Monthly Archives: January 2003

Holy War

Holy Land, holy war,

and the Saturday morning prayer

pecked

with pops of bullets.

Each “Amen” is punctuated by a firm “crack.”

 

Holy Land, holy war,

and the scent of baking Shabbat

bread as it twists into the acrid odor of blood—

only a block away.

 

The taste of peace fills my mouth, bulging my cheeks

in all of its addictive,

intoxicating,

saccharine flavor.

Then there is the taste of revenge.

Like water, it is flavorless… ordorless.

It boils, scalding my mouth—

leaving my taste buds buzzing

and the pink flesh of my inner cheek

stinging.

 

Holy hopes, holy war,

and the feel of my father’s fingers,

coarse and worn,

wrinkled like his thick camouflage suit.

I know the valleys of his hands like I know the rough creases

of his uniform.

Here I’ve leaned my head,

innumerable times.

 

He’s been gone so long.

All that I remember are his hands.

In our final moment together, his left hand held a gun

and his right the skullcap of his youth.

He held it fast on his head as he placed an army hat

atop his kippah.

Then he tucked the Torah into his gun sack

for Friday night readings in the trenches of a war.

 

This work received a Gold Award in The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards of 2002.

A Bunch of Nonsense

I am a super hero!
I am the lingerie loving,
Plum dancing,
Popcorn serving,
Potato eating,
Viggo Aspiring,
Moviegoer,

I am…

The Last General of the forgotten creed,
The laughing Grand Mage of forgetfulness,
The Ranger of the play grounds,
The Arch Duke of the melancholy collaborators,
The Poet who talks to little hairy fat naked Fay…

                They
say to me,
                            He
shall be knighted,
                                  He
shall propose,
   He shall kiss the earth and be blessed,
 He shall cry when his children are born,
            He shall
rise and be recognized…

But in my mind I see,
                     You
curling up in the covers,
                        While
I make breakfast,
   &nbsp      And I’ll wake you with
the smell of fresh orange juice.
                  After
I move your hair from your eyes,
                    We
lay…
                                In
a half daze till our children come barreling in…

Because I say happiness is a long winded poem,
being read by an overconfident, Lord
of the
Rings
maniac, with a little too much time on his hands… And
a whole lot of nonsense to share
with the world…

Daniel

An Essay Written as a Letter

Hey, Marijke,

I don’t feel like writing this down in an actual letter, and I probably won’t be able to talk to you till at least much later, but I do need to say something to somebody right now.

I witnessed the death of a man, today. His name was Daniel. He was painting the house next to us. He was on the top couple rungs of the ladder when it folded under him. It was a cheap ladder. Corroded aluminum.

I am right in the line of sight on the back porch of our house; I hear the ladder starting to collapse, and see him hit the ground. At first I call out to him. He doesn’t respond. I guess I should have called 911 then. I don’t. I run over to him.

He’s barely conscious. I ask him if he is OK, and he can’t form any words. He’s moving around his left arm, as if searching for something on the ground. I remember that he has glasses, and then see them lying five feet away on the grass. I put them on him. One of the legs of the glasses had snapped off, so they don’t go on straight.

I get my mom. When she gets there, she asks him what is his name. “Daniel,” he wheezes out. She asks him what day it is, but his eyes glaze over, and he loses consciousness. She goes in and calls 911. When she comes back out, she tells us that they’re on their way. Then she just stands there waiting next to him, and I sit next to him with my hand on his shoulder. He’s convulsing, and he gasps. I can feel his body tensing up under my fingers. I let go. He is foaming at the mouth. We talk to him, saying stuff like, “It’ll be OK, the ambulance is on its way.” and, “Just hold on, Mr. Daniel, hold on, till the ambulance gets here.” He’s still for twenty or thirty seconds at a time, not even breathing, it seems. Then he convulses gently. Each time he convulses, I feel myself sighing in relief, that he hasn’t gone yet. It is more serious than I had thought at first.

He was still alive when the paramedics finally got there. But (the fireman said later) he stopped breathing and his heart stopped beating as they stood over him, checking his pulse. They did CPR on him, right there on Ms. Selma’s lawn, and a few minutes later, they loaded him onto the ambulance.

I say to the fireman, “How is he? Is he alive?”

“Well, his heart and breathing stopped as we where checking him, and they’re trying to bring him back now, on the ambulance.”

“So that’s it, huh?”

“Yeah, that’s it. I mean, they might get him back, but not yet.”

Umm. Yeah. So, I’m a little shook. I went back to painting for a few hours, just because… what else am I going to do? Sit in the house and think about it? No, I just felt like immersing myself in work for a little while. But now I’m taking a lunch break, and it’s all coming back to me.

I was painting our house on the ladder yesterday, about ten feet higher than the one he was on today. That could’ve been me. And can be me, later today. Well, sorta. I have a good ladder. But anything’s possible. This is real life, Marijke. I feel like I’ve just woken up from a dream, and Daniel was my alarm clock. Yeah, I’m shook.

Eric

I Didn’t Know

We would sit on the Spanish steps until our lips were swollen and chapped, until our tongues were coated with the taste of cigarettes, until our skin had melted and darkened from the heat of the sun. We would sit there wanting to be older, or at least look older, assuming everyone was staring at us, assuming everyone wanted us. We wanted our lives to advance, but we didn’t know in what direction. We would wait, patiently watching the “baggy-pants boys,” as we called them. They were such a rarity in Italy that when you found one you had to hang on. “The baggy-pants boys” also consisted of leather-, chain-, and spike-wearing punks, tie-dyed hippies, and fifty-year-old drug addicts. They had a designated corner where they would all meet and disturb the peace while policemen hid around corners watching from afar. Every day we went there we would move closer and closer to their corner. We were spiders, and they were insects trapped in our web.

