Editor Assistant Editor Advisors Fiction Editor Associate Editors Art
Transcription
Editor Assistant Editor Advisors Fiction Editor Associate Editors Art
Fall 2012 Volume 6.2 Straylight Editor Dean Karpowicz Assistant Editor Fiction Editor Danielle Rose Danielle Rose Associate Editors David Haight Kim Gragen PJ Carter Art & Layout Maria DiMauro Kathryn Mendez Public Relations Tim Lawler Advisors Carey Watters Mark Bilbrey Poetry Editor Emily Harring Associate Editors Sarah Towle Dylan Falduto Website Hailey Foglio Laura Bauer Podcast Carl Rollmann Cover Artist Dan Barber Self Portrait Straylight Straylight is a journal of creative and visual arts, published biannually by the University of Wisconsin—Parkside and is supported by funding through the English Department, the College of Arts and Sciences, and SUFAC. Business and Editorial Address: Send all correspondence to Straylight, care of the English Department of the University of Wisconsin—Parkside, 900 Wood Road, Box 2000, Kenosha, WI 53141-2000. Literary Submissions: Straylight publishes fiction and poetry. All submissions should be addressed to the appropriate genre editor, and those sent via regular mail should include a self-addressed, stamped envelope for the return of the manuscript or correspondence. To submit online, visit straylightmag.com. Reporting time is about two months. Straylight must be notified of simultaneous submissions. Visual Art Submissions: Straylight accepts off-campus submissions through email only. Email work in jpeg format at 300dpi as an attachment to submissions@straylightmag.com. In the body of the email, include a brief bio and any information about previously published work. Indicate whether you would grant permission for your work to appear on Straylight’s web counterpart at the time of the print publication. Work will remain online at least until the next issue is published. Up to six pieces may be submitted. Simultaneous submissions will not be considered. Reporting time is about two months. Your work may need to be resized, but any alterations made will be sent to the artist for approval before publication. Subscriptions: Subscriptions to Straylight are currently $19/volume. Subscribers outside the U.S. must add $7. Sample issues are available for $10 each, and we currently have most back issues available. Web Access: Straylight is available online. Please visit our main page at straylightmag.com. Copyrights: We buy first North American serial rights. All rights revert back to the artist upon publication. © St ray li g h t 2012 Is s n : 1 9 4 6 - 3 8 6 3 CONTENTS FICTION The Things We Keep; the Things We Leave Behind Carried Away POETRY Some Ghost of a Dream of Long Ago A Palatable and Mutable History face Prideless FICTON Another Afternoon at the Paramount Café POETRY Yarrow The Dog of Hearing The Dog of Conversing father, son, holy ghost ART Portrait of Africa Gassed Time for a Nap! Degeneration Killer News Cheedeera Windy Chickens My Muse, My Love Cat Lilies Encounter with Sheryl Crow Japanese Skyfall Wonderment Self Portrait as a Warped Object Megaphone Crow V2 Rebranding Shane R. Collins 1 Elisha Wagman 10 Nick Knebel William Walsh Monica Scholle Steven Niemi 24 27 28 29 Lawrence Farrar 30 Kate Belew Mark Bilbrey Mark Bilbrey Jacob Donaldson 41 42 43 44 Rachel Bullis Jennifer Thompson Jose Miguel Amante Jessica Ange Jennifer Thompson Brittany Parshall Spencer Elizabeth Karczewski Samantha ("Mewtant") LaVassor Anna Frederiksen Robert Anderson Benjamin Friedrich Adrienne Mata Dan Barber Brittany Smith Tyler Hahn 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 CONTENTS FICTON A Double Homicide Crockett in the Pacific POETRY Correspondence Lament Haunting Arms Like Wires Larry Graham 60 Carl Hoffman 67 Amanda Thayer Amanda Thayer Lindsay Knapp Karen Barsamian 81 82 85 86 Fiction Shane R. Collins The Things We Keep; the Things We Leave Behind Over the past few weeks of riding, Ryan had made a habit of looking over his shoulder. He wasn’t sure what he expected to see. Occasionally he thought he heard something behind him. It was all in his head, of course, but sometimes he swore he could hear a low thrum like a diesel engine in high gear. When he craned his neck, he half expected to see an eighteen-wheeler mere feet from his back tire. Other times, the sound was more primal, more malevolent. Like the rattling growl of a grizzly bear. How fast could a grizzly run when chasing down a caribou? Ryan looked over his shoulder. The road flowed like a river of asphalt into the horizon, completely straight, an optical illusion with no ending or beginning or memory at all. All he could see were the tips of the Rocky Mountains poking above the horizon like clenched teeth. Ryan was unlike the handful of other long distance bicycle riders he had met along the way. He didn’t wear neon, polyester biking clothes. He wore jeans and t-shirts. He didn’t camp along the way to get closer to nature or to save money. He enjoyed soft hotel mattresses. He didn’t live off a steady supply of trail mix and Gatorade. He ate fast food and pizza and kept a thermos of black hotel coffee with him at all times. Ryan wore a small backpack where he kept a change of clothes, a few magazines, and a toothbrush. Besides a few pieces of clothing, everything Ryan had he Volume 6.2 1 2 had bought along the way. When his t-shirts got dirty, he threw them out and bought new ones at tourist shops. The only sentimental belonging he had was a crayon picture his daughter, Mallory, had made for him that he always kept in his right leg pocket. It showed two stick figures holding hands. One was tall and green and had brown hair. The other was short and pink and had yellow hair. There was a blue house behind them with a pair of bicycles, and at the bottom it said, “I Lov U Dady.” Mallory was five. Up ahead, Ryan saw a highway diner, and he pulled off into the parking lot. He sat at the bar and ordered coffee, toast, and a plateful of bacon. The best part about biking eight hours a day was that he didn’t have to worry about what he ate anymore. There was an old newspaper on the bar, and he pretended to read it while he bit into the overcooked bacon. It was a habit he had developed after eating at so many restaurants alone. Ryan thought that it made him look comfortable with his aloneness and discouraged conversation with waitresses and other nearby diners. He looked up from the paper for a moment, taking a sip of his coffee when he noticed a young blonde woman at a table in the corner of the diner. She was watching him, and when he saw her, she smiled and waved at him with her fingertips. She was in her early twenties, maybe five or six years younger than Ryan. She had a round face, and freckles covered her high cheekbones. When she waved at him, Ryan looked away, but not quickly enough. He paid the tab, added a generous tip, and left the diner. The door’s cowbell marking his departure. Ryan was unlocking his bike from the lamppost he had tethered it to when he heard someone behind him. “You were in Federal Heights last night, right?” He spun and saw the blonde behind him. Her Straylight Fiction teeth, too big for her smile, looked even brighter in the prairie sun. “You stayed at the Holiday Inn, didn’t you? I was there. Are you biking cross-country, too?” “Uh,” Ryan said. “My name’s Mandy.” She stuck out her hand. He looked down at his bike lock. He hadn’t gotten the chain off yet. If he had, he might have been able to smile, shake her hand, and then have jumped on his bike, making a clean getaway. But with the chain still locked, he didn’t see a socially graceful way to escape. So he grabbed her hand and said, “Ryan.” “How much farther are you planning to go today? Maybe we can ride together.” He wondered if she was smiling or if her face was just made like that — a perpetual expression of coy enjoyment. “Sure,” he said. Mandy brought her bicycle around while he finished unlocking his own. Ryan walked his bike over to the road, waited for a pickup truck tugging a horse trailer to pass, and then mounted the bike, riding east. The road ran straight, and they took turns taking the lead. When the shoulder widened, they rode side-byside, and Ryan was relieved that Mandy didn’t insist on talking while they rode. She was fit and attractive, and Ryan liked the way she looked in her biking shorts. The shoulder tapered off again, and Ryan took the lead. “Why do you keep doing that?” she called from behind. “What?” “Looking behind you like that. Lots of people bike down this road. The cars are used to it.” “Oh,” he said. “Take a right up ahead.” There was an intersection coming up, but he Volume 6.2 3 4 couldn’t see why they should turn. “Why?” “Turn!” she called. Ryan turned, and they rode in silence for about two miles when they came upon a deep gorge. It was narrow and so deep that he couldn’t tell if there was a bottom. The rock walls were the same rust as most of New Mexico and Arizona. “Isn’t it beautiful?” Mandy asked. Her mouth hung open, and she looked as if this were one of her life’s great experiences — as if this gorge would change her and the way she thought of life from now on. Ryan leaned over the bridge, gripping the metal guardrail. He saw a crack in the ground. He hoped it was a rhetorical question. “How long have you been riding?” she asked. “Three months.” “Really? Wow! I’ve only been riding a couple of weeks. I started on the Golden Gate Bridge and bee-lined it here. Where have you ridden?” Ryan shrugged but thought. He knew this wasn’t a rhetorical question. “I rode north through Oregon and Washington but stopped at the Canadian border because I didn’t have my passport. Then I rode past San Diego and had the same problem at the Mexican border. So I rode to Yosemite and headed east since then.” Ryan realized how crazy it was when he said it aloud. “Wow,” she said, sounding impressed rather than skeptical of his mental wellbeing. “Are you riding for a cause?” Ryan pushed a pebble across the bridge until it rolled over the edge and plummeted into the oblivion. “Not really.” He waited, listening for the sound of the pebble hitting the side of the gorge, or perhaps the bottom — if there was one. But a car drove by and he Straylight Fiction couldn’t hear anything except for the grinding of tires against concrete. “Are you?” “I’m riding for breast cancer awareness,” she said cheerily. “I get money from sponsors for every mile I ride. My aunt was diagnosed last summer.” Ryan nodded. He realized this was the longest conversation he’d had in months. “Are you getting tired?” Mandy took out a creased map from her bike’s saddlebag and laid it out on the side of the bridge. “There’s a Quality Inn only ten miles farther.” Ryan nodded and hopped back on his bike while Mandy folded the map. 2 As they neared the Quality Inn, Ryan saw it was the centerpiece in a town the size and shape of a postage stamp. Bright lights dotted the town’s confines, boasting gas stations, fast food joints, and pizza cafés. Ryan pulled up to a red light — the first light he had come across all day — and pointed to a brick building decorated with so many neon signs that it looked like a squat Christmas tree. “Let’s stop and get a beer,” he said. He was feeling good. It had been good to ride with someone else. The act of spending time with another person was like a vacation spot from his childhood that he had forgotten until returning by accident, standing at the intersection of the white-sand beach and the strip of tourist shops and lobster grills, fondly recalling summers long lost. “Beer?” she said as if the word was foreign and she was testing it out for the first time. “Yeah,” he said, and he pulled into the parking lot before she could say anything else. Volume 6.2 5 6 They got a booth, and he ordered a pitcher. “Do you like wheat beers?” “Umm,” she said, looking at the menu. She looked lost, as if she hadn’t understood the question. “So what do you do?” Ryan asked when the pitcher came. “When you aren’t riding cross-country.” “I just graduated from college in December,” she said. "I have enough savings to do this until the summer, and then I’ll get a job. You?” Ryan sipped the beer to buy some time. “I’m a website designer for a company in Silicon Valley,” he said. It wasn’t a complete lie. He had been one just a few months ago. “Wow,” Mandy said and sipped her beer. He wondered if she was buying time, too. The pizza came, and Ryan nodded and smiled as Mandy told him about college. She had gone to UNM and had a laundry list of ready-made stories about frathouse antics, final exam crises narrowly avoided, and an assistant field hockey coach who asked her out on dates and who she had gracefully turned down. Her stories were a pleasant distraction. Her style of storytelling was safe and comfortable: he knew when to laugh, when to frown, and when to say, “That was nice of you,” by gauging her facial expressions. She smiled even when telling her stories, but there were nuances to her smiles. Ryan felt guilty for having wanted to escape her earlier. The waitress came and laid their check facedown after they had finished the second pitcher and declined a third. Ryan grabbed the bill. “Oh, let me pay,” Mandy said. “No,” he said. “Please.” Ryan pulled out his wallet. But when he did so, Mallory’s crayon drawing fell from his pocket. Straylight Fiction “What’s this?” Mandy asked, reaching down to pick it up before he had even known he’d dropped it. “Wait, no,” he stammered, but it was too late. She had picked it up and unfolded it with the same care and precision as when she’d unfolded the map earlier. Grinning, she looked at the drawing. “Who made this?” Ryan looked at the check and pulled out a credit card. “My daughter made it for me.” “Aw,” Mandy shrieked. Had they been outside, astronauts might have seen her smile from the space station. “Where’s your daughter?” Ryan almost didn’t answer. He looked over his shoulder, silently cursing the waitress. Where had she gone? He looked back at Mandy. His eyes dropped. “She died.” Mandy’s smile faltered. “Oh.” Ryan nodded. He wondered what he should say next. He’d never talked about it before. Even when he had gone to the lawyer to collect the life insurance policy for Mallory and his