The old man stands above me leaning on his loaded cart talking at me. I happily answer his questions even though I'm sure I' m not supposed to be.
Under the current circumstances, it seems pointless to put up any sort of fake social plaster. He asks for my name and once he has it he used it.
"Misty, you have a bike?"
I tell him I don't that I'm on foot knowing there is no need to define the lack of a car: the backpack has already done that for me.
As I place the large wet bundle of celery between the grapes and a container of soy milk I see a man dressed in mechanic blues with clear blue eyes to match pauses inside the breezeway to watch us.
I don't have to stare at him to know why he and the young boy beside him have stopped.
He is a father and despite that, we might be the same age he sees me as someone in need of oversight.
Clearly, he doesn't like what he is seeing. The old man makes him nervous and he might think I don't know enough to be afraid, or at least more cautious.
What he doesn't know is I am always afraid. Always watching the shadows along the trail. Today is no different.
The old man is creepy but harmless even only if that is because I can outrun him.
Really he doesn't phase me because I am a mom on a mission, car-less but in need of cucumbers- it's funny and it's not.
The food isn't really even for me. I could survive on spoons full of peanut butter but the girls need something better and I have 2 hours to make that happen for them.
I stand up, smile at the watching man, and walk out into the parking heading to the street for the slow walk home.
Halfway I realize it is already July and I am passing the very spot on 9th west where my mind resets time to before I knew my sister was dead.
The last moment I was ever truly full myself. "And then I was driving. Driving with the windows down..." ... AND then I realize I also forgot to buy noodles, damn.
taming venus, part one: the order of
things
(Friday, July 28, 2006)
People die. Wendi died on “A”
day. I guess that isn’t really true, she died in the dim blank space
before that. Her bloated naked body slumped across the bathroom floor.
Her swollen feet tangled around the base of the toilet. Her badly
bludgeoned forehead smashed against the door jam. In her apparent fall, her arm
laid trapped beneath her, the weight of her decomposing body splitting and
shedding the skin.
A bathtub of stagnating water to her
left, on her right a pool of dark rancid fluid created by brown chunks of her
hair, thick layers of rotting flesh, old blood, and vomit.
In the first few hours, her once
olive-toned skin had taken on stark jaundice, as time past a shade of ashy
purple. It is death purple and you will not find it in a box of crayons.
You must know raw death to know this color. And once you know it
you can’t “un-know” it.
In the 6 x 9-foot front room a fan
jammed in an open window did little to cool the stale summer heat, nothing to
dissipate the smell.
And then there was something said
about the flies.
It was the smell that exposed her.
Of course initially, my information was all second or third hand. I was
told a tenant in her building called the landlord complaining of a noxious
odor. The landlord found her body. He called the police and they
called my parents. I suppose that is our parents, after all, she was my
sister.
Do I tell you now who we were, about
our perfect childhood about raspberry patches and the distant sound of lawnmowers on Saturday mornings? About the squeak, the swing set made, about
tiny drops of condensation in the corner of our bedroom window, or the
blistering warmth of the back deck on an August afternoon.
Would it matter that I was the
little sister separated by three years, she was the middle and there was one
three years older than her? That we were raised as Mormons on tree-lined streets with lush green manicured lawns with manicured lives to fit.
That the home of my beloved soccer
coach smelled of fresh coffee and cloves foreign aromas forever imprinted on my
soul. Along with the fields of early freedom under his watchful eye
covered by dew-soaked blades of freshly cut grass that stick to your legs and
arms like glitter.
No, I don’t think it matters.
I could tell you but unless you lived it you would never come to really
understand how ideal our life was. A world created through pick gingham
and station wagon windows. Peace and isolation like that exists only in
the purest of childhood and the loneliest of snow globes; I find I am a
collector of both.
The police phoned my
sixty-something-year-old father to tell him there had been a disturbance at his
daughter’s apartment and would he please come down. My father, with his
dark eyes, eyes he gave to us, told the officer there was always a disturbance
at his daughter’s insisting the need to know exactly what it was before deciding
whether or not to come.
The officer persisted; he should
come to the apartment to talk. My dad, his dark hair peppered gray, thick
strong hands and arms turning to fat, told him that he and my beautiful sweet
mother had dinner plans with another couple so unless he was told what the
trouble was he wouldn’t come. The police had to tell him over the phone.
My parents called me. When it
was about Wendi I was always called- but I didn’t get that phone call. I
was at the grocery store buying green beans, a tiny seedless water watermelon
with dirt still caked on one side, and unbleached flour. All for the petite
towheaded toddler sitting in the shopping cart basket clutching a package of
goldfish crackers in one hand, pudding in the other, and singing a very bad
rendition of twinkle-twinkle little star.
It was “A” day, the start of 26 days
of learning the alphabet one letter one day at a time. It was a simple
idea a friend gave me. I have come to understand even simple ideas can
rely on very precarious assumptions.
I could drive myself mad picturing
what I was doing while she died but it wouldn’t do any good. She had been
dead for so long. We don’t know how long so I can’t find the moment to
hate myself for. All I know is what I was doing when my parents climbed
the stairs to her apartment. Where I was when the M.E. told them
not to go in, that no parent should see their child that way.
The phone calls, the police, the
smell, I was there in the store like I said, shopping for dinner, for green
beans, flour, and watermelon. And then I was driving. Driving with
the windows down in the red VW van mostly because of the lack of a working air
conditioner but you can’t overlook the fact that the driver side window was
broken and I could not have rolled it up even if I wanted to.
There in the heat of a July evening,
in the part of the day when the air rises like fat ribbons off the pavement,
between the rush of 5 o’clock traffic, my little girl safely strapped in her
car seat talking away to no one. Domestic chores of everyday life
floating off into dryness of Utah
desert, the only worry was a fall semester, which looked like a bear of
calculus and bio-chem.
It is slow and silent now. I
can see us driving, eternally preserved as if we never came home. We
become a mosaic of filtered colors and sunlight dancing across the tiny
proteins of memory, stored next to dust fairies and thick green shag carpet.
But I did come home...
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