I had never seen Gian Luka there before. I figured he was new, so I let my cigarette dangle from my fingers as if offering something, as if telling him that everything I had was there for the taking. I didn’t think I was enough for him. I didn’t think I was enough for anyone. I liked his deep dimples, messy hair, and “I-don’t-care” attitude. I wanted him. I wanted him to want me. We all had a designated baggy-pants boy that we would watch like a dog begging for food at the dinner table. Our heads cocked, our eyes open, longing. We wanted them, not knowing what we wanted. He asked me if I would help him with something, would I come with him. I said yes, putting one weak foot in front of the other hoping “help” didn’t mean far away, hoping “help” didn’t take place in a bedroom. He led me down the Spanish steps and around the corner. I followed his shadow, not him. I was afraid of him. We stopped at a soiled public bathroom, and he told me to wait there as he kneeled on the stairs below me. He told me to tell him if someone was coming, as he took out a coffee can and began putting the contents of it into plastic bags. “Drugs,” he said. “But not really. I mean this is just herbs and wood an’ shit. But we sell it to the tourists ’cause they think it’s drugs.” He started up the steps and along the way back kept singing a line from a song that went, “Don’t worry, be happy.” But when he sang it with his Italian accent, it sounded more like, “Done wary, be ’appy."

“Let’s go for a walk,” he said, taking me to a back alley where we sat on a doorstep, speaking in two different languages, not understanding one another. Silence prevailed. And then he grabbed me, sticking his tongue down my throat, jamming it between my teeth, folding my tongue like laundry. I could taste the beer as his saliva collided with mine. I didn’t know if I liked it. It was my first kiss. I didn’t know.

He took me farther down the alley and leaned me up against a cold, stone wall; my left leg rapidly shook as he fingered my stomach, as he undid each button on my grey pants quietly, as if what he was doing was a secret, or wrong. My shirt climbed my stomach, and I could feel the stones become part of the small of my back. My left leg shook faster, each time springing my knee forward, and I thought about how I could flee. I planned out each step in my mind as he touched me. I saw my knee spring forward, hitting him in his crotch and running. I saw myself under water, clean and cold, wrapped in a blanket of seaweed. He touched me like I was a popsicle on a hot summer day, and he had to touch every inch of my body before I melted. When he reached the last button, he asked me if I had ever had sex before. “Yes,” I said. I thought if I said yes, it would make it easier to say no. I don’t know what my reasoning was, but I didn’t want him to realize that I wasn’t enough. “Do you want to have sex?” he asked. “No,” I murmured apologetically, then added, “’Cause, I mean, my friends are waiting for me.” As if I had to have an excuse, as if I had to explain why I wasn’t ready. I remember the padded bra I wore. I remember worrying if I had put on enough deodorant. Then I began to worry if I had put on any deodorant at all. He slid his finger along the top of my underwear, the underwear my mom had bought two sizes too big. The underwear lined with black lace and black bows. The underwear I had gotten when I had my first period. He exhaled into my ear, and I could feel my eardrums beat against his breath, wanting to burst free, to escape. He placed his hands on my waist and drew them toward the fly of my pants. I can still see him sliding each button through its hole. In black and white, in slow motion, in disappointment. I wasn’t enough. And I knew it. During my walk home I kept pushing piece after piece of gum into every region of my mouth. I chewed rapidly, trying to get rid of the taste of his juicy tongue and leftover saliva.

My friends screamed and bubbled in excitement, having made our first contact with the baggy-pants boys. I thought I was happy. I hoped I was happy.

“Did you like it?”

“Don’t you think it was a little quick to let him touch you the night you met him?”

“Was it fun?”

“Does he know you’re a virgin?” My friends filled my room with curiosity as we lay on the floor. They didn’t really care what the answer was. They already had their own visions of what had happened.

I lay there, crossing my legs and squeezing my thighs together as if someone was trying to burrow between them. I didn’t want to go back the next day, even though I knew I should, even though I knew I would. I hated the fact that he touched me, I hated myself for letting him touch me. And I hated the fact that I disappointed him, and that I wasn’t enough. I perceived his touching me as a compliment. I never thought someone would want to touch me. I never reckoned someone would, at least not for a long time. I didn’t like the smell of his breath. I didn’t like the temperature of his body, or the texture of his skin. I didn’t like him touching me. I didn’t like him wanting me because I didn’t want myself. I clasped my thighs together and wished they would become stuck like that forever. I still didn’t know what I wanted, but I knew I didn’t want him. I didn’t like my mouth being invaded, my eyes searched or body groped. I didn’t like my breath smelled, my voice heard or my ears whispered to. I didn’t know I wouldn’t like any of it. It was my first kiss, my first touch. I didn’t know what I wanted. I didn’t know.

We went back the next day. And the next day. And during the two weeks after my first kiss, we went there every day. We met his friends. Orso meaning bear, Giallo meaning yellow, Pizello meaning small penis, Diego, Matteo, and Carmello. Orso was roughly 275 pounds. Beady eyes that stalked you behind glasses that pinched the fat on either side of his face, squeezing sweat from his face like pulp from an orange. He would pull me onto his lap and bounce me, the fat jiggling in his legs, like I was sitting amidst a bowl of Jell-O. He would press his goatee upon the back of my neck and rub it up and down, up and down, up and down. His bristly hairs stinging my flesh, the smell of ham on his breath. I didn’t like his hairs on my neck, I didn’t like sitting on his lap or the scent of ham. They called me their doll, but I didn’t mind. It made me feel good that they wanted me. One night as I was lying on the steps, Jean Lucas appeared above me.

