her mother was alive.  In her mother’s house, love was clean underwear, not hugs and kisses.  When she stroked Marge’s cheek, she was surprised by its softness and the light peach fuzz.  She assumed her skin would feel more like burlap than silk.  Her sister Anne bore a very strong resemblance to Marge-tall, slender, and fair with freckled skin and thin lips.  Lucy took after her father, which meant she was shorter, rounder, her skin olive.  Her dark hair was noticeable on her upper lip and sideburns, more pronounced on her arms and legs than the average woman’s.  Lucy couldn’t help but wonder if Marge’s interest in the werewolf boy was an indirect slight at her.

Number Four:  Reinsert oxygen tubes.

Lucy released a heavy sigh, not realizing she’d been holding her breath.  The tubing rested on Marge’s throat.  Lucy carefully inserted the prongs into her mother’s nostrils and turned the oxygen tank on.  When Dr. Cuchinnati arrived it was to appear as though Lucy was so in shock that she left her mother untouched.

Number Five:  Open window and release my soul.

            Lucy opened the window next to the bed.  Marge had told her to say a prayer for both of them.  Lucy heard the Million Dollar Movie theme music coming from the TV.  Beyond the alley, in the moonlight, the clothesline shimmered,  a shooting star against the cinder block walls of the backyard.  In the upper pane of glass, she could see her own dark reflection and the white brightness of her mother’s blankets behind her.  If she stood perfectly still and concentrated hard enough, she thought she might see her mother’s soul leaving her body.  “God forgive us,” she whispered.  A chill traveled up the length of her spine.  Had her mother left?  Turning away from the window, she watched her mother’s motionless body.  She grabbed the index cards and her mother’s purse from the foot of the bed, then slowly backed into the kitchen.

Number Six:  Call Dr. Cuchinnati.

            Marge’s purse was heavy, twenty years old and camel-colored faux leather.  Sometime during the Seventies it was available for purchase exclusively on television.  It had compartments specifically designed for a matching checkbook, address book, cigarette case, and key chain.  When Marge saw it, she knew it was the perfect purse for her- a place for everything and everything in its place.  The pages of the address book crinkled like old parchment from the stress of Marge’s printing as Lucy searched for the doctor’s information even though she knew the number.  She needed the prop. The line rang and rang and Lucy envisioned the octogenarian slowly making his way to the telephone.  Finally he answered.  She could hear her mother’s voice in her head as she recited her lines:  “She went peacefully in her sleep during the 11:00 news.  I called to her from the kitchen to see if she wanted anything and there was no answer.”

 

With Marge’s purse in tow and the index cards folded into her palm, Lucy waited for the doctor on the front stoop.  Being alone with her mother frightened her now, despite her years of practice keeping the dead company.  Since the doctor lived several blocks away and stubbornly refused to take a taxi, Lucy knew she’d be waiting for some time while he hobbled over.  The coolness of the marble step seeped through her threadbare sweatpants.  She reached into her mother’s purse and pulled out the matching cigarette case.  Some of its color had crumbled away.  Her hands trembled as she lit a cigarette.  Then, she began to pull at the hair on her forearm; the pain grounded her.

She looked over at the darkened row houses across the street.  Her entire life had happened on this narrow street in South Philadelphia.  She knew every neighbor at least by sight.  The houses were all the same-two-story red brick fronts, a bay window on the first floor, two windows on the second.  Tonight, they resembled yawning faces.  Some neighbors had opted to install aluminum siding over the brick front; others stuck artificial grass to their steps, perhaps in an attempt to bring some green to the lawnless neighborhood.  While Marge disapproved of these embellishments, her pet peeve was the adornment of the bay windows with Virgin Marys, or cat and dog figurines, or plastic flower arrangements against white vertical blinds.  The Pescitellis had sheer curtains and heavy, dark mustard-colored drapes.  A single crystal lamp lit the window.  On this night, many houses had seasonal cardboard decorations of ghosts, witches, and black cats taped to the windows.

Only a few trees were on the block.  In front of their house, at the base of their stoop, was a square of mismatched cement.  When her father lived in the house alone, before he’d met her mother, a tree grew there.  In the spring, it produced white blossoms.  Marge had it removed, fearing it would fall on the house or tangle its roots around the sewer pipe.

Lucy slipped off her black flat and stubbed out her cigarette in its soft foam sole, which resembled a waffle from wear.  Marge didn’t like butted cigarette marks on the sidewalk and Lucy didn’t want to reenter the house alone to retrieve an ashtray.  Through the vertical blinds, Lucy spied the purple-pink light of televisions in some of the houses.