wife — ex-wife really, they’d been separated for a few months — and even when he had said to the lawyer, “Why do I collect Kelly’s policy, we weren’t together,” and the lawyer had said, “Because she hadn’t gotten around to changing her will,” even then, when the lawyer asked, “Are you doing okay?” he had shrugged and ignored the question, collected the checks, and left. What was the social convention when a tired trucker killed your wife and daughter? Should he tell her about the funeral, or about all of the horrible sympathy cards he had endured or about the flower arrangements that he had watched with horror as they withered and died? Should he tell her about the home he and Kelly had bought when they were Mandy’s age, about what it was like to stand in the driveway of that house, wearing the same suit he Volume 6.2 7 8 had worn for weeks without dry-cleaning it, waiting for the realtor to drive up with some young couple, grinning from ear-to-ear and saying, “We love the bay windows!” or “Does the basement leak much in the spring?” and him smiling and cringing because he knew they wouldn’t buy the house? What about the perverse elation he had felt when the house finally had sold? Maybe he could tell her about how immediately afterward, he had cancelled the lease for his apartment, sold all of his furniture, DVDs, and golf clubs in a yard sale, and whatever hadn’t sold, he had illegally dumped in a green dumpster behind a Trader Joe’s? Maybe the most rational thing to say would be about how the only thing he had kept was the picture and the bicycle. And the only time he had cried had been when, at the yard sale, he had sold Mallory’s bicycle, which matched his own except for the training wheels, the bicycle that she had loved and had ridden with him every Sunday afternoon. “She died in a car accident,” he said. “I’m so sorry,” she said. Ryan nodded. It was the worst thing she could have said. At the Quality Inn, they learned that there was a basket weaving festival in town over the weekend, and every room was full except one. “We can split the cost and save money,” Mandy said. Mandy laid her saddlebags on the bed closest to the window and took out a t-shirt and clean shorts. Ryan flipped through channels while she took the first shower. He lay in bed that night, staring at the ceiling. The digital clock’s crimson digits ticked by far too slowly. He tossed and turned, and when the clock said it was midnight, he sat up and rubbed his eyes. He looked over at Mandy. Moonlight slipped in through the heavy shades and he could see that in sleep, Mandy did not smile. Her mouth Straylight Fiction was open. She looked pretty as she slept. Very quietly, Ryan grabbed his small backpack and slung it over his shoulder. His night vision could just barely see the lines in Mallory’s drawing. At night, he could not tell the difference between the colored crayons. Pink looked the same as green. In the drawing, the two people looked identical except that one was taller and one had long hair. Ryan smoothed out the drawing’s deep-set creases and placed it on the dresser drawers between the TV and the little booklet filled with delivery food menus. Ryan had lied when he told Mandy he was going cross-country. He wasn’t riding toward the east — he was riding away from the west. As his fingers left the wrinkled paper for the last time, he realized he had been holding his breath. He was too far gone to stop now. It was another habit. He looked back one last time at Mandy. He wondered if she would keep the drawing or if she would leave it for the maids. He hoped that she would keep it and remember him, but he couldn’t say why. It was difficult to ride alongside the highway at night. Once or twice, he nearly rode off the shoulder and into the ditch that followed the road. At this hour, there was little traffic. Most of the eighteen-wheelers kept to the interstate. In Ryan’s head, he heard a whirring sound. It reminded him of the thrushing sound of a boat’s inboard propeller. It terrified him. Every minute or two, he looked over his shoulder, scared so much that his hands gripped the handlebars, trembling, scared at the thought that he would look behind him and see Mandy pedaling after him. Volume 6.2 9 Elisha Wagman Carried Away The door opened and inside the elevator stood Mrs. Munch, a fat neighbor of indiscernible age thanks to plastic surgery. Her skin stretched so tightly over her cheekbones that Molly worried a kiss would tear it. She wore a tweed suit with glittery buttons and patent shoes. Next to her was a metal shopping cart, and like Mrs. Munch’s heels, it sparkled in the fluorescent light. Molly thought of her daughter Jackie, threeyears-old and stuffed in a snowsuit. Jackie giggled as she travelled the aisles of the grocery store in the shop cart. It was safer and cheaper than taking her to an amusement park. “Are you going to return it?” Molly said. She stepped inside and inhaled the scent of Mrs. Munch’s perfume, a noxious blend of lily and rose. “It was here when I got in,” said Mrs. Munch. “Then you won’t mind if I take it?” “What do you plan on doing with it?” Molly had expected a simple no. She studied the panel above the doorway where translucent numbers glowed a ghastly green. Five, four, three … “I’ll convert it into a planter,” she said. Mrs. Munch bristled. “That’s how it starts. And the next thing you know Mrs. Shwartz is drying towels over the railing.” “We all have dirty laundry,” Molly said. “Do it and I’ll report you to the condo board.” Molly grabbed the handle and spun the cart around forcing Mrs. Munch to jump sideways to avoid being hit by the front wheels. 10 Straylight Fiction “Report away,” Molly said as the elevator door slid open. “You don’t belong here,” said Mrs. Munch as she scurried from the elevator to the hallway. She’s right, Molly thought. I belong with people, not sheep. That’s how she saw the other tenants: a herd of conformers bleating vacuous complaints. There wasn’t an original amongst them. Molly knew she was different. It wasn’t just that she saw beauty in other people’s garbage or that she refused to replace things when they fell out of fashion. It was the way she viewed life, as if it was shards of glass best swallowed swiftly. That is, in fact, how she described it to her daughter when she first learned that Jackie drank to numb to the pain. “Life is disappointing,” she told her. “You better get used it." What she didn’t tell Jackie was that she harbored a secret hope that in some small way she could make the world a better place. She didn’t tell her because she knew how fake it sounded, like a platitude in a greeting card. The desire was authentic, but she had failed to act on it. Somehow, Molly knew the shopping cart could change that. She pushed the cart through the lobby, which was filled with overstuffed couches, plastic plants, and bad reproductions of art in gilded frames. Her neighbor Mr. Hinkle sat, as he did every day, in a wing chair by the window, reading a detective novel. He told Molly that he liked mysteries best because they made him think, something retirement from public service seldom required of him. He looked up from the book as she wheeled by, and half-waved. “Where’s the sale?” “Wish I could take it all back,” Molly said. She pushed the cart outside and onto the sidewalk. She struggled at first, forcing the wheels past cracks in the cement. These Volume 6.2 11 weren’t the well washed aisles of the grocery where the cart normally rolled. No, it was the pedestrian strip of the middle class, where condos flanked fractured sidewalks that nobody used. Every building on the street was constructed from brown brick and had identical rectangular windows. When she bought the apartment, she thought the street seemed methodical and neat. Now it felt callous. Molly seldom questioned Toronto’s reputation for being as clean and cold as its skyscrapers. She had grown up in a worn pocket of the city, in a four-story apartment building nestled between tall maple trees. She remembered games of war fought on battlefields of gravel and the tartness of the lemonade her mother mixed in the tiny kitchen that overlooked the beltway, an abandoned railroad track where joggers sprinted and dogs meandered. She looked skyward, her view obstructed by overhanging balconies. Under the umbrella of darkness, she felt the city seep through her skin, an ice cube melting in the inferno. Wring motivation from melancholy. That’s what her mother had said so often it was tattooed in her mind. At the end of the next block, she paused to inspect a desk dumped by the side of the road. Her fingertips, light as feathers, traced the grain in the wood. A few nicks and one gouge. She could save it. Her husband, David, had scratched a desk she’d bought at Goodwill and restored in the quiet of their backyard. While he grilled pork chops and red peppers, she stripped paint from the desk’s limbs. They worked in compatible silence, each pausing to sip the chardonnay David had bought during a weekend excursion they’d taken to Niagara. Seven months later, David used the edge of his car 12 Straylight Fiction key to scratch the word enough into the top of the desk. “We can’t grieve forever,” he said. Molly pushed David away and pressed herself against the desk to shield it from further harm. She couldn’t speak because whatever language she possessed drowned in a whirlpool of rage. She hated him, not just for destroying the desk but for what they had become, two specks hurled through darkness. David sought the light, while she knew that none existed. The following day, she moved out. She flipped the desk upside down, lifted it by the legs, and put it in the cart. She pushed onward, past the pharmacy, the bank, and the bagel shop. When she stopped at a red light, she noticed a woman in a yellow sports car staring at her. The woman looked vaguely familiar but it was hard to be certain through the slightly tinted windows. She took a step toward the car as the window slid down, and Pamela Pinsky, her daughter’s friend, waved from the driver’s seat. “I meant to call,” Pamela said. Molly’s hand flapped like a fly swatter. “I’m fine.” Pamela’s gaze shifted from Molly to the shopping cart. “Collecting for the church bazaar?” “Keeping busy,” said Molly. “I can take you home,” Paula said. “The desk will fit in my trunk.” “Wouldn’t want to trouble you. Besides, I need to return the cart.” The truck idling behind Pamela’s car honked. “You better go.” Her lips parted and for a second, Pamela looked as though she would speak. Instead her lips stretched into a smile. She waved twice, the way a nervous child bids her parents farewell on the first day of kindergarten. Molly blinked and Pamela was gone. Just like Jackie. Volume 6.2 13 The last visit with her daughter had gone badly. She had found a set of china at Value Village, the plates and bowls adorned with irises, and they reminded her of Jackie. She bought the set despite cracks in the saucers and chips in the cups. She took the dishes home and washed them by hand before wrapping each piece in old linen and packing the set in a box. She tied a bow with red ribbon and taped it to the top. On the back of a used envelope she wrote her daughter’s name in big, bold letters and leaned it against the box. She spent the remainder of the afternoon preparing dinner. She put pot roast in the slow cooker, peeled potatoes, and shucked peas. She hated everything about peas, their putrid color, their mushy center, their sugary taste, but Jackie loved them so she pretended to like them just as she pretended to enjoy her daughter’s turbulent visits. Jackie arrived thirty minutes late, smelling like scotch. “You could have called. The roast is wrecked,” Molly said as she took Jackie’s coat and hung it in the closet. “We can order pizza,” Jackie said. She kicked off her shoes and one landed next to the cat crouched in the corner. The cat hissed and swiped the shoe with a claw. “Cut it out, Chloe. I’m not in the mood.” “You’ve been drinking,” said Molly, her hands on her hips. “I’ll call your sponsor.” “She’s in rehab.” Jackie sat on the sofa, the one Molly had recovered in blue velvet, and put her feet on the trunk that served as a coffee table. “Then we’ll call someone else.” “I already called my therapist. He said I should sober up here and go home tomorrow.” “You hungry? The peas and potatoes are okay.” 14 Straylight Fiction “I just want to sleep,” Jackie said. Molly grabbed an afghan from the closet and draped the blanket over her daughter. “Call me if you need anything,” she said switching off the light. The next morning, Jackie was gone and so was the box. 2 Molly steered the cart along the sidewalk, as the contents rattled against metal with each step. The clatter annoyed her almost as much as the spasms in her stomach. She needed food. There was a diner up the street, one of the few remaining greasy spoons in the city that served homemade soup and hot turkey sandwiches. She headed toward the restaurant, grateful that the curbs sloped at the crosswalk. She wondered how many accidents people in wheelchairs had to endure before the government had agreed to fund the mini cement ramps. Thick, cumulous clouds blocked the sun. Molly untied the sweatshirt that hung from her waist and slipped into it. She shoved the cart over a clutter of crushed soda cans and cursed as one of them snagged a wheel of the cart. She wrestled the wheel free and pushed the cart forward but the injured wheel dragged instead of rolled. Molly grabbed the cart from the rear and towed it the final few feet to the diner. Nestled next to a wall, the restaurant’s awning would protect it from rain. The clouds overhead had darkened to indigo. They reminded her of Picasso’s blue period, the one critics say marked his descent into depression. His painting La Vie had troubled her since she had first seen it during the honeymoon she and David had taken in Malaga. She felt the anguish of the young couple as their baby was taken from them and she cried quietly until David insisted they Volume 6.2 15 leave. He didn’t appreciate the painting or her public display of emotion. She should have realized then that the marriage was doomed. No point in dwelling on mistakes, Molly