“Come on,” he said. “Why are you doing this to me? Let’s go for a walk.”

“No,” I giggled, pretending to be ignorant of the fact that he was serious. His dry hands moved up and down my arms casting flakes off my sunburned skin upon the stone steps.

“Please,” he pleaded, while some of his friends stood behind him watching, telling me to do it, to go with him. I imagined the stones again. I imagined him moving up and down on top of me like the ebb of the ocean. I imagined him being inside me, and I hated myself. I hated myself because I didn’t want to have sex, because I wasn’t ready. How could I let someone else in while I was trying to get out? I knew I was going to have to disappoint him. I stood up delicately, trying to seem as if I were enjoying myself, as if I were having a good time. As if I were still six, and I giggled at the word sex, thinking it was a secret game.

An acquaintance of ours, Lily, came along the next day. She was from Milan and wanted to see Rome. So we brought her to the Spanish steps. He didn’t say hello. He made it clear he didn’t care that I was there. He was shirtless and drunk at three in the afternoon. Beer glistened on his bottom lip like dewdrops on flower petals. He looked Lily up and down and leaned against a wall complimenting her loudly. “Anna—you see this? You should get your belly button pierced like this. And you should get your nose pierced.” I said OK, propping my hand upon my forehead; the sun was beating down on my back. It was beating a migraine into my head. Gian Luca turned his back against me. Lily told us to get together for a picture as Jean Lucas leaned into her. I knew she was preparing me, apologizing for what would follow later in the evening.

He came and sat next to me, smiling, with his eyes rolled up in his head.

“Kiss!” she said. “Anna smile!” So we did. We pressed our lips together, it’s just skin I thought. I didn’t want to kiss him, but I thought that if I could convince him I still wanted him, then maybe he would stay with me. If I could convince him there might be a chance of me letting him in, of my giving myself up to him, maybe I wouldn’t be such a disappointment. I felt like a pimple exploding on a teenager’s face. Being pushed together until my insides ran out and I deflated into a red wound of humility. I kept asking myself, Why won’t I let him fuck me? It’s all nothing but skin made up of organisms and tissue and stuff. It’s nothing but a body. My body. He asked Lily to go on a tour of Rome with him. She said yes, looking at me with an apologetic look on her face, handing me the picture. I knew what that tour would consist of—a bedroom maybe, most likely an alley. He winked at me like we were best buds and he was about to score bigtime. My friends tried to stand in front of me. They tried to prevent me from seeing. But I knew. I ran my tongue along the inside of my mouth and tried to forget the feeling of his teeth on my lower lip and hands clinging to my waist. I heard the English language as it surrounded me, tourists commenting on the Spanish steps, closing in on me, suffocating me. I waited for him to return. I didn’t know why.

He fucked her three times that afternoon. He fucked her earrings from her ears, he told me, as if pointing out what I had missed. The opportunity of a lifetime. He was telling this to me while I smiled, pretending to be listening to another conversation. But no one else was talking. “I gotta go,” he said to his friend. “My girl is waiting for dessert.” He placed his hands on my knees. “Ciao,” he whispered pityingly, extending his neck toward mine with expectations for a kiss; I turned my head and kissed his cheek. I almost said thank you. But he was already gone.

He never got to see my belly button pierced, or a stud in my nose. He never got to see my red, purple, blue, orange, brown, black, or green hair. He never got to see how hard I tried to be enough. I never learned how to say no. I didn’t know I would ever have to. I was thirteen years old. It was my first kiss. I didn’t know I wouldn’t like it. It didn’t know what he would want. I didn’t know, and I still don’t. I continue to lie at night squeezing my thighs together, gazing at the picture of our lips pressed together, taped above my bed, dreaming of days where I may be enough.

This work received a Gold Award in The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards of 2002.

Spinster

She suspects she has only ever had one true affair with the knife, and all those since have been meagre attempts at regurgitation, petty rivalries born of intention and tainted by the anticlimax of recreation. She sits daily watching the synthetic roses, virulent with red, fluoresce persistently on the porch. Moth-bitten, with broken stems and a hairline crack running the length of the ceramic pot that marks their station on the brick step. She sits observing their activity, disassociates herself from the solemn sermon their blushing heads deliver, ducking in the wind. Waiting for something to happen. She has lost, or perceives she has lost (and looks for death on the horizon because she fears she has lost) the ability to make things occur. How useful youth was in the day-to-day creation of happenings. Now she has displaced the seasons, and the pleasant expanse of nothingness, a featureless backdrop, assimilates itself to her emotionless countenance, as she welcomes the weather.

Her father’s house, in the Polish town. Its healthy walls, its strong bone structure. She found it easily, buried knee-deep in the liquid winter, and enquired of the locals as to whether anyone currently resided there. They regarded her, not more obliging than they were wary, with the heavy, knowing gaze of people carrying the burden of the past—both pervasive and private. Her accent was rusty, the native tongue had long since been liberated—a stray cut loose from its derelict cultural confinement. She spoke in dislocated dialogue; the secure, prosaic language of dinner parties and familial get-togethers. Of pleasantries exchanged between well-wishing strangers. Broken German from an elementary textbook. How she hated the sluggish tongue, the barren vowels that tripped reluctantly from the lips, imprisoned by the teeth. The English language seemed a positive ballad of elegant syllables. She had wished never to hear these sunken verbs again. She had tried to forget it all, but they spoke with a dramatic flourish, demanding that she remember, their tone didactic and intense with purpose. Those primitive villagers, deeply set in their archaic ways, the spit in the palm. Such old gestures seem a blessing on unimaginative bones, bones of gypsy ancestry; wrapped in incense and adorned with elaborate jewellery. She briefly caught the delicate, sickly scent of patchouli and lavender, an odour that seeped from their pores, travelled on the breath and suggested unrelenting hardship and wisdom and infinite strength.