The street was quiet.  She lit another cigarette and stared at the burning embers and the smoke drifting up.  Since it was Mischief Night, she thought she might see some kids making mischief.  At twenty-nine, she’d never seen it happen.  But every Halloween morning, without exception, she awoke to see soaped-up car windows and doorways and store fronts splattered with over-ripened tomatoes and raw eggs.

A couple approached; they weren’t from the neighborhood.

“Those’ll kill ya, ya know,” the woman commented as they walked by.

“Yeah,” Lucy said, “I know.”

She took a deep drag, then blew the smoke out in a steady stream.  So far the day had gone exactly as planned.  In the morning she had finished some minor household tasks before the visitors for the day arrived.  Fr. Reed heard Marge’s confession, gave her Holy Communion, and seemed to suspect nothing out of the ordinary in their behavior.  Jack Kelleher arrived in the afternoon.  Marge had respected and trusted Jack as a friend and a lawyer and because his aunt, Mrs. Garrity, who lived across the street, was her best friend.  Jack was in his late thirties and had gone away for law school but returned to the neighborhood.  Something graduates rarely did.  He was the opposite of her sister Anne who only returned for funerals.  Lucy lit another cigarette with the last one.  The folded index cards were damp from being clenched in her fist.  Despite this, the lines and dots Marge had embedded into the cards still felt like Braille.  When Marge first reviewed them with her, Lucy felt demeaned by their simplicity and repetitiveness, but they had proven a comfort this night, allowing her to focus on tasks, not the implications of her actions.  She unfolded them.  The next card gave instructions for calling Anne.  Lucy wasn’t to do this until Marge’s body had been taken from the house.  Marge didn’t want Anne coming over and asking questions while she was still there.  Lucy flipped to the last card.

Number eight: Destroy to-do list.

            The final item.

St. Peter’s loomed large over the squat houses.  Its muted bell rang out midnight.  Her cigarette had burned down to the filter; it singed her fingers.  For a moment she absorbed the pain.  Then she ground the butt into her shoe and shoved the cards into her pocket.  The sound of footfalls echoed down the deserted street and Dr. Cuchinnati’s elongated shadow appeared before he turned the corner.

 

Excerpted  from When Love Was Clean Underwear by  Susan  Barr-Toman  (www.susanbarrtoman.com), winner of the Many Voices Project’s Fiction Award 2007. The  novel  will  be  published  by  New  Rivers  Press  in October,  2009.

 

Susan  Barr-Toman  teaches  writing  at Temple University and  holds  an MFA in Writing  and Literature from the Bennington Writing Seminars.

The Origins of Sadness

[img_assist|nid=4793|title=bean pie: take the seed outside by Tamsen Wojtanowski © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=175|height=262]Seven a.m. on a Monday morning and my mother is the only one awake. She pads downstairs. In the kitchen, she raises the shades, letting in weak, gray daylight, then turns to find the coffee pot. It’s where it always is—on the counter, next to a bowl of clementines—but it is filled only with hot water. It sputters happily. (Mocks her, you know?)

    “Dammit!”

Her voice, though not a shout, rings sharply through the house. I hear it in my secluded room and wonder whether something is actually wrong.

    “Dammit, Jim, did you set the coffee maker last night?”

She knows he didn’t; if he had, there would be dark brew instead of clear water in the pot. But she calls upstairs to him anyway, just to make him admit his mistake aloud.

    And now my father enters this real-life play—thickset, goateed, brown-skinned, wavy-haired, kind. Unhappy. Lying on his back in bed upstairs, while his petite white wife berates him from a floor away.

    “Jim?” Tone curls up at the end—shrill and accusatory.

    “Oh, shit. I’m sorry.” He speaks without moving anything but his lips. Lies motionless on his back in bed. A turtle, a turtle. (God, but a loveable one. Can’t he see?)

    After another hour of lying still while his wife and son whirl around him, the turtle crawls out of bed. He languishes for an hour in a room adjacent to his bedroom before getting into the shower. The wife and son have left for work and school by the time the turtle emerges from the shower (fresh, but not refreshed; clean but never cleansed). He pulls on an expensive suit, plods downstairs, skips breakfast, clambers into an expensive car, and drives off to a job that is slowly killing him. His heart is a landfill.

My father’s childhood could be the source of his current problems. People are pottery, it seems to me—if there are mistakes made early on in the crafting, and the piece is put into a hot hot kiln and fired anyway, the flaws will be there forever. 

Depression is one such defect.