thought as she entered the diner. What’s done is done. Bright bulbs of light blurred her vision, and she gripped the counter to steady herself. “Can I help you?” a waitress said. “I’d like a table,” said Molly. “Preferably a booth.” Her legs ached, and she wanted to rest them awhile. The waitress’s smile was as phony as her blondefrom-a-box hair. “We’re a little full right now,” she said. Molly scanned the room. Yes, the restaurant was busy but it wasn’t full. She could see a vacant booth in the back near the staircase leading to the bathroom. “I’ll take that one,” she said pointing to the empty booth. “It’s not clean,” the waitress said. Molly was about to tell her to clear it when Mrs. Noble, a widow who lived in her building, approached. Molly had seen her sitting at a booth in the front, sipping tomato juice but hadn’t waved. The woman talked too much for Molly’s taste. “Why don’t you join me,” Mrs. Noble said. “We can catch up.” She didn’t want to, but the waitress wasn’t making any effort to reset the booth, and she was tired. So tired in fact that she felt she might faint. “That’s very kind of you,” Molly said. “At least someone around here has manners.” She and Mrs. Noble slid into the booth. Molly stretched her right leg but didn’t rest it on the bench. She was a guest and would act appropriately even if it pained her. The menu the waitress had tossed on the table 16 Straylight Fiction was difficult to read. Each letter was shadowed by a twin and vibrated on the page. She held the menu away from her, and then brought it closer. “Use mine, dear,” Mrs. Noble said handing her a pair of half-readers speckled in rhinestones. Molly searched the menu for a soup and sandwich combo but couldn’t find one. “When did they stop serving soup?” Mrs. Noble patted Molly’s hand. “Why don’t you have something more substantial?” She couldn’t recall having a proper meal since Jackie ruined the pot roast. Pushing the cart had made her ravenous. She ordered the chicken souvlaki platter and a small salad. “It’s my treat,” Mrs. Noble said. Her lipstick had bled and pooled a little in the corners of her mouth and when she smiled, as she did then, she reminded Molly of a clown. “I can pay for it myself,” Molly said. She unzipped her purse and dug inside for her wallet. Tucked in the billfold were two crumpled dollar bills. She sighed. What she needed was a decent meal and some rest. She heard a crack of thunder outside and hoped the rain would pass quickly so she could return the cart and go home. “Thank you,” she said. “I’m sorry to hear about Jackie,” said Mrs. Noble. “Must be very hard on you.” Molly blushed. She knew the walls of her apartment were thin but she hadn’t realized neighbors could eavesdrop. She wondered how much they had heard. Mrs. Noble’s rutted brow told Molly they knew everything. “Nothing I can’t handle,” Molly said, her fingers toying with the cap of a salt shaker. “Still, it couldn’t have been easy.” Volume 6.2 17 “What is?” she said. Mrs. Noble nodded, and they didn’t speak again until they finished lunch. Molly used a napkin to wipe the grease from her lips and said, “I need to wash up.” She walked across the diner towards the staircase that led to the restrooms. A woman and child sat in the booth Molly had been refused. The little girl had long, brown locks that fell in tight curls around her shoulders, and when she smiled at her mother, she revealed two missing front teeth. “That woman is funny looking,” the girl said. She pointed at Molly who could see a half-moon of fuchsia painted on the girl’s fingernail. “Ssh,” the woman hissed and then looked up at Molly and said, “Sorry.” Molly shrugged her shoulders and smiled. Jackie had said worse when she was a child and she remembered how embarrassed it had made her feel. “Kids say the craziest things,” Molly said. “It can’t be helped.” Going down the stairs proved painful, and by the time Molly reached the washroom and sat on the toilet her knees throbbed. She detested how people popped aspirin for every tiny ache and pain, but today she would have gladly chugged an entire bottle. She remained in the stall a long time, giving her knees a chance to rest. When the pain dulled a little she limped to the sink. As she scrubbed her hands with soap, she stared at her reflection in the mirror; tendrils of hair had escaped from a ponytail and exhaustion had cast a crimson web in the whites of her eyes. The child was right. She did look odd, like a modern Medusa. “You all right?” Mrs. Noble’s bulky frame filled the entrance of the restroom. Molly dried her hands with a paper towel and used the corner of the crumpled sheet to wipe sweat stains from her neck. “Fine, thank you.” She tossed the towel in 18 Straylight Fiction the trash and pushed past the woman to the hallway. “Why don’t you come home with me?” Mrs. Noble said. “Thanks,” said Molly. “But I’ve got to take the cart back.” She and Mrs. Noble climbed the stairs single file. Molly led the way. At the top, she saw that a young couple sat at their table. The woman was the sort Molly detested, a breathing billboard of brand names. She crossed the room and pounded her fist on the table. Water flooded Formica. The woman slid closer to her husband who mopped up the spilled water with paper napkins. He yelled, “We need some help here,” and the waitress, the one who had denied Molly the table, appeared. “These people stole our table,” Molly said. “We’re finished,” said Mrs. Noble. “Let them have it.” “Get her out of here,” the waitress said. “Before I toss her myself.” Mrs. Noble tugged on the sleeve of Molly’s sweatshirt. “Let’s go.” Molly jerked her arm from Mrs. Noble’s grasp. “You’re a bunch of cowards. And you,” she said, stabbing the air between herself and the waitress with a finger, “are a bully.” “I’m counting to three,” the waitress said. “Chickens!” Molly said. “Just waiting to be slaughtered.” Mrs. Noble pulled Molly away from the booth and steered her outside, into the rain. “You can’t keep doing this,” Mrs. Noble said. “They’ll lock you up.” “It’s a free country,” said Molly as she walked towards the cart. Mrs. Noble shook her head sadly and walked in the opposite direction towards the parking lot. She stopped and turned when she heard Molly scream. “What’s wrong?” she said. When Molly didn’t Volume 6.2 19 respond she ran towards her. “Are you hurt?” Molly pointed at the cart. Rust flaked from every spine, and grime coated the handle. Warped wooden legs jutted from the cart at odd angles. They reminded Molly of dismembered limbs. “No one will want it now,” Molly said. “Let me take you home,” said Mrs. Noble. She hadn’t travelled all those miles to abandon the cart. “Will it fit in your car?” Molly said. Mrs. Noble’s mouth opened but only a sigh of steam escaped. She shook her head no. “What if we unscrew the wheels?” Mrs. Noble turned and walked towards the parking lot. The rain fell heavy now and she used the arm of her coat to shield her head. Molly chased after her. “We could tie it to the roof.” “I can’t help you,” said Mrs. Noble as she unlocked the car door and climbed inside. The engine revved, and seconds later the car peeled out of the parking lot. Molly knew she didn’t have the strength to drag the cart home. That’s when she had the idea to call David. She checked the corner for a phone booth but didn’t find one. She remembered one being near the bank but when she walked there all she found was a beaten up newspaper box. She halted a woman who carried a box of doughnuts in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other, and demanded to know the location of the nearest phone booth. “Lady, they’re as dead as Jesus on Good Friday,” the woman said. “You gotta get a cellphone.” Jackie had urged her to get a mobile phone, had even threatened to buy her one for Mother’s Day, and Molly had laughed. She should have accepted Jackie’s offer. If she had, she would be talking to David and not searching for a phone in the rain. She walked back to the 20 Straylight Fiction cart and stood next to it under the awning and cursed her poor judgment. A man exited the diner and Molly heard him talking to someone even though he was alone. She couldn’t see a phone but guessed he wore one of those fancy do-dads in his ear that allowed him to communicate wirelessly. She grabbed the tail of the man’s coat as he passed. “I don’t have any change,” said the man. He yanked his coat from her grip and dusted it with his hand. “I need to use the phone,” Molly said. “It’s an emergency.” “Hold on a sec,” the man said and Molly assumed the command was meant for the person he had been speaking with before she interrupted him. He stared at Molly in her soaked suit and then at the broken cart. “I’m not giving you my phone.” “You can dial for me,” Molly said. “Please. I need help.” She gave the man David’s number and hoped he was home. “She says she’s your wife,” the man said. Molly mouthed ex and he nodded. “Your ex-wife, I mean. She needs you to come get her.” The man rolled his eyes and Molly guessed he was being treated to one of David’s long lectures. She smiled and stroked his arm. He brushed her hand away and said, “So, are you coming or not?” Molly tried thanking the man, but he stormed off before she could speak. She leaned against the cart and waited for David to arrive. She didn’t recognize the Volkswagen as it pulled to the curb and honked. The last time she saw David’s car it had been black, with a small dent in the rear fender. This one was white and a convertible. He got out of the car and ran toward her. She noticed how much he had aged since the last time they saw one another. Deep fissures sliced his forehead and his skin sagged as if someone had Volume 6.2 21 stretched it from his face and it failed to snap back. “I’ve been so worried,” David said, hugging her. “Why didn’t you call me?” “I did.” “Before this,” he said. “I’ve looked everywhere for you.” The idea amused her. David had barely bothered with her while married and now that they were separated he was eager to seek her out. “Well I’m here,” she said. “And so is the cart.” David looked over Molly’s shoulder at the buggy brimming with junk and flinched. “This is what you’ve been doing?" he said. “I’ve been tearing my hair out trying to figure out what happened to you.” “I need to get the cart home,” Molly said. He tilted his head slightly to the left, the way he did when Jackie had a fever he feared wouldn’t break. “I need to get you to a hospital.” “There’s nothing wrong with me that a shower won’t cure. The cart, however, is another story.” He wriggled out of his coat and wrapped it around Molly’s shoulders. She could smell his cologne on the collar, a blend of cedar and sea salt. “First the hospital,” he said, pulling her toward the car. She wrestled free, ran to the cart, and grabbed the handle. She dragged the cart a foot before David stopped her. A crowd of people watched through the diner windows while the waitress stood in the doorway smoking a cigarette. “Want me to call the cops?” she said. “I got it covered,” David said. To Molly he whispered, “Please don’t make this worse than it is.” She didn’t care that she was embarrassing him. In fact, a small part of her enjoyed seeing him suffer. But she needed his help and antagonizing him was a guaranteed way to ensure the opposite. “I’ll go if you agree to take the cart," Molly said. 22 Straylight Fiction “Where?” “Tabernus. You have to convince them to take it back.” “They’re closed.” “Then promise you’ll take it tomorrow.” “Closed,” David said. “No longer in business.” The news consumed the little resolve Molly had left and she sat on the ground. Her legs trembled, and her head hurt. She felt David’s hand on her shoulder, firm and warm. “I’m calling an ambulance,” he said. She laid back and looked at the sky, a black pool illuminated by a string of sparkling lights. “Wouldn’t it be nice if Jackie were up there?” she said. “You know I don’t believe in that stuff,” he said. “How long has it been?” “Seven months, twenty-two days.” “Sometimes,” Molly said, “it feels like hours.” Volume 6.2 23 Nick Knebel Some Ghost of a Dream of Long Ago i thought / but was too quick / the fool's mind / a lame restart / and dropping / the brick / and lands like lead / a short stop / a sudden end and forc'd / into moonlight / we saw / too bright / the eyes dead of / the tiger in the / stream / ing down into light / the sun's / on another day / another time drea/reali/ms/ty and wash'd / away / went / cargo hold / that they paid 600 dollars a month for / live a life / for another / why would you / question / everything / and bestow / that life for the crows / we begin // we begin / for the crows / that life / and bestow / everything / question / why would you / for another, live a life / that they paid 600 dollars a month for / cargo hold / that went away / and wash'd the scene into the darkness / but no one ever thought / to watch the actors say / their lines / or to listen / to the play 24 Straylight Poetry and papercuts as punishment / a thousand at a time / the world slept / with eyes forc’d closed / just looking for a sign stop. / don't / forward / now / and into / the waves / fire engulfs the acrobat / but the trick is the same / whether she is ten thousand feet in the sky / or if the rope / is just an inch high i don't even know the truth / that it was fine / and all at once the world / changed its mind / and everything you thought you knew / dying, spent, // through i like sleep / more than most / because it separates / the man / from host / and you talk about / connecting / when all we want is to leave / wrapped in piano strings / and words / upon the sheets / the book and sleep / for seventy six hours / just a second more / please don't knock too loudly / or better yet at all / upon what looks like / the old wooden door better / you think / and death walks / to someone you once knew / in the world where time / splits at every slight / turn and decision / that might / make you the one / of a hundred thousand billion versions / of yourself / that you are // and the stranger's family / weeps in black / on a too hot day in june / too hot / for funerals / and songs of the dead / weeping / are those their voices / whispering laments / as you sit outside the rest / while a bird retreats / before, better / she thought / now / into the nest Volume 6.2 25 things they said / when you're tired / of the blinds / not being able to close / off the living / from the world outside / your head / tanks down, and away / and someone gets locked up / for what they call help / for twenty eight days / but you know better / that after people measure the time with their yardsticks / and thirty have come to pass / its just the actor’s face / that lasts i / didn't even wonder / why / wonder again / too much / the windows / shriek in the rain / inviting it inside / and making its acquaintance / they nod their heads / bowing / tossed aside // a piece of paper / faded brown / in time / splits itself in half / one jumps out the window / the other flies around the room / devoid of anything but shadows / and tries to find / a light / but it went out / two years ago / the rain started / no shadows in the night a bustling winter night / tried to pay attention / but attention wouldn't take / my money / he said no / when I tried to pay / instead / he brought his friends / grief and happiness / and fighting / making ends / of beginnings from times ago / and when it was over / cold blood / dripping on the snow 26 Straylight Poetry William Walsh A Palatable and Mutable History What I remember of Canada is a sandbox, a beach pail, a crying girl holding a large plastic ball. An old man in a plaid button-down shirt at the Mohawk Apartments, who might have been the maintenance guy, took the pail from me and gave it to her. The next day in the sandbox, she had a stick which at some point for some unknown reason she rammed in my mouth, knocking out my front teeth. Everything dulled to a black and white electrical fog of hurt, including the blood on my t-shirt. That was my introduction to women, a tough journey ever since, moving from darkness to light and back to the seams of shadows where life is rolled up in a rear pocket and the moon is the taste of a woman’s neck glazed with Tequila. Sometimes the barriers in communication are greater than a lack of vocabulary, where life’s familiar path toward redemption is a dumb numbness of insight as we deny what was or simply attempt to revise a new outcome. Volume 6.2 27 Monica Scholle face such a sad face in a clear box for display the new start, entertainment lines. wash your brain live to feed off the daydreamers peer into eyes of innocence laugh at the light sound of a pure tear drop such a pretty face, they constructed of that blind girl only sees her reflection. a size too small old years sink their eyes change. new sensations dream broken beauty underneath look. its fright 28 Straylight Poetry Steven Niemi Prideless He told Noah to build an ark. He offered me supper. Take my sins away, So I can make more. A walking, talking dream Cracks in the riverbed lead the scorpion to the burning lion. In his arms she sleeps. How can he be a lion When he’s lost his teeth? But his mane is full The pinch stings. But. The venom is cool and A prideless lion still has pride. He paws the scorpion, into his gums. Open eyes, full mouth, short hair. In his arms The smell of noise. But he’s still good She says. Water park. Delivery. proof. enough. home. her. enough. Maybe that’s why he went to His house with for her. Volume 6.2 29 Lawrence Farrar Another Afternoon at the Paramount Café Hector Ewert peered through clear plastic framed glasses into the street below his second floor efficiency. He sighed; nothing had changed. It was a day like every other day. He did not know what other kind of day he expected it to be. Still, he felt disappointed. Some inchoate, undefined longing clutched at him. He tried to wish the feeling away. But he failed. He checked his watch (two o'clock in the afternoon) then stepped into his tiny bathroom, where he postured in front of a mirror. Hector sighed again. Random gray hairs and, worse yet, splotches of gray intruded into his once solidly ash blond crew cut. Forty and, as he described it, a bit more, Hector was a self-effacing, selfcontained man. Nonetheless, vanity exercised its private, attention-grabbing demands. Perhaps one of those hair products for men they advertised on television … Hector picked up a neatly folded newspaper, tucked it under his arm, and went out in the hall. He locked the door behind him, jiggling the handle — just to be sure. You could never be too careful. Then, his left hand sliding along the worn smooth banister, he negotiated his way down the dimly lit stairway, stepped out in the street, and set off on the two block walk to the Paramount Café. It had become a Saturday afternoon ritual — coffee and perhaps a piece of pie. It had also become the high point of his week, and nervous anticipation gripped him, as it always did. Hector strode purposefully along. It was an 30 Straylight Fiction unremarkable day, like every other unremarkable day — neither hot nor cold; the air comfortably warm, neither humid nor dry; the sky neither blue nor gray. Somewhat pleasant. Yes. He supposed it could be considered a pleasant day, but one quite ordinary. Like the day, Hector, too, seemed unremarkable, a bit round-shouldered (too many years hunched over a drafting table), a man of middling height and middling build. He had put on a dark blue open neck shirt, crisply laundered; tan gabardine trousers, sharply pressed; and sensible brown shoes, diligently polished. He exuded a kind of shabby gentility. Neither in the city nor out of it, Hector’s street featured nondescript shops, restaurants, and two or three story apartment buildings. It was that hodgepodge kind of street where you could buy a used book, grab a quick meal, repair a vacuum cleaner, pick up a bouquet of roses, get your nails done, select a child’s toy, or, if so inclined, have your fortune told. The neighborhood had seen its better days. The Olde English street signs and decorative lamp poles once installed by civic minded businessmen had fallen into disrepair; mosaics of cracked concrete decorated the sidewalks; and here and there For Lease signs on empty shelves leaned against dusty windows. In any number of places, a mason’s trowel or a painter’s brush could surely have been put to good use. A bus rumbled by spewing fumes and demanding right of way from a delivery truck with flashing lights. It was, Hector thought, a thoroughly ordinary place, like thousands of other ordinary places. He passed a pair of drivers playing backgammon on the trunk of a taxi, disregarded the paper cup extended toward him by a homeless man, and sidestepped an elderly woman creeping along behind her walker. He’d encountered all of them before in the course of this Volume 6.2 31 32 weekly passage to the Paramount Café. The rather grandly named Paramount Café was, in fact, an ordinary café, like every other ordinary café. It occupied the ground floor of a two story building, the second floor given over to apartments. The café blended nicely into the undistinguished homogeneity of the structures that were its neighbors. Its gray stucco exterior was unremarkable, save for a few clinging strands of exhausted ivy and for its sidewalk windows that invited passersby to gaze directly in at customers wolfing down their sandwiches and beer. In warm weather, the proprietor cranked down an awning and crammed three or four tables outside on the sidewalk, forcing pedestrians to pick their way through the diners or to step into the street to get round them. Hector paused on the sidewalk and, as if by way of confirmation, contemplated the neon sign in the window. Open, it said. It was a pinkish red sign. Open, it said. Of course, he already knew the café was open, but the lighted sign welcomed him, marked the café as a place where he would be accepted, where he could drink coffee at his ease, read his paper undisturbed. A regular customer, after all, he claimed the rights and privileges pertaining thereto. He could pass time. He could find refuge from the everyday, oppressive, and — truth be told — lonely life he led. Not only did the place provide sanctuary. Above all, Norma Driscoll, a waitress, worked in the Paramount Café. In Hector’s world of ordinariness, he considered her anything but ordinary. She was, alas, much too young for him, perhaps fifteen years too young. He searched for a proper description. Perky? Almost pretty? No. He decided she was actually pretty. He thought of her shortcropped black hair, her lustrous white skin, and her eyes that seemed to have seen it all — and been made more Straylight Fiction knowing by the experience. She stirred in him a faint hope, a slim hope, but one he knew in his heart to be delusional. Fifteen years too young and likely wooed by a veritable cavalcade of suitors. Still, when he thought of her, feelings long dormant touched him. Hector could dream. Heart thumping with excitement (his doctor would disapprove), Hector pushed through one of the long handled double doors, crossed to the counter, and climbed onto a stool. The owner and cook, Jack Bligh, a large man, bull-necked and shaven headed, grinned at him and pointed at a printed sign hung above the cash register. In God We Trust; All Others Pay Cash. It was their private joke. Hector always paid — and he always paid cash. Although the noontime crowd had cleared out, the air remained ripe with cooking smells — whiffs of garlicladen spaghetti, lingering traces of bacon, and touches of some savory soup. Hector liked the smells; he liked the old movie posters, the incongruous paper lanterns, the red and yellow flowers in little bottles decorating the tables. He thought of the other patrons as comrades; he knew some by name, most by face. True, people rarely spoke to him, but they sometimes greeted him with a welcoming smile, an upraised hand, a friendly nod. The atmosphere in the place, familiar and ordinary, reassured him. As Hector put down his newspaper, the heel of his hand came to rest on a sticky spot — perhaps jam, perhaps syrup. It smudged and tore his paper. About to call it to Norma’s attention, he had second thoughts. He did not want to begin his afternoon sojourn with what she might take to be a complaint, a criticism. On the other hand, she might appreciate being made aware of the condition. What to do? He decided to say nothing, at Volume 6.2 33 34 least not initially. Perhaps he would mention it later. He sat silent as a Trappist monk. “What’ll it be today?” Norma asked. “The usual?” The usual. Confirmation that she remembered him, that he occupied a niche, however modest, somewhere in her mind. He felt reassured — the usual. “Yes, please.” He lifted his eyes and smiled. He ordinarily said nothing more. But now, emboldened, he added, “How are you today?” “So so. How about yourself?” Her response, he concluded, revealed her interest in his well-being. What a wonderful feeling. “Fine. I’m fine, thank you.” Perhaps he could mention his stiff neck. No, that might seem too intimate, too forward. But surely it would not be untoward to reiterate that he felt fine. “I’m just fine,” he said. “That’s good. I’ll be right back.” He watched her take several steps to the large silver urn located behind the counter. She moved with what struck him as feline grace. Comely, perhaps that was the word he’d been searching for. She merited being described as comely and, he thought, shapely. Her beige waitressing dress and white apron simply failed to do her justice. Simply failed. “Here’s your coffee, honey,” she said. She placed the cup and saucer in front of him. Why had she included the little container of cream? Didn’t she remember he didn’t use cream? Fortunately, the fact she called him honey compensated for this small slight. Anyone knew honey was a term of affection. “It’s a pleasant day outside. Quite nice,” Hector said. He wanted to say something more interesting, but nothing came to him. “Yeah. I guess. Doesn’t look real sunny though.” He detected a slight nasal quality in her voice. It’s barely Straylight Fiction noticeable, he told himself. Norma moved down the counter to tend to an elderly couple who’d come in for a late lunch. The old folks smiled, and Norma laughed. What could be so funny? She disappeared into the kitchen, and Hector picked up his paper. He sipped his coffee and worked his way through the international news. When two young men from the power company slid into a booth, Norma reappeared to take their orders. Again, Hector could not hear what they said, but Norma dismissed the two with a wave of the hand while they laughed convulsively. Hector hoped they hadn’t been rude. Some of these young fellows treated waitresses with a lack of respect. His mug nearly empty, Hector signaled for a refill. “How you doing over here?” Norma asked when she arrived with the glass pot. Attentive to his needs. No doubt about it. “Fine. Just fine.” “Just let me know if I can get you anything else. How about a piece of pecan pie?” “Maybe later. Oh, by the way, there’s something spilled here on the counter.” “Be right back.” She went off to the sink and fetched a wet cloth. “Sorry about that,” she said on her return. He wished she didn’t chew gum, but it was a habit easily forgiven. He watched her hands as she wiped away the spill. Red with work, nonetheless, her fingers showed themselves to be slender, sensitive-looking. Was he the only one who’d noticed? He nursed along the second cup of coffee. While so engaged, he removed a pencil from his plastic protected shirt pocket and tried his hand at the paper’s crossword puzzle. Volume 6.2 35 36 “You look ready for that piece of pie. How about it?” she asked. “Yes, please. But do you have apple?” “Sure thing. How about a scoop of ice cream with that?” Something extra; how thoughtful. “That would be good.” She returned and said, “Pie á la mode. Here you go.” He now decided her small features lent her a kind of sweet faced, Kewpie look. But her eyes seemed disinterested. He suspected she likely found him boring as gray paint in a closet. “Did you hear about the two antennas that met on a roof, fell in love and got married?” she asked. His reverie interrupted, Hector looked puzzled. “I’m afraid, I don’t … ” “The ceremony wasn’t much, but the reception was great.” Hector