She walked self-consciously, away from them, shielding herself from their accusatory recognition, feeling a pariah, a fugitive. As though wearing the flag of her inheritance on her lapel.

Her father died when she was ten, as did most fathers in the war. Fathers, and men. It was never a thing to be fussed over, death is the most reliable thing about life, everyone knows that. And they had dared to glorify it, morph it into a gross celebration. Stripped it of its austerity and depth. Spoke of souls and eternity. She could not allow for this, and carried the weight of his demise with her for so many years, never daring nor feeling inclined to lay it down. To dismantle it. What else can be born of death but sorrow? What else can be born at all?

She retreats to the stairs and pauses to consider the black telephone crouched on its haunches, ready to pounce. To announce. People don’t much come up to the house, it is miles away from the assaulting imposition of neighbouring cities. She doesn’t receive visitors warmly, and all prospective suitors dispatched by well-wishing relatives invariably retire back to their distant homes after an evening of her company, unsettled and discouraged, for she has created for herself a feminine mystique that cannot be penetrated by mere mortal man. She appears in their perception brisk, evasive, and preoccupied. She concentrates on cultivating a solid, scarlet heart to beat a constant rhythm against the world of the dying. She is keeping death out in the physical sense, assimilating herself to the prospect of solitary eternity and forming no attachments.

Sometimes she feels an inexplicable longing for the anonymity of the city, where such informal tools of misinformation as gossip and hearsay are not so readily employed. She envies them their compartmentalized lives, regimented working hours; those unobtrusive strangers who would submit to anything to avoid confrontation. A positive conglomeration of drifting, nameless particles, condensed within the thriving nebula of the city, where one could get smaller every day and very likely disappear.

But the suffocation. She politely declines, preferring to spend her days in the soft sunlight, arranging the weary roses.

She attempts to sweep away the misguided bugs with a few hesitant gestures of the hand. Soon blue saline solutions will wave a salutation to such foreign guests. Her light fingers graze the frayed edges of their heads; the bloody inks are particularly exciting in the sunlight. When the thought of blood transpires, the dizzying swell of the heart’s diastole and systole rises in her chest, a pressing undulation. So perhaps it comes as no conscious surprise when, upon brandishing the pruning sheers in order to trim the petals of their half-eaten siblings, she clips her finger instead of a stem, loosening a sizeable flap of skin over a current of blood. She resists the urge to suck the wound, but stares at her finger, suddenly regarding it as one does an unfamiliar object; a digit not attached to herself. How exquisite a ruby red the blood appears to be, and how warm against the skin. It is amazing how, upon mutilation, a body part becomes something external to the person to which it belongs, merely a treasured belonging. She stares at the finger for so long that it ceases to be a finger, in the same way as a word fails to register in the consciousness as legitimate when it has been repeatedly vocalised. Perhaps there is a separate self that exists beyond the body of physical composites. She puts down the sheers and rearranges the flowers, marvelling over her secret discovery.

Oh, Father. Now is but a moment passing. When does the future become the present and the present become the past? When do the living become the dying, and the dead become the forgotten? The brutish become the commemorated for the death that cleans the slate? Where does the tongue become the throat, and the voice become the word? The heart cease to be the person, but something bigger altogether?

Complex Fruit

Men are like kiwi

Women are like pineapple

Thus the complexity of fruit

In Arms

The helicopter flew into our forests two days ago, chopping the air like a large dragonfly with gauze wings splayed, plastered in metal and broken. We heard it in the dawn and I wiped the dew wet inside my ears so that I could hear it again, chopping the air through our trees. The men jumped up, and so did he, hush-hushing the fear and surprise. I forgot to breathe.

We found it today, sunning itself, its shadow short in the high hours of noon, waiting. By the time I got to it, running, yelling, victory in my ears, the men had already gotten to the pilot. He drooped over the side of the rusted door with a small red hole on one side of his head and a large splash of black death yawning on the other, his army uniform scattered in green shaded shreds. A bullet can take away a lot with it; it comes in like a thief and leaves like a drunkard.

I climbed onto the top of the metal creature, beating its green head with my fists, thinking it would crush in like a tin cup, victory in my ears. But no, the enemy would be stronger, I hurt my hand, there was blood on metal oozing, I did not care. I had wrestled a beast and put it to its death. I broke my red glass bangle.

*  *  *

I used to wake up with the taste of his dreams in my mouth. They say that if you are in perfect silence, you can hear air beating inside your ears. I could hear his voice beating in my mind even if I were dead. I lost myself to him without knowing, and one day I panicked; I could not find myself. I could not remember what I used to be like before. But then I did not care. I was in him, he was my home, my soul. I could have heard him even if I were dead, but it was he who died. He took my heart with him warm in his mouth, and I never saw him again. Occasionally, I hear my heart beating in his mouth, and then I know he is near. I believe in ghosts.

There are dense trees on both sides, and we follow a narrow path cutting through the leafy heart. It runs straight ahead and ends in a burst of golden light. The sun is setting. We have been told that the path falls beyond that point, and down on the other side is the river. But to me, it seems like I am walking into the sun. It is warm, but Sita is coughing by my side, her thick hand banging her chest every time. The dew seeps into our skin as we sleep on mud and leaf grounds, and the cold has grasped her body. Her thick frame shakes with the rattle of her lungs. We know it is more than a problem of her health.