If you were to skim a written summary of my father’s life thus far, you might read, near the bottom, in the second to last paragraph or so, that he was diagnosed with clinical depression. But I would argue that the seed of an adult’s unhappiness is planted early on; it is a spore that lies dormant in the head. Whether in an instant or over a long period of time, the spore eventually blooms and a dark mold spreads over the soul, weighing it down, down, down. Rotting it through.

My grandmother – a mixed-race, fair-skinned, upper-middle class woman with coarse Indian hair, and hard black eyes – gave my father all the necessary tools for developing a healthy case of depression. She made little James Archibald Amar Pabarue feel as though he, in his natural state, was worth nothing. She anglicized him, sending him to Groton boarding school in Massachusetts where he was one of two black students in his class. (He wished he were one of the white kids; doesn’t identify with black Americans and never will.) She scolded him for his untidy hair. (He brushes it now obsessively.) She beat him with a worn leather belt because he was overweight. (Tough love, tough love.)

No one cried much on that sunny day when my grandmother was burned to cinders, sealed in a black box, and buried.

So little Jimmy went through his years with that devilish, black seed of depression festering in his mind. Self-conscious, self-doubting. (But his hair was always well-combed!)

    And I know when the turning point came.

    My father was a “freak” in high school—a cross between a “straight” and a “hippy”. His true passion was and still is rock and roll music. My mother first met him as the long-haired, blue-eyeshadowed, gown-wearing, pot-smoking lead singer of a band called Dingo. (What a ladies man, and so happy singing his tunes in a silky-smooth tenor).

    After college, he started playing with a new group, Duck Soup, and with them tried to break into the music industry. They wrote and wrote and practiced and practiced and played and played and toured and toured. They were poor—macaroni for most meals, you know—but they were happy and fiery and young.

    Two years of mild success and countless empty boxes of macaroni later, it became clear that the world was not ready for Duck Soup. My father had to write off his dream. (“Sorry, Dream, I can’t chase you anymore. Maybe we can meet up later?”). He traded his lyrics sheet for a law degree, his gown for a tailored suit, his eye shadow for aftershave, his band practice for board meetings. His pot for Prozac. His microphone for a fountain pen. The laughter and music for sighs.

    He sheared his long hair and brushed it down smooth, and deep in his head a little seed sprouted.

    My mother is too pragmatic to help.

“He should just fix it,” she says. She is sitting in an armchair in soft lamplight, knitting methodically. (Is she entangling herself in that web of yarn? Is it a cocoon? There are so many strings. How does she keep track of them all?). She takes a sip of tea.

    “I mean really. It’s not a disease. It’s all just a mental thing.”

She means well, she really does. She loves him for who he is, she really does. She just doesn’t know what to do, and she comes off as callous and insensitive.

    “Why can’t he just go get some friends instead of paying a shrink to talk with? I don’t have a shrink, and I’m perfectly fine.”

    I am too much of a teenager to help him.

    “Jay-Bo-Bay, Jay-Bo-Bay” he says in the morning, smiling wearily. He reaches out to tickle me. All I have to do is say Hey, Daddy, How are you this morning?, and sit down beside him. But I can’t.

    “Not right now,” I growl. “I’m not in the mood. Are you done with the bathroom?”

    (I wish I had been nicer as soon as the words leave my mouth)
    “Yeah, it’s yours,” he mumbles, and shuffles back to his dark room.

I don’t help, I don’t help, I don’t help. I could help. Could I help? Can I help?

    I’m pretty sure that I can’t help. It’s up to him. Or perhaps it’s up to some god to chip away the concrete blocks around his feet and the lead around his eyes—up to some hammer-wielding Thor or some squat Buddha scurrying around with a sharpened chisel in hand.

    But maybe it can’t be helped at all and he’ll forever walk in place in a muddy rut on the side of the road, gradually sinking deeper and deeper. Perhaps he’ll be sucked underground and only a patch of neatly-brushed hair will peek out. I think he wouldn’t even mind much. I think.

At two or three a.m., when most employed adults in their right minds are sleeping, my father sits sunken into the couch, letting the flickering blue lights of late-night television wash over him. His salt-and-pepper hair runs laterally in uniformed waves. He blinks from time to time.

He isn’t watching the screen; rather, he’s looking past the TV set, either silently grieving over his past, or inventing a bleak, bleak future for himself and staring coldly at it. There has never been a face so wholly empty.

Off goes the TV at some ridiculous hour. He rocks to his feet and trudges upstairs, the hardwood steps creaking as he goes.

He forgets to set the coffee.James Pabarue is a resident of Philadelphia. He dabbles in both creative non-fiction and in poetry.