smiled. “Oh, I see the reception was … antennas.” She was joking with him. She’d never done that before. His elation was brief. Norma walked away to give the old couple their check. This time he caught snippets of their conversation. He heard her say, “Did you hear about the two antennas that … ” She was sharing the same joke with others. Hardly inappropriate, yet he felt a little disheartened, a little envious. It rendered the earlier sharing less special. A third cup of coffee seemed like something of a stretch. He glanced at his watch. He’d been in the Paramount Café for the better part of an hour. Certainly no one pressed him to leave. Yet, he felt awkward — just sitting there. Perhaps one more cup. “Mind if I look at your paper for a minute? I’d like to check the movie listings.” Oh goodness; she had returned. Straylight Fiction “Please. Here.” He scooped up the entertainment section and handed it to her. She stood behind the counter, holding the open paper in two hands. “Do you ever go to the movies?” she asked from behind the paper. “Not often, I’m afraid.” “Here it is. There’s a show at the Rialto I’ve been dying to see. Eight o’clock.” Hector said nothing. His mind whirled. Was she suggesting they go together? Impossible. He dismissed the notion as deluded. “I don’t like to go alone, though. Know what I mean?” No. He didn’t know what she meant. Not really. Perhaps it was an invitation. What to do? What to do? “Oops. Customer. Thanks.” With that she handed back the paper and whisked away to tend a man and little boy wearing baseball caps. Were they going to or coming from the game? It didn’t matter. Norma’s remark about the movie showing had captured his full attention. Hector laid the paper out on the counter and ostentatiously scrutinized the listings. His stomach knotted. Should he ask her? Could he ask her? She might think him presumptuous, even fresh. Did people still say fresh? Probably not. Almost anything seemed to go these days. Still … He raised his eyes and saw her bringing him the check. “Don’t feel rushed. Take your time,” she said. Perhaps delivering the bill without being asked to do so simply provided an excuse for her to talk to him. She wanted him to stay. That must be it. She looked at her own watch. “I get off at seventhirty. Just time to make it.” Was she merely thinking aloud? Or had she transmitted yet another signal? “I was wondering if perhaps you would … ” He Volume 6.2 37 38 foundered on the shoals of indecision. “I was wondering if perhaps you … would be good enough to bring me some more coffee.” His resolution failed, the magic carpet of anticipation transformed into an elevator hurtling straight down. Few things, it seems, are more incalculable than the ebb and flow of confidence. “Sure. It’s on the house,” she said and stalked off. At least he believed she had stalked off. Had his failure to respond irritated her? Disappointed her? Or had he read more into her words than they warranted? Hands over his face, he deliberated behind his palms. Be honest with yourself, he thought. You’re an absolutely ordinary person. There is no way she could be interested. He allowed his mind to explore their exchanges — nugacities, all nugacities. In assigning meaning to any of them he’d deceived himself. Hector extracted a five dollar bill from his wallet and placed it on top of the check. He drained his cup and stood up, ready to leave. Norma had disappeared into the kitchen and, he decided, it would be best to be gone before she returned. Like a man experiencing pain, he walked slowly toward the exit, twice looking back over his shoulder. He thought he glimpsed her coming toward the door. But although he lingered outside on the sidewalk, she did not appear. It had been nothing other than a glorious, but childish, dream. Wrapped in a cloak of martyred melancholy, he trudged back to his apartment building, made his way up the shadowed stairwell, fiddled with the key, and let himself into his confining little apartment. There’d been a brief respite at the Paramount, his afternoon there an elixir he hoped would carry him through the coming dreary week. But already a fresh wave of loneliness rolled over him. He sank into his old recliner and stared at the television set, without turning Straylight Fiction it on. Today had eclipsed yesterday and would soon evaporate into that insubstantial yet moving thing called time. And time slipped by, carrying him along with it. He could find no language for what he wanted to express. He wanted to weep, but could find no release. There was no escape from the dreary, humdrum life he was fated to live. Or was there? He pried the cap off a bottle of beer, nibbled some crackers, and munched a little Brie. Lolling in his recliner, a sense of serenity embraced him, and he began to smile. In some respects it had, in fact, been a better than ordinary afternoon at the Paramount. He should have realized it. Norma had talked to him a half dozen or more times. She’d joked with him. And she’d hinted she would like him to take her to a movie. His assessment had been wrong. He had given up too soon. He wanted to believe this. And did. Perhaps some of that hair treatment, perhaps next week … He experienced a jumble of thoughts and counter thoughts as he anticipated another afternoon at the Paramount Café. Then it struck him. Why wait? The time for Hector Ewert to act had arrived. Damn right. The time had arrived. At seven-twenty, freshly scrubbed and outfitted in gray slacks, a white shirt, and checked sport coat, Hector Ewert stepped back into the Paramount Café, now busy with customers. He hovered just inside the door. Two or three of the regulars greeted him as they passed by. The room had become lively with the clink of cutlery, the murmur of voices. Norma emerged from the ladies’ room precisely at seven-thirty. Her waitress garb abandoned, she was dressed in a simple white blouse, straight brown skirt, and flats. She carried a purse. “Hi, Mr. Ewert. You forget something?” she said Volume 6.2 39 when she reached him at the door. “Yes. Norma, I forgot something.” He looked at his shoes, and then screwed up his courage. “I forgot to ask you if … if you would like to … to go to the movie with me tonight? The one at the Rialto.” Nervous apprehension grabbed at him, and he trembled at the expected answer. But he had made up his mind. He had to escape the ordinary. At least to try. Her lashes fluttered, like those of a southern belle in an old movie. “Why, Mr. Ewert. I thought you’d never ask.” She looped her arm through his, they went out the door, and he hailed a cab. What could have been but never was now might be. For Hector Ewert, it had turned out to be an extraordinary day. 40 Straylight Poetry Kate Belew Yarrow The herb of Achilles, carried into battle to heal the bleeding of his soldiers. I will lick your bleeding only to end it. Staunched blood flow in the fawn that the coyotes found first. I will be your herbal abortion. Let nature take its course. Slick womb with clasping leaves, rotted roots. It is time to let go. The tannins, and the yellow. The Navajo throw me to the wind at night. Chew me for toothaches. I will grow as your wild thing, calling the devil on the hill. The burial mound. I rise toward the moon. Hitching a ride on Achilles’ heel. Call me witch. I’ll always come back to you. Volume 6.2 41 Mark Bilbrey The Dog of Hearing What did the deaf dog say To the other deaf dog I don’t know how my wounds compose my skin no story but now no story but I fear the emptiest now I listen to my digestion please if I’ve whispered once a thousand psalms dirt on the paw heart on the air no story we didn’t say and we never said where have you been all my life in the hot snapping ends of every dendrite your love is old and eats well and you can have it each alveolus full 42 Straylight Poetry Mark Bilbrey The Dog of Conversing Let’s talk about what carries a tune in the well. Contingent continent please let me live in you as I let song well up and spill my face deep into my neighbor’s that damn dog’s damn hollow mostly air and slobber errant love note. Volume 6.2 43 Jacob Donaldson father, son, holy ghost I was twelve when I stabbed a man three times in the belly with a skinning knife, he plundered children’s purity. knelt on the gravel I asked him Where’s God now, walked back inside. liberated a shotgun hidden away like the nights he visited, adopted plague. preacher, double barreled, Adam’s apple I pulled the trigger. pellets flew out like quail, relieving a neck burdened by vile thoughts. the blood reminded me of an orphic sunset glistening on waters of Mississippi, snake doctors flew by, but offer devils no aid. I threw him in the lake, gar shadows shot under gloomed water, tincture bleak with pestilence, named each cut father, son, holy ghost. 44 Straylight Art Rachel Bullis Portrait of Africa Black & White Ink Bottle Volume 6.2 45 Jennifer Thompson Gassed Relief Print on Hand-Colored Paper 46 Straylight Art Jose Miguel Amante Time for a Nap! Traditional Watercolor Volume 6.2 47 Jessica Ange Degeneration Digital Media 48 Straylight Art Jennifer Thompson Killer News Intaglio Print Volume 6.2 49 Brittany Parshall Cheedeera Digital Art 50 Straylight Art Spencer Elizabeth Karczewski Windy Chickens Relief Print Volume 6.2 51 Samantha ("Mewtant") LaVassor My Muse, My Love Brass, Copper, Fabric, Glass & Found Metal 52 Straylight Anna Frederiksen Art Cat Lilies Relief Print & Fabric Volume 6.2 53 Robert Anderson Encounter With Sheryl Crow Linoleum Relief Print 54 Straylight Art Benjamin Friedrich Japanese Skyfall Felt Tip Pen Volume 6.2 55 Adrienne Mata Wonderment Digital Media 56 Straylight Art Dan Barber Self Portrait as a Warped Object Tapestry Volume 6.2 57 Brittany Smith Megaphone Crow Digital Media 58 Straylight Tyler Hahn Art V2 Rebranding Digital Media Volume 6.2 59 Larry Graham A Double Homicide Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Researchers know more about it now than they used to, but it seems the more they learn, the more they realize they need to learn. Recently, for instance, it was discovered that a parent — such as a soldier returning from war — who exhibits symptoms of PTSD can transfer those symptoms to his or her children. It’s a little like exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke. But why, the researchers wonder, do some of those children develop “second-hand PTSD,” and others do not? 2 One account of “second-hand PTSD” begins on October 23, 1957, in the vicinity of Portland, Oregon. In 1957, the term PTSD has yet to be invented. Doctors still refer to it as “shell shock” or “battle fatigue” or “war neurosis.” It’s still a condition to be ashamed of, a disorder that an ex-soldier feels compelled to hide. Soldiers are not supposed to complain, especially if they return from war physically intact. There’s something suspicious about a soldier or an ex-soldier who claims to be injured when there’s no physical sign of injury. For this reason, most ex-soldiers suffering from this condition do not seek treatment. Two such ex-soldiers, veterans of World War II, play a part in this account. After the war, both men buy small farms next to each other. Both have an eight-yearold daughter. The girls, Sissy Rollins and Amy Smith, are best friends. 60 Straylight Fiction 2 October 23, 1957. Because two fences and a wide pasture separate the girls’ houses, Sissy’s father has just finished stairs (he calls them stiles) over the fences. Today, for the first time, Sissy climbs up and down the first set of stairs, skips through the pasture past the dull cows, climbs up and down the second set of stairs, and jumps squealing from the last step into Amy’s arms. After a little dance together, the girls pause to wave across the pasture to Sissy’s father, who stands at the far stair. Sissy has inherited her father’s course red hair, his freckles, and his squared features. She blows him a kiss and jumps up and down as she waves. But he doesn’t return the wave. He only nods, lifts his toolbox and walks back toward the house, extracting a small bottle from his coat pocket and raising it to his lips as he goes. “It was nice of your dad to build the stairs,” says Amy. She has her mother’s pale blue eyes and blond hair, which is cut short like her mother’s. She resembles her mother so closely that people in town often stop, take a second look at them, and smile. “He’s kinda crazy,” says Sissy. “My dad’s crazier than yours,” says Amy. This week, Sissy and Amy have been comparing families. It’s been a friendly competition. “I doubt it,” says Sissy, repeating a phrase that drives their third grade teacher — and all the parents of the third graders who use that phrase over and over — to distraction. “My dad gets mad,” says Sissy. “And hits things. Hits them with his hammer.” “That’s nothing. One time my dad hit my mom.” “My mom talks to her typewriter. My brother talks Volume 6.2 61 to Sputnik,” says Sissy. The girls skip in unison toward Amy’s house, where they will sit in the living room in front of the big oil heater and play with their dolls until Amy’s mother calls them to lunch. They will act out scenes that illustrate aspects of their family’s “craziness,” then fall back on the carpet in paroxysms of laughter. Sissy and Amy can make a game out of anything. But this is the last day they will be such good friends. Tomorrow, Sissy and Amy will go their separate ways. Amy 62 Tomorrow, Amy will move in with her father who has an apartment downtown. She will meet the girl in the apartment across the hall, who has a record player and a prodigious collection of vinyl records. The girl owns every record Elvis Presley, Pat Boone, and Bill Haley have made so far. She also has a wonderful library of movie magazines. She and Amy will lie on the floor for hours listening to the records and studying the magazines. Amy will begin dressing and talking like her new friend. She will become a different person, someone her father understands less and less as time goes by. Eventually, he will stop trying to understand her. As she matures, Amy’s beauty will flower. She will develop her mother’s high cheekbones and full, almostpouting lips. She will let her blond hair grow, and later, ten years from