“The herbs are not working, Baini. I took both leaves and the root. I don’t know what more to do.”

“We will deal with it, Didi. If Comrade Ram does not let you go to the front, I will stay behind with you. We can tend the lights.” I say it even if I don’t want to. We don’t like to wait on each other here. We don’t like to feel. I want to be at the front of the line. I want to hear victory in my ears. But then again staying behind would be a greater sacrifice, a higher duty. If she coughed, the enemy would hear. I will not let them hear.

*  *  *

I miss her sometimes. She comes in my dreams, and while I am dreaming, I feel her weight in my arms. I believe in ghosts, but I know she is alive. I can feel her soft skin, her roundness, her light heaviness, my daughter. She suckles at my breast and I push her away. I must not feel. I have a higher duty.

She is what we had, me and him. I remember how I used to see sunlight in the cracks cutting through the door, my parents asleep in the next room, and I would pick my doko and head into the golden green hills, chopping firewood, cutting cattle grass, feeling the ground cold brittle fresh with my bare feet. I used to cut whole days, climb trees with my axe, enter bushes shoulder-high with my sickle. And at the end of the day, wherever I may be, on whichever hill or on whatever tree, he used to find me. And he would carry my doko for me all the way back every day so that my back would not tire and grow crooked like that sickle, he would say, you are already as mean as that sickle, now I don’t want you to be as ugly as it, pointing to the sickle tucked at my waist. And I laughed inside, but I pretended to be angry and I continued to be mean. He only smiled.

He loved to talk and his eyes would look far away, past the trees with sunlight playing among the leaves, reflecting off the leaves like water; he would look into the sky blue with clouds like ghosts, white ghosts in distorted shapes, and he would talk. He talked about the king who had forgotten us. He brings back the stories of our fathers, the story of the young king who walked these same paths and talked to the villagers and how grand a feeling that was, to know that the king thought of them all the way out here from Kathmandu, and thought about them and thought of them strongly enough to come all the way out here where the roads were mud, paved at the last minute, and the steps up the hill were broken, patched up for his purpose. The Queen lifted the chins of the little village girls offering her flower garlands and patted their heads, “but she never took off her gloves, see,” he would say, and I would say, “maybe she was cold, my father said it was nearing winter,” and then he would laugh, “no, no, I am sure she does not wear her gloves in Kathmandu .” And then he would be silent.

At other times he would think of his sister, and I could hear his thoughts, and there would be ghosts and darkness around us in the golden light of afternoon. He would think of the big man with the blue cap and black boots, in charge of the largest building within four valleys. The big man either sat in his office with a grimy towel hung on the back of his chair, dictating, ordering, farting; or he sunned himself in the yard outside the police station, boasting, belittling, laughing; sounds of the tortured floating in from the overcrowded jail. He had a villager flogged once for making love to a goat. But then he went ahead and made love to my husband’s sister while she cried and screamed in a faraway field, wishing for the God on the buffalo to come charging by and take her to Death. When my husband marched up to him and spat on his face, he had him flogged too, all the while laughing at the sounds of the tortured floating up the hill. They found my husband’s sister two weeks later, her skirts soaked to the hem, swaying from the highest branch of a handsome tree, crows caw cawing in her hair.

When they came one night, infiltrating minds with their red flags and slogans, he left with them.

“Wife,” he addressed me, and it sounded like a coronation, “I cannot forget.” He took my hand and squeezed it into a red glass bangle. He felt our daughter’s cheek with the back of his hand. And then he was gone. Gone to address the ghost of his sister in the sky, gone to undo all the injustices in the land, to flog the enemy, the politicians with pregnant bellies and constipated faces in Kathmandu, the King, the crown. He went with his eyes dreaming and left me with a raw nipple, daughter in arms.

*  *  *

They did not miss out the details of his death. They laid them down, mouth to mouth, ear to ear, spreading through the village, spreading up to me with daughter in arms, he was shot in one leg first and then when he was crawling they shot him in the other and then in the head all from the air you see the enemy was in the air and of course who can outrun wings though he was fast so fast he was our best our hero. My husband became the village hero, and they came with flowers strung in hands, silent yet proud, knowing yet not knowing, telling me bless you your husband was a great man , telling my daughter in her cloths with her small oiled head shaping the mustard-seed pillow, your father was a great man a man of honor let him live forever. And then they returned, the ones in the green camouflage, with guns slung over stiff shoulders, red stars in their eyes and slogans in their mouths. One of them marched straight up to me sitting on the steps before my empty hut with my daughter in my laps, and he marched so sudden and violent I thought he was going to strike me. I drew my daughter to my breast. But then he stopped in sudden break just before my knees, stamped his foot hard on the dust ground, one hand rising to salute me the other raising his gun shooting in the air may your husband live forever. My daughter started shrieking in my arms.

Then there was emptiness and silence. I could not hear my heart beat, and so I replaced it with the heart of my daughter. Where are you with my heart in your mouth , and I looked up to the skies and searched for him among the white figures slipping through blue. I searched whole days away, but the silence nibbled at my mind, and I could not hear him and I could not hear my own heart and with nothingness in my ribs I went back and put my ear to my daughter’s small chest. I listened to my daughter’s heart with the widow’s sari cold and white over my breast.