now she will flick back her hair and smile, and males will look into her startling blue eyes and forget for a moment what they were talking about. In high school only the brazen boys will approach her. She will experiment with them briefly, but will find them shallow despite — or because of — their bravado. She will turn to older males, and begin dating college men. In college she Straylight Fiction will encourage the attention of men with graying temples and established careers. She will seem to be one of those calm women who are in control of things. She will move and speak and dress with the confidence borne of beauty. But she carries a vivid memory of that day in 1957, and it won’t leave her alone. She can’t talk about it. The memory doesn’t fade as she ages — it grows more real. By the time she reaches forty, it causes her to withdraw completely from her friends and family — from her husband, even — because it crowds everything else from her mind. It causes her to watch TV for hours on end, not caring what she watches, seeking only distraction. It causes her to jump whenever a door slams or a piece of silverware drops to the floor. She begins sleeping in the living room, wrapped in a blanket from her childhood. She curls into the fetal position and covers her eyes with the palm of her hand. Eventually, doctors will diagnose her condition (incorrectly) and recommend admission to an institution for treatment. Her husband will visit regularly, twice a month, and sit with her in front of the TV as long as he can bear it – usually less than an hour. After the visit he returns home and sits at the kitchen table the rest of the day, drinking himself into a stupor. Sissy Tomorrow, Sissy will move in with her maternal grandmother, a widow of fifty-three. The grandmother knows the healing power of music, so she teaches Sissy to play the piano. Every night Sissy will bang on the old piano while her grandmother sips whiskey and entertains a handsome man with a heart condition and too much hair. Sissy discovers she can play almost any song she hears. While she plays, Grandma and the handsome man Volume 6.2 63 sing at the tops of their voices and applaud wildly. Sissy can do without the singing (they sing off-key), but she craves the applause. When the handsome man is away, Grandma drags Sissy to the coffee houses around Portland State University. They sit in the back and sip hot chocolate and listen to men and women in turtleneck sweaters reading poetry. All the verses are morose and laden with gratuitous obscenities. The air is thick with smoke and the anticipation of doom. People gather around Grandma’s table and bemoan the State of Things, and everyone talks to Sissy as if she’s an adult. Sissy loves it. In the care of her grandmother she adjusts to things. She learns to look outward, beyond her own life. She contracts a playfulness that compliments her razor intellect, and this remains with her all her life. It makes her irresistible to certain men who recognize the sensual dimensions of her wit. At age eighteen — in 1967 — she says goodbye to her grandmother and drives to San Francisco with a drummer. She sings and plays the piano in his band. The band members get into psychedelics, claiming the drugs clarify the music. She finds that the drugs only scramble it for her, so she drops out of the band and enrolls at the University of California at Berkeley. She earns a PhD. in music and lands a seat on the faculty at Berkeley. Her home in the hills above Oakland becomes a perennial halfway house for homeless poets and other indigent illusionists. She reads a novel a week, always a murder mystery. One summer she tries writing her own novel and is surprised when the first publisher who reads it buys it. She writes prolifically after that, always a murder mystery with a musical term in the title and a music person, place, or thing in the resolution. She becomes something of a cult figure among college music and literature professors. 64 Straylight Fiction Amy’s Mother But today — October 23, 1957 — Sissy and Amy are just two little girls playing before the big oil heater while Amy’s mother works in the kitchen. Amy’s mother smiles as she listens to the girls. At times like these, she knows that the divorce was the right thing to do. Even though the couples in the neighborhood will no longer invite her to their parties, even though her co-workers gossip behind her back about whom she is dating (she is dating no one), even though her own mother argues that the ex-husband didn’t mean to hurt her — that he deserves another chance — Amy’s mother knows she did the right thing. She can live without walking on eggshells now. She doesn’t have to listen for a certain tone in her husband’s voice. She can live her own life, now. She heats Campbell’s Soup, mixes tuna with mayonnaise, and sets the table. She calls the girls as she spreads the tuna on toast. The girls tumble into the kitchen. They have grown tired of their game. Sissy has another idea. “We could hammer my mom’s typewriter like my dad did.” Amy complains, “That doesn’t sound like fun.” “I could show you how he looked when he did it.” Sissy lolls her tongue out of her mouth and shakes her head up and down. Her hair flops around her head. “I can yell like him, too.” Amy’s mother stops spreading tuna. She sits down. “Your father hit your mother’s typewriter with a hammer?” “He was mad,” says Sissy. “Way mad. I thought they were getting a divorce. But it’s okay now. It’s the way they keep their eagle-ism.” “Eagle-ism?” Volume 6.2 65 “Their balance. The way they keep their balance. The day after he hit it, he bought her a new typewriter — and flowers. Everything’s okay, now. He promised she can write whenever she wants to.” Amy’s mother touches a finger to the hairline scar that runs through her own lip and halfway to her chin. The scar doesn’t hurt anymore, but she winces every time she touches it. She finishes the tuna sandwiches and sets them in front of the girls. The girls watch each other eat, and giggle from time to time for no apparent reason. When the girls finish eating, Amy’s mother picks up the dishes and wipes the table. “When you go home,” she says to Sissy, “I’ll walk over the stiles with you. Is that okay? I want to talk to your mother — just for a minute.” 2 Sissy leads the way over the stiles. Amy’s mother follows, and Amy comes over the stiles last. Amy complains of the cold, but Sissy giggles as they climb each of the stairs. They’re climbing Mount Everest, she informs them, and she’s the leader. She opens the door to the back porch. “My mom will be in her study,” she says. Then, as she opens the door to the kitchen, she calls out, “Mom?” The study is next to the kitchen. It used to be the pantry before the shelves were cleared and the typewriter brought in. “Mom?” Sissy stops at the door to the study. Her mother lies face-down on the floor. The back of her head is rumpled and scarlet. Amy’s mother gasps. She pulls Sissy back from the door. Then she hears a noise behind her. She turns in time to see the hammer begin its short, blurred descent. 66 Straylight Fiction Carl Hoffman Crockett in the Pacific In the beginning, before I understood history or knew what a history teacher was or felt more than an inkling of my lifelong obsession and career, let alone the veiled but ineluctable power of the wars that shaped my country’s life and my own — before, in fact, I understood anything, there was Victory at Sea. It was there on Saturday afternoons, or was it Wednesday or Thursday nights, and it swirled out of the TV with soaring music and flashing films of ships and sailors and airplanes, maybe the most exciting show I had ever seen, the show that taught me what I have known ever since. My education, compulsion, and life story were born together in front of the TV set, in my father’s presence, perhaps at his behest, when I was five years old and open-mouthed at the sight of racing destroyers and rainbows of antiaircraft fire twinkling toward the onrushing kamikazes. One Saturday was a typical bright afternoon in the San Fernando Valley when my father called from the den: “Janet, Carl, it’s time.” When he called, I was playing in my bedroom. I yelled, “Just a minute, I’m coming,” because even though Victory at Sea was my favorite TV show, just now I was performing a task that required a lot of concentration, setting up the last wall of a stamped-metal toy Alamo on the carpet near my bed, so I could play Davy Crockett with plastic soldiers. It was a job I hated to leave halfdone, even to watch Victory at Sea. But he insisted on promptness. “They’re running a commercial,” he said from the next room. “You have sixty seconds.” Volume 6.2 67 68 “Here I come!” Working feverishly, I lowered the last section of wall into position, so it was finished at last and ready to withstand the siege that would commence as soon as I was done watching television. I sprang up and ran into the den, hearing my mother say something from the far end of the house. “Just in time,” my father told me. Wearing a t-shirt and old pants today like he always did on Saturdays, he was already seated in front of the TV, taking the first sip from a glass of whiskey on ice. I threw myself onto the couch behind him and stared at the television, just in time to hear the first chords of stirring Victory at Sea music that rolled out of the set — Boom, Boom, Boom, BOOMBOOM — music that even when I was five carried me to another part of the world, the vast reaches of the Pacific Ocean that my father had sailed across when he was a soldier in World War II, and there on-screen were the waves, rising and falling, rising and falling forever, while the sun sparkled in a long silver path leading toward a tiny island faraway on the horizon. A white V-for-Victory appeared in the distance, superimposed on the ocean, growing larger and larger as the music surged and a voice-of-God narrator intoned, “And now, ‘The Pacific Boils Over.’” Or maybe he said, “And now, ‘Midway is East,’” or maybe, “And now, ‘Rings Around Rabaul,’” as my mother entered the den, moving slowly because she was fat with a baby in her stomach that would soon be born as my brother Tom. She asked, “Have I missed much?” “It’s just starting,” my father said, and sipped his drink as my mother sat on the couch next to me, the two of us behind him in his chair, the music changing abruptly to an oriental tinkling as the screen flashed pictures of Japanese women wearing kimonos and wooden platform shoes on the streets of Tokyo before World War II began. We saw autos and streetcars and long avenues that Straylight Fiction resembled those in American cities, although different, too, with foreign-looking buildings and strange cars, the voice-of-God explaining the happy lives of the millions of productive Japanese people working and going about their daily business, and even at five I marveled at the quaintness of the people and automobiles that looked so different from the modern ones I saw in Van Nuys. Besides, even then I knew that World War II was looming in the near future for the people on-screen, and soon they would have to deal with the terrible anger of the United States. I even felt slightly smug, because I knew it, but they didn’t. But the music altered again, becoming menacing and off-key, the images changing to Japanese armament plants making weapons, Japanese ships massed in an anchorage, Japanese soldiers carrying rifles and machine guns and flashing swords, swarming over parts of the world where they didn’t belong, a map showing the dark blob of Japan reaching out toward other countries with an octopus’ tentacles, the music turning particularly sinister as they plotted and practiced for the attack on Pearl Harbor, planes swooping low over the water until they dropped their torpedoes with a tremendous splash. “They developed specially-modified torpedoes for the attack,” my father explained. “Otherwise they wouldn’t have worked in the shallow water.” I glanced at him blankly, not understanding what he said, then back at the set. Now the music changed again, becoming relaxed and dreamy, and we saw Americans living in Hawaii, where there was always time for one last aloha, the sun shining on palm trees and warships at anchor, bands playing and sailors tossing baseballs, hula girls draping flowery leis around the necks of U.S. naval officers. The music hushed, and out of the silence a lone telegraph key played dit-dot-dit-dit-dot as it radioed the Japanese carriers lurking off the coast: “Climb Mt. Volume 6.2 69 70 Niitake!” the attack signal. With low music growling in the background, mustachioed airmen dressed in bulky flight suits that made them look like bears trundled across the windswept flight decks toward their planes, the admiral standing quietly on the bridge and nodding his head, giving the signal for the launch, and hundreds of planes roared off for the long flight to Pearl Harbor, toward the unsuspecting Americans who were just getting out of their beds that Sunday morning. My father said, “Here they come.” Sitting on the couch with my legs tucked under me, I leaned toward the TV set as I became more and more excited. This was always my favorite part of Victory at Sea, when the action started, when the documentary footage — which in later years I perceived was usually real but sometimes restaged using actors and extras, and sometimes entirely artificial, with miniature ships floating in a water tank and scale-model aircraft hung from wires — became swift and slashing, a whirl of rushing ships and swirling planes, sailors running and guns going off, and although the battles varied each week according to what part of the war was featured, the conflict always featured heroic Americans pitted against insidious enemies. As I watched, huge formations of warplanes peeled off for the attack, and the gallant Americans, taken at a disadvantage through the devious machinations of the Japanese, piled out of their bunks and up to their anti-aircraft guns, shooting back courageously as the ships in Pearl Harbor flamed and exploded around them. “Wow,” I said, “wow,” totally lost in the images rolling in front of me, the camera moving swiftly from angle to angle, the viewpoint of the men on the ground and in the ships, the sights seen by the pilots in the air, dive bombers plunging from the sky, grimly determined machine gunners firing at them, flak and tracer flicking Straylight Fiction and shimmering toward the enemy planes, then the bombs falling and an American battleship exploding, the music roaring to heights and crescendos as the attack proceeded. “Just look at that,” my mother said, and got up wearily, as if she was tired of lugging her stomach around. “I have to check the washer.” The planes flew away and the music changed again, becoming hushed and low-key, even mournful, because now the battle was over. Survivors floundered in the water, swimming for lifelines or heaving themselves over the gunwales of the lifeboats; a battleship rested on the bottom, sunk at anchor, its main deck awash but its superstructure gushing smoke, sailors swarming on the upper decks. Onshore, grimy medics lugged stretchers bearing dead men in white sheets, while the voice-of-God intoned something like, “Warrior, rest. Thy task is done.” Then somehow we were in Japan, seeing more women in kimonos parading through the streets in a long double line, each of them carrying a little wooden box. My father sipped his drink. “Their sons are in those boxes,” he told me. I stared. The boxes were way too small to hold anybody’s son, even if he was a baby. “How did they get inside?” “Their ashes are in there.” Once again, I didn’t understand what he was talking about, but it didn’t matter, because now we were back at Pearl Harbor, which was returning to life. Out of the sunken ships and smashed airplanes, the gutted hangars and machine shops, the wreckage and rubble left by the explosions, American determination was working a miracle, as ships rose from the bottom, buildings were repaired, new sailors and Marines replaced those killed or wounded. The U.S. command was gazing westward Volume 6.2 71 72 across the Pacific, the admirals studying their charts and calculating the way to Tokyo, getting set to order their ships and soldiers and airmen off to win victory on land, victory in the air, Victory at Sea, the forces of democracy surging across the globe, onward toward the inevitable triumph of freedom, the stirring music rising and rising, because even though many Americans had died, the war had just begun, and soon enough the Japanese would never know what hit them. The ocean waves appeared once more with the superimposed V-for-Victory, the music surging just before the screen flashed a commercial. “Pretty good,” said my father. “And I was there.” “You were there when things were tough!” I exclaimed, because that was what my father always said. “You bet, buddy boy,” and he polished off his drink and said, “I was riding my motorcycle.” “An Indian!” I shouted, because I thought that was a funny name for a motorcycle. “First an Indian, then a Harley-Davidson,” he explained for what must have been the twentieth time. “We got replacements after about six months.” He laid his glass aside. “Now I’ve got to run an errand — ” Mother reappeared in the doorway: “Is it over? Did I miss the end?” “’Fraid so.” He started to rise. “I’m going to the drugstore.” “Could you spend some time with Carlie?” my mother interrupted him. He stopped and looked at her. “Honey, you know how much I like that.” “You’re gone most of the time. Soon the baby will be here and we’ll both have less time — ” “I really need to get some razorblades. There’s some other errands too.” “Jackie? Please? I’ve got to finish the wash.” Straylight Fiction My father took a deep breath. He turned to me: “Do you want to look at my picture book?” “You bet, buddy boy!” I shouted. “Thanks, Jackie,” my mother said, and disappeared again. My father said, “Back in a minute. I’ve got to fill up.” I waited eagerly on the couch, almost breathless because looking at his World War II photo album was even better than watching Victory at Sea. It seemed like an hour before he came back, carrying another glass of whiskey and the album. He sat next to me and took a drink before opening the book on his lap. “Here it is. There I am.” The first photo was a black-and-white portrait of my father wearing his uniform. I had seen it before, but it always amazed me. “There’s you, Daddy!” “You bet.” In the picture he wore a thick dark heavy dress jacket with pleats on the pockets, over an equally dark shirt with a somewhat lighter tie. I could recognize him easily because his observant eyes and thick eyebrows were exactly the same in the photo as they were now, although overall he looked a lot younger, and combed his hair in a strange pompadour. He explained, “That was taken at a picture studio in Adelaide.” “Where’s that?” I already knew the answer, but I wanted to hear him say it. “Australia. A big country across the ocean. I’ve told you that before.” He sipped again from his whiskey and turned the page, and this time it was him and five other soldiers in front of a tent, all of them wearing pants but no shirts, all of them squinting into the sun. “Is that in Australia too?” “That’s right. The airstrip at Darwin. Those are my army buddies. We all slept together in that big tent.” Volume 6.2 73 74 “I can see one of the bunks.” It was visible just inside the tent flap, lit by a slant of sunlight. “That’s not a bunk, it’s a cot.” “I can see that cot.” I corrected myself because I wanted to use the right name. “You bet.” He drank from the glass and turned the page. “There’s an anthill.” A jeep was parked in what looked like a stretch of desert, the driver standing next to it. Next to him was the anthill, at least seven feet tall, made out of dry mud with ruts down its sides, like a miniature mountain, like one of the strange formations I saw in TV shows about the deserts of Arizona and New Mexico. I exclaimed, “It’s bigger than that jeep! It’s bigger than that man!” “The ants were about that big.” He held up a thumb and finger. “They climbed all over the place. Sometimes I felt something tickling under my pants and found ants crawling up my leg.” “Wow. Did they bite?” “Sometimes. Sometimes not. There were all kinds of bugs in Australia,” he said. I started to chant, like he did sometimes: “Leaping bugs, hopping bugs, skipping bugs, dancing bugs, green bugs, yellow bugs — ” Slowly, he joined in: “Red bugs, orange bugs — “ — flying bugs, walking bugs — ” Daddy sipped from his glass. We continued flipping through the album. All the photos were black and white, and I realize now that the bulk of them came from his days in Australia, especially his thirteen months at the huge Air Force base in Darwin, where he served in 1944 and 1945. Some of the shots were tiny, no bigger than postage stamps, taken with what he described as a G.I. camera, and I was thrilled by the sepia-toned snaps of fighters and bombers taxiing Straylight Fiction down the landing strips in billowing clouds of dust, the beer-barrel shaped P-47s and the semi-truck-like B-24s, the other men in his company with their strange hairstyles, my father on his motorcycle in his corporal’s uniform with jodhpur riding pants. The album was organized chronologically, and eventually we made it to his six months in the Philippines, the photos becoming stranger now because they included buildings that were just as foreign-looking as the ones in Victory at Sea, although also different from the ones in Japan, with less pointy roofs but lots of thick white walls and palm trees along the streets, my father explaining the pictures were of Manila, the capital of the islands. One that especially struck me showed a solid-looking white stucco church whose five-story steeple had been knocked askew, so it didn’t point straight up like every other church I had ever seen. It pointed off at an angle. “That looks funny,” I said. “It sure does,” my father said. “It looks like a clown’s hat.” “I suppose so.” “How did it get that way?” “Probably artillery fire. The army was still fighting the Japs when I got to Manila.” “What’s artillery?” “You know. Cannons.” I nodded. Plastic cannons had come with my Alamo set. Toward the back of the album was the strangest photo of all, of a brown-skinned little boy, maybe even younger than me. He stood next to the door of a grass hut, wearing nothing but a white undershirt. I could clearly see his penis, and looking at him made me feel strange and hilarious because Mother always told me to cover myself up before going out in public, and I had never seen a photograph of anyone who was bare. I Volume 6.2 75 76 laughed and shrieked, “Where’s his pants?” “He doesn’t have any,” my father said, and his tone of voice told me this wasn’t funny. “His family is too poor to buy them.” I realized I had to be serious. “Oh.” “There were a lot of poor people in the Philippines. Poorer than anyone who lives in the United States. They don’t have nearly as much as we do.” “Oh.” I felt a little embarrassed for laughing. Clearly, this wasn’t funny at all. “I saw them.” For a moment I didn’t say anything. Then I asked, “Is that his house?” “Yeah. It was made of grass, like it would blow over in the first rainstorm. They didn’t have any lawn in front. After I took this picture he started playing in the dirt because he didn’t have any place else to go.” His voice still sounded strange. He set his drink on a coaster and shut the photo album. “Carlie, I need to get razorblades. Do you want to ride with me?” “Uh-uh, no thanks, Daddy, so long.” And I ran away because I wanted to play Davy Crockett. He went out to the car and I ran into my room, forgetting the little boy with no pants. It had been fun to watch Victory at Sea and look at the album with him, but now it was time for my soldiers. I liked Walt Disney’s Davy Crockett maybe even more than I liked World War II, and last Christmas Santa had brought me a toy set consisting of stampedmetal walls painted to look like adobe, and the miniature replica of San Antonio’s Alamo church, complete with the trademark hump on top of the building, plus ninety or a hundred plastic figures representing the Mexican army and the coonskinned defenders. Kneeling, I laid my cheek on the carpet and inspected the stronghold’s walls from floor level, seeing what the Mexican storming party would Straylight Fiction see as they marched against the fortress. Now, it was time to set up the defenders. About fifteen plastic frontiersmen garrisoned the Alamo, brown and red and tan and green, wearing buckskin and aiming muskets, and the stampedmetal walls of the fortress featured platforms that allowed me to place them in firing positions from which they could rake the oncoming Mexican horde, while from the barricade at the gate their single cannon could massacre any attackers who got close. Davy Crockett himself stood atop the church behind the hump, a beige figure with his feet planted and his rifle, Betsy, in his hands, a pose based on an advertising photo of the actor who portrayed him; I deliberately placed him in a spot where everyone could see him, and the Texans would be able to hear his shouted orders. Then I turned to the attackers, the blue plastic Mexican soldiers with tall tubular hats who had four cannons in a battery placed where it could hit the church, and who far outnumbered Davy and his men. I set up the Mexicans in three long ranks, a formation that overlapped the walls and would allow them to move like doomsday into the teeth of the Americans’ fire. I took a moment to admire the setup, then gave the order under my breath: “To the attack! Move out!” Making crashes and explosion sounds with my mouth, I re-fought the battle as I had worked it out a halfdozen other times, the Mexicans advancing in their long lines like blue robots who were mowed down by the fire of the Texans, but there were never enough defenders to stop them completely, so the Americans were driven back step-by-step from the walls, the Mexicans hoisting up their plastic storming ladders, the Americans falling one-by-one just as they had on the Disney TV show. As the battle continued, I was convinced I was re-enacting history as it had actually occurred long before I was born, the soldiers on the walls and Davy atop the church, loading Volume 6.2 77 78 and aiming and firing, loading and aiming and firing, and I knew they were fighting for Texas independence in a battle to the death, just as the real Davy and his men had long ago. The hosts of Mexicans hurled themselves across the walls, ruthlessly bayoneting every American who got in their way, then threw themselves against the final bastion of intrepid Americans by the church. Now Davy was left by himself on the church roof, facing the assault alone with his musket, Betsy. Soon Davy, too, would be dead, just like all his men, and I didn’t want that to happen, but there was no way to avoid it, because I was re-enacting history. I studied the situation as Davy reloaded Betsy for the last time. Down below, the Mexicans were preparing for the final assault, some of the blue soldiers hauling the storming ladders into the courtyard, and Davy considered shooting at them, then realized he had only a handful of bullets left, and he had to save them. So there was nothing he could do but watch through his slitted eyes in his grimy face. Maybe now that he faced death he recalled his long life as a scout and hunter and soldier and Congressman, all of which I had seen in the Disney television series. Maybe he remembered how he and his Tennessee Rangers rode to Texas to aid in the fight for freedom, because he was an American, and Americans believed in freedom. Maybe he even said it out loud: “Freedom.” “Freedom,” I muttered. Then a Mexican officer shouted in Spanish, and Davy had to stop thinking, because the Mexicans were bellowing and screaming in a language I couldn’t understand, raising their plastic ladders against the church wall, Davy standing to meet them, his shot from Betsy bringing down the first Mexican soldier. Then he swung Betsy like a club because there was no time to Straylight Fiction reload, the blue soldiers swarming around him just as they had on Walt Disney Presents, and moments later, fighting heroically, Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier, died on the roof of the Alamo. I paused again