I hid the red glass bangle. I was supposed to break it, actually, supposed to fall to my knees upon hearing the news, crying, wailing, tear at my hair, then grab a handful of soil and rub it into my hair, rub out the red powder of marriage lining my scalp, tear away the red beads of marriage around my neck, break the red bangle of love around my wrist. I did everything but break the bangle. I kept it under my daughter’s mustard-seed pillow, her head just nestling within the circle. What future do you have here, I asked, what future with your father dead your mother out of her mind your village torn and shredded, meat to the dogs?

*  *  *

I was not alone. The husbands of others died, the brother the fathers the sons. Weeping wailing why why why then silence, the birds dead in the trees, the cattle asleep on their hind-quarters, the wind motionless numb. Only the infants cried out in their sleep.

Then they came back, a whole army of them, red banners sailing in the sunset like clouds in the sky, ghosts of victory, slogans warm in their mouths, the throb of blood in their ears. There were gunshots and the infants in the village screamed and the dogs barked whined tails hiding assholes, scampering into the hills. And then for the first time, I noticed the women among the numbers, young girls of fifteen looking smart and in control, and I realized it was them with the world in their hands. One of them came up to me, daughter-in-arms, and I looked curiously into her glazed eyes, thinking she was blind, wondering how she could have walked so straight and with purpose up to my knees.

“Comrade,” she addressed me, and I thought women looked like fools in men’s pants, and the newness of the word made me giggle. There is a rumor stringing through the village, a rumor that these makeshift uniformed people call each other “Comrade,” an English word, Angrezi. They say that you can call anyone Comrade, a friend or brother or father. This girl, a green cap with red star above her eyes, her gun so comfortably crossing her back between stiff shoulder blades, her legs in men’s pants, was addressing me as an equal. I blushed, shifted my daughter’s weight from one arm to the other, blinked up at her shaded face with the sun like a golden crown behind her head.

“Comrade, you are a widow. This is what the corruption of Kathmandu has gifted you. A newborn fatherless child. We are not dogs, Comrade, we are not dogs, what do these people think? How long can we be oppressed? How long are they going to steal from us, steal from us with so little, steal the earnings of our sweat and blood? They murdered your husband, Comrade, they murdered his sister. They will murder you and then they will murder your daughter. Rise, Comrade, Rise!”

She raised her voice with every word. I thought she was mad, her eyes looking glazed, blind, unfocused, like something polished. My daughter awoke with a whimper.

“Rise, Comrade !”

I did not know if she wanted me to get up to my feet or join the ranks. I looked up at her again with the sun behind her red star, and I felt fear, felt the power of this young girl with slogans warm in her mouth, her ease with the gun, the confidence lining her back.

She was younger than me, but her presence made her older.

I should have addressed her as Baini, but I said Didi instead.

“Didi, what of my daughter?”

“What of her?”

And then I knew. Nothing of her, nothing for her, not here, not now. I saw myself and the bundle in my laps in two polished mirrors, my image in white, white on polished black, tattered white thinking where to get the next meal from daughter-in-arms, the failed potato crop rotting in the fields behind, where are you with my heart in your mouth?

I left my daughter at a neighbor’s house, and there were young tears on the old woman’s dried up face as she took my child into her bony arms caked in mud. May victory be yours, she said, and I walked away without turning around, the green men’s pants falling from my waist, the sound of my crying child falling away from my ears. Then there was no sound at all.

*  *  *

The women were worse than the men. They all had polished eyes, and in the beginning, I could not tell why. Some would train whole days, decapitating sandbags with sickles, and the sand would burst in a white fountain shooting up to the sky, and I would remember his words, you are already as mean as a sickle, I don’t want you to be as ugly as one. The others would be quiet, listless, weeping secretly, their tears washing into dew in the cold nights, but red stars rising in their eyes in the morning. Some of them were too young, just wrenched out of their mother’s arms, because when those in the green camouflage came to recruit with their unbargaining demands, parents decided that sons were too valuable, and sent their daughters instead. Let our sons work our fields, let our daughters fight the war. But there was more in this war for a woman.

The first night I was passed around five men, meat to the dogs. All the time I thought of him, never doubting that he had not enjoyed some female Comrade, imagining all five men to be him, to be his purpose. And then I landed up in the arms of Comrade Ram, and he decided to keep me. I became exclusively his, and the others fell behind, left me alone. I was content. I knew things would be worse at the front.

I have heard stories of the front, heard how they throw in the youngest girls first, how they are torn up by the bullets, their braids in the air like falling leaves. I have heard how the men get crazy sometimes, how the hunger and pain make them lose their minds, how one girl was attacked by twenty and how she died stars in her eyes. But I push the thoughts away. I live for the purpose.

*  *  *

We walk into the sun. The forest parts, the river bursts forth below. It is blue like a piece of sky that lost its way and I think this water must be the only thing that I compare in beauty to my daughter’s eyes. The line stops. Everyone starts pointing, fingers shooting in the air from the person in front to the person behind, and I can imagine Comrade Ram in the very front of the row being the first to lift his finger. “That hill, there, and then there, see?” The towering Comrade in front of me turns and points and his black bandana with the red star blocks out the sun.

The two hills rise like breasts and the river flows in between, a little to the left after the monsoon. The villagers say they woke one night after the rain and found that the river had shifted, lifted up and moved by the wind as if it were a young girl’s ribbon, blue, curling, whispering. It left behind ugly rocks like giant teeth grey and broken. Some ways down, where it grows fat with water and gets wider, rests the town, rests another police station with its building the largest in seven valleys except for the cinema hall. We are going to burn that station tonight, run at it from both sides, across the river, down the hill, gaining momentum, faster, faster, break through doors windows roofs slicing the blue men inside with our sickles our drunkard’s guns firing staccato under the stars, his purpose.