to study the mounds of plastic carcasses that lay heaped around the Alamo, and they gave me a strange feeling, one that made me breathe a little deeper and slower, even feel a trifle light-headed, as though I was in the presence of something important. I knew Davy and the others had sacrificed themselves fighting. But somehow I also understood they had helped something bigger and more important than themselves to be born, the Republic of Texas. And even though the defenders were gone, Texas would live on because of what they had done. I could just barely comprehend it, and it sent a ripple through the hair on my arms. General Santa Anna and his Mexican army might think they had won the battle, but I knew that really, it was just the beginning. The Mexicans couldn’t really win, because they were fighting Americans, and Americans never lose. “Americans never lose,” I whispered. As a Mexican detail lowered Davy’s body from the Alamo’s roof and I surveyed the masses of plastic bodies, I said it again. That was how I became a history teacher. But there’s also Daddy’s life, and mine, which continued as they had that afternoon like railroad tracks aimed at the horizon, paired but parallel, pointed in the same direction but seldom or never touching, him and me united but separate. Showing me Victory at Sea was a great gift, one of the most important ways he ever shaped my existence, but he never knew it, because I never told him, and in the years since his death, I have often wished that was different. It helps a little when, in the early 2000s, on the spring mornings when my U.S. History or Volume 6.2 79 American Studies classes are studying World War II and I show an episode of Victory at Sea to give them a hint of what the United States felt about its role in that conflict, I imagine him sitting off to the side in the classroom. He is dressed in his t-shirt and worn-out pants, just what he wore as we watched the exact same episode in 1950s Van Nuys. This time there is no whiskey glass for him to sip. I can see him glancing back and forth between the TV screen and me with a look of dawning comprehension on his face, his sharp sober observant eyes under his thick eyebrows as he discovers something about the life we once lived together and, just for a moment, wiser than before, we’re father and son together, together in the same room as we were when I was five. 80 Straylight Poetry Amanda Thayer Correspondence I tell you my fears, secrets shared, and so you return them in echoes spinning into a golden thread of trust. Whispering back at me a woven thing of beauty; corners that cover my edges and hem me in blanketing all of me. Volume 6.2 81 Amanda Thayer Lament You swallowed everything. I stood in the roar but a whisper, and drowned. Your hands enclosed me; noose upon the soft of my neck you stole my breath away, and my time. Crushed the flower upon my cheek; pink bud to garish red. Laid me to waste; a foreigner pillaging my vineyards. In you all was consumed. The belligerent years of match to chaff; the spark of violence and lust, and all ignited. In you all was lost. 82 In you I was destroyed. The great oaks of my walls lowered to the enemy. It was the hour of the dirge; my lips raised a welcome song. I crafted you a disguise and fell for my Trojan horse. I penned in pretty fiction; an ink blot tongue twisting you into a false image. Straylight Poetry I laid me down at the altar, a sacrificial lamb. Priestess of this high place. Sweet communion wine blood red on the lips and bitter insides. I broke the bread, My body broken for you. Crushed in your hands Of capable rages. Your endless appetite you left me no crumbs. In you all was squandered. You stole all of me. You emptied my holding; pirated the hull of my ship. A great wealth all lost to you, all taken. The unfair scales; I did not count the cost. I saw for you redemption; You offered me destruction. I saw for you restoration; you offered me the blindfold The fire stolen from my balded eye. Scalped my glory; my shorn head a trophy. Shame to shame; and one by one I made your trades till my hand lay empty. All aces lost and with them my kings. Volume 6.2 83 This for that. And I was found wanting; emptied out upon the shore, the remains pillaged my entrails scavenged. You shipwrecked all of me. The unguarded well; a spring of death. We broke into our own wineries and I lay beneath the feet of your press. You bled me dry. And in still days the aroma rises; the mingled notes of hope and despair. We never mixed well. You still steal; I lose the waking hours where you come like night terrors from the empty left side of me. I forget you cannot hurt me here. You come like a shadow still stretching your fingers long and black, eerie and elongated, creeping across the lawn into my day. I have given you a good long stretch of my past and yet you are hungry still. I forgive you but I do forget, I lost all of me. 84 Straylight Poetry Lindsay Knapp Haunting You walked away and never looked back, I screamed silently and thought my absence would make you miss me But I was already two miles too late And you were living on a different plane. When we spoke in pockets of time Between bolts and rugged state lines. You used language I’d never heardLike an unwanted bearded kiss Bristly and crass. But I dug so tight and tried to fight For you to remember those golden times. You cursed those days and the shame of your ways. To me, you were only sixteen, A slice of a dream that was still unseen. Don’t fold me into that pile of your life; The dirty laundry and all you despise. I was a bright light. And I was a whisper of love. Now you’re sitting pretty. Do you ever miss me? I knew you when you didn’t know yourself. And I couldn’t hold you … here But I can’t touch you there. Volume 6.2 85 Karen Barsamian Arms Like Wires When I hug you I like to think about how you’re electrical, how we’re machines, with small turbines, and how we break. I think eons ahead, where our bodies are not. Well used. Forgotten. I like to think about how we’re electrical, how we will break. 86 Straylight Fall 2012 CONTRIBUTORS Jose Miguel Amante is a nineteen-year-old Filipino college student. He is a self-taught artist and likes to paint and watch wildlife films and animated movies. Robert Anderson is from Racine, Wisconsin. He is a special student at the University of Wisconsin — Parkside working in relief and intaglio printmaking. Jessica Ange is a super senior getting her bachelor's degree in digital art with concentrations in graphic design and web design. She does freelance design work and is one half of the art studio PinStripes Studios. Sometimes she pretends she is a cashier at a certain well-known grocery store, but other times she is just an artist. Dan Barber's artistic goal is to address the viewer as intensely as possible. He is currently working in film and would like to be a performer in digital video. Karen Barsamian is an aspiring librarian who enjoys Victorian literature, poetry, and time travel. Writing is a life-long passion that drives her academic career. She has been lucky enough to work with local author Kathie Giorgio and has been published in the Windy Hill Review. Kate Belew is a student at Kalamazoo College. This past summer, she spent time writing under the Nature in Words fellowship at Pierce Cedar Creek Institute. Volume 6.2 87 Mark Bilbrey's poems and essays have appeared in Action Yes, LIT, Versal, 42opus, VERSE, and The Villa. He lives with his wife and two mutts in Claremont, California. Rachel Bullis is a senior and an art major at the University of Wisconsin— Parkside. She enjoys drawing, printmaking, and photography and truly loves experimenting with different colors and media. Shane R. Collins writes in the Green Mountains of Vermont. While not writing, he enjoys many outdoor activites such as hiking, camping, fishing — and yes, biking. He is the editor and founder of The Speculative Edge digest. He is currently an MFA candidate at Stonecoast. Jacob Donaldson is a twenty-six-year-old former infantryman in the United States Army. He lives with his four-year-old son and wife in Sardis, Mississippi. He is currently a student at the University of Mississippi. Lawrence Farrar As a career diplomat, Lawrence Farrar served in Japan (multiple tours), Norway, Germany, and Washington, DC. Short-term assignments took him to nearly forty countries. A Minnesota resident, he has degrees from Dartmouth and Stanford. In addition to an earlier appearance in Straylight, his stories have been published in such magazines as: The MacGuffin (twice), Red Cedar Review, Red Wheelbarrow, Evening Street Review, G.W. Review, Green Hills Literary Lantern, Colere, Worcester Review, 34th Parallel, Blue Lake Review, and New Plains Review. He also provided credited assistance to the author of a Hiroshima memoir published in New Madrid. 88 Straylight Anna Frederiksen enjoys looking beyond reality to create her own world. In her art, she uses 3D objects, patterns, and texture. Her inspiration comes from the beauty of nature and pop art. Benjamin Friedrich is an artist that loves to use ink and marker in all of his work and tends to find inspiration in cityscapes, nature, and old cartoons. Larry Graham lives in Sacramento, California. His stories have appeared in The Sacramento News and Review and in Susurrus, the literary journal for Sacramento City College. One of his stories will appear later this year in Listening Eye. He has written news stories for the Santa Paula Chronicle (Santa Paula, California). Tyler Hahn is a graphic designer and printmaker living in Kenosha, Wisconsin who specializes in silkscreened gig posters and illustration. His clients in the past ranged from national music acts such as of Montreal, Dr. Dog, and Father John Misty to commercial package design for small Milwaukee businesses. Carl Hoffman “Crockett in the Pacific” is an early chapter from Carl Hoffman’s memoir Take His Children Home, which deals with his coming of age as an American during the post-World War II/ Vietnam years. Another excerpt, “Guadalcanal,” was published in an earlier edition of Straylight. Currently, Carl teaches U.S. History and American Studies at Hathaway Brown School in suburban Cleveland, Ohio. Volume 6.2 89 Contributors Spencer Elizabeth Karczewski is a senior at the University of Wisconsin — Parkside, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in digital art. Spencer currently works as a student designer and digital photographer for Parkside and is a member of the Racine Arts Council. Along with her love of design and photography, she also has a passion for relief and screen-printing and enjoys combining them both into her design work. Lindsay Knapp is thirty-two-years-old and lives in Racine, Wisconsin. She’s a snarky idealist. It’s backwards and upside down. She holds hope by a rope of cynicism or maybe it’s the other way around. Either way, she loves mangoes in the winter. Nick Knebel is a junior at the University of Wisconsin — Parkside studying English and writing. He has studied poetry extensively under Mark Bilbrey and likes to swim and play the piano in his free time. Samantha ("Mewtant") LaVassor works in multiple mediums, lately with a focus on art metals. Her inspiration comes from those close to her and she creates as a declaration of love. Adrienne Mata is working towards a bachelor of fine arts degree at DigiPen Institute of Technology, located in Redmond, Washington. She loves video games and hopes to someday work for Riot Games. Steven Niemi graduated from the University of 90 Wisconsin — Parkside in December 2012 as an English major with a writing concentration. This is his first published work. Straylight Contributors Brittany Parshall ("BParsh") is a Chicago-based artist, illustrator, and designer. She focuses on digital graphics and fine art, creating many wild and whimsical pieces. Some of her goals are to design one hundred album covers, publish her childhood stories with updated illustrations, and inspire a positive, creative message in the mind of everyone she meets! Monica Scholle is an English major at the University of Wisconsin — Parkside. Dr. Mark Bilbrey introduced contemporary poetry to Monica in 2011; she has been writing ever since. Brittany Smith is a senior at University of Wisconsin — Parkside. She studies illustration that varies from traditional to digital. Brittany is currently working on two graphic novels. She enjoys crows and other birds as subjects in her pieces, being jealous of their ability to fly at any moment. To see more of her art, please check out pinstripes-studios.com. Amanda Thayer is a graduate of Columbia College Chicago. She has been published in the Racine Mirror and is an award winning artist. Her custom design work is currently worn by the Grammy nominated band Skillet. Jennifer Thompson is a current art student at the University of Wisconsin — Parkside in Kenosha. She will be graduating in the spring of 2013 with a printmaking concentration and a background in illustration and animation. Her work contains emotional symbolism pertaining to the negative side of human nature. Most of her pieces tend to be clean and straightforward with heavy contour lines and a cartoon aspect. Volume 6.2 91 Elisha Wagman is an MFA candidate at The New School and possesses a graduate diploma in fiction from the Humber School for Writers. She is currently working on a novel and a collection of short stories. Her stories have appeared or are forthcoming in Fiction Fix, Sheepshead Review, and Bartleby Snopes. She lives in Brooklyn, New York. William Walsh has published five books: Speak So I Shall Know Thee: Interviews with Southern Writers, The Ordinary Life of a Sculptor, The Conscience of My Other Being, Under the Rock Umbrella: Contemporary American Poets from 1951-1977, and most recently David Bottoms: Critical Essays and Interviews (McFarland). His work has appeared in the AWP Chronicle, Five Points, The Flannery O’Connor Review, The James Dickey Review, The Kenyon Review, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The North American Review, Poets & Writers, Rattle, Shenandoah, Slant, The Valparaiso Review, and elsewhere. He is also a world-renowned photographer. 92 Straylight