I readjust the gun between my shoulder blades, looking at the hills.

*  *  *

I remember the first time I held my gun. They had wiped the police station five villages away clean of life, leaving behind smears of blood in patterned designs on soil and cement, animal designs and pictures of birds, and they looted the guns from the storerooms and they stole the bullets in sacks. They had a bonfire that night with laughter, victory in ears, and all the guns were thrown into a pile like a construction of sticks. They ushered us in, the new recruits, wide-eyed and wondering, throbbing in my guts, and we stood single file, a stringed necklace around the pile, eyes blinking, ghost breaths escaping white in the cold.

“These are your arms,” Comrade Ram announced and it sounded like a coronation, “These are the weapons that belonged to the other side. Now they are ours. We have taken them, and now we shall use them to wipe out the evil tightening its grip about our throats. Rise, Comrades, Rise!”

He picked the guns up, one by one extending them firmly to our faces.

“Long live the Republic! Long live our Brother!”

I took the stick in my arms, arm in arm, and was surprised at its weight. I cradled my weapon, feeling its corners, feeling the newness, the coldness, my daughter of wood and metal. It was one-eyed and when I looked at it, it looked back long and hard at me with its circle of darkness. When I let it rest by a tree and turned around, I felt its eye on my back, its single black eye unmoving, unforgiving, watching, waiting, daughter-in-arms.

*  *  *

The line splits in two, Comrade Ram shouting out orders in front, and one split end extends towards one hill, the other towards the other. I follow Comrade Ram, close by his heel, down towards the river. The water is high, moving in waves like white muscles and blue veins, and we step into the wetness, the cold slicing my feet till I forget they are mine. I slip my gun off my shoulder, raising it high in the air above my head. The men’s pants get soaked, put on weight, and my legs are dragging against the power of the water. We move slowly, single file, taking in sharp breaths as the numbness moves above our knees. I enter a current and the force is too great, I fall on my knees, the water forcing its tongue down my throat, lapping around inside, feeling for my heart, retreating from the emptiness. The gun is held like a trophy, untouched, untouchable. I remember the story of how the Lord Krishna was carried as a baby across an expanse of water, and how the waves leaped up to his feet dangling off the edge of the basket, how even the water wanted to touch the Holiness in the flesh, how that almost drowned the one carrying the basket below. I think of my daughter. Her feet are pink underneath like spring blossoms.

I pull myself up, my purpose in my guts rising upwards, moving along my spine. I reach the other side and lower my gun slowly to the ground. My arms are sore and I am breathing hard, knees bleeding, blood sticking thick and black to pants, shivering in the black blue mist of dusk. Comrade Ram looks at me in the growing dark, and I cannot tell what is in his eyes. He shouts hoarsely at the others still in the water we are fighting a war here, not taking a swim. Long live the Republic!

Comrade Ram thinks of our Brother while he makes love to me. Our Brother, who gave up his position as a respectable man in Kathmandu to live underground, fighting for change, for rebirth, our purpose. Our leader. Our protector. Our war. I don’t know what our Brother looks like, but I am thinking he must look like Comrade Ram, shadows in his eyes.

We trek up the hill in the dark, black branches reaching to me like snakes and fingers, shadows taking the shapes of trees and bushes and death. The bora sack, wet and heavy strapped to my back is icy in the wind. My lower back is hurting, and I can feel the blood double-gush out of my uterus. The bora is slowing me down, but I do not dream of taking it off. It will be needed later to carry heads like melons, bouncing against the back of my knees as I run.

We set up our positions behind the trees feeling in the dark, listening for animals and ambushers, hearing insects surprised, touching snakes and wet frogs on rough bark like chapped lips frozen. Sita is coughing behind the tree next to me, and I can hear her muffle her sounds from the ears of Comrade Ram and the enemy, banging her chest, covering her mouth, choking herself in the cold darkness. We wait, motionless, soundless, in position, the river roaring far away below, the sound lifting up, and I am thinking the river covers the sounds of Sita. The enemy will not hear.

After a time so long, my legs numb in their wetness below me, the lanterns are turned on. I see them first on the other hill, someone from the other group turning the light off and on, blink, blink, blink. Then Comrade Ram turns on our lantern from the top of a tree, the light replying, blink blink blink. Other lights go up. Five lanterns talk to each other on two hills, across growling river and yawning space. The conversation ends, Comrade Ram jumps like a cat off the tree in the darkness; we are ready to move.

*  *  *

My feet rush beneath me, swift, soundless, sure even in the dark, my lungs screaming, branches rushing at me, leaves grabbing at my hair, the wind stinging my eyes. We clear the forest, the hill. I hear the others, and the sparse lights of the village grow in size on this side of the river, I can see shuttered shops and quiet houses as we enter, street dogs waking in fright, barking, growling, whining, tails covering assholes scampering into the hills. People wake up in their houses but they do not move, remaining lights going off, eyes waiting, watching. We run at the police station, and they are ready for us; their guns go off first. There are drunken bullets in darkness and screams of the dying, but we break through, into the largest building in seven valleys except for the cinema hall, my gun jumping staccato in my arms, dislocating my shoulder, my sickle slashing, feeling warm blood and it is almost comforting in the cold. I cover for the others, and Comrade Ram is ordering all the while from the front. On the way out, I see our dead, red stars in disarray in the blue blackness, and I pick up after the Comrade in front chopping heads with his khukuri. It reminds me of Dashain, how my father would tether the goat and clear its head in one quick fall of arms. The Comrade in front sacrifices our red stars for victory, his khukuri falling heavy in the darkness. We do not let the enemy enjoy the dead of our numbers, so we take them with us, take their heads because their bodies are too heavy, take their heads so we can never be recognized. We are ghosts fighting in the blue blackness, and like a strong wind, we bring change, lift things up and leave them someplace else, shifting things, twisting directions; nameless, faceless. I run downriver and then up the hill, blood warm in my hands, heads in the bora bouncing like melons against the back of my knees.

I reach our base behind the trees, my feet sure, my directions perfectly mapped out even in the darkness. There are voices of survivors around me, rising and falling, weeping, laughing, whispering, the river gushing in the background. I see the familiar shape of a body slumped against a tree and I go to Sita. As I approach, I see the whites of her eyes, rolled up and backwards in her dark face. Her cheeks are puffed out and I realize someone has stuffed cloth in her mouth and taped it in. Her hands are extended behind her body, tied in a backward embrace to the trunk of the tree. I am trying to decide whether she was too loud or whether the men lost their minds, lost control of their bodies, lost their senses and decided to take it out on her. I don’t know. We don’t question here. We don’t feel.

I sit against a tree, the bora by my side. I feel my wrist, feel the emptiness where the red glass bangle had been. I think of my daughter, feel her light weight in my arms. She must be sleeping right now, her breath coming slow and peaceful. I lift the gun off my shoulders and fling it some distance away. It falls with a metallic thud. I feel lightness, my shoulders relaxed, my breath steady. I hear a sound and I realize it is my heart, beating close to my ear, thud thudding in the blue blackness. I believe in ghosts.

St. Francis’s Program for Gifted Children

Janie, what is love?

Love is a flower, sir.

Hmm. Quite. And, Randy, what is hate?

Hate, sir?

That’s what I said.

It’s, er, a fire, sir.

Excellent. Brandy, define fear.

Fear is a report card, sir.

Ah. Hah-ha-ahem. Certainly. And—oh, are we to Byron?

Yes, sir.

Mm. Of course. Very well, then. Byron, do keep it shorter this time, won’t you?

Yes, sir.

If you please, what is anger?

Sir, anger is a falling star that blazes white, yellow, then red and drops from the sky in brilliant despair. It falls into my house, where it quavers, flickers, and stands still, with mere ashes surrounding its deathly glare. Sir.

Masquerade

The first note strikes to

the tune of deception,

The second note sung by deceit,

The musicians play on, a harmony of lies

As we rise to dance in the fraud,

Our steps—quick and light as evasion—

Echo with hollowness when set to the floor,

Waltzes of guile, forgery, falsehood,

Sweeping the room with polished distortion

When under the weight of our own self-destruction,

As the delicate melody draws to an end,

the dance floor beneath us crumbles and shatters.

Piercing egos in the stillness

 

This work received a Gold Award in The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards of 2002.

Rain

My friends often describe me as a cynic and a pessimist. For the most part, they ’re right. Sentiment loses value when it permeates one’s attitudes and behavior just as the value of a commodity decreases as it becomes ubiquitous, so as a rule I reserve expressing sentiment for rare occasions that I deem worthy. Fortunately, even the harshest cynics are surprised sometimes.

To begin, most people in my hometown know who Mike is. But I would bet that ninety-nine percent of those people don’t know Mike’s name. Mike is a homeless man who lives at the public library. He didn’t really attract my attention until several months ago; since then, I have found him impossible to ignore.

At about eleven o’clock one Friday night, I left my house with the intention of buying a CD at Discount Den. I grabbed my coat to shield myself from the chill air, the result of a cold front and incessant rain, lowering temperatures into the 40s and threatening to drop them even more. Before I reached the Den, I passed the public library and noticed Mike sitting on a concrete bench. Stopping at a red light just beyond the library, I attempted to force myself not to look back at his cold, shivering form. With guilt welling up inside my chest for driving past Mike so many previous times and overlooking him, I couldn’t make myself look away.

As the light turned green, I sat for a moment, not moving, and asked myself what I was going to do. Then I accelerated slowly, waiting for the car on my left to pass as I changed over to the left lane. I made four left turns at four consecutive stoplights until I approached the library again. Pulling into the library’s parking lot, I turned off my lights, radio, and heat. As I opened the car door, the cold air stung me like a quick slap to my face. Slowly and uncertainly, I walked toward Mike.

The street was eerily quiet as I crossed. So was Mike. Staring at me unwaveringly, he said nothing as I approached. The crow’s feet framing his eyes, the ridges in his forehead, and the crinkles in his cheeks still stand out in my mind. How many nights had he lain on that bench, covering his face as the wind whipped against it? Now he hugged his body tightly. He was wearing an old pair of tan khakis, a shirt that I couldn’t see clearly, and a light multi-colored jacket, its sleeves ending above his pale wrists, that was just slightly too small and clung to his body. As I gave him the money in my wallet, he took it—slowly—and stared at it for a second in disbelief. Although the street in front of the library is usually an amalgam of car horns, headlights, whining engines throughout the night, nothing—not one honk or screech of tire—disturbed the silence. Mike’s head rose slowly, and he looked me in the eye with nothing but sincerity and kindness as he uttered three simple words: “God loves you.”

In nearly any situation, I can think of something to say in response, but this time I was dumbfounded. It was as though a thick cotton sock had been jammed into my throat to suffocate any reply. I felt inadequate. After several seconds, I muttered something unintelligible and shuffled across the street to drive home.

During that particularly snowy winter, I often drove by the library looking for Mike. I was encouraged when I didn’t see him lying on the hard concrete bench. I haven’t seen him outside at night for quite a while. However, I did see him a few times inside the library during the day. After that first encounter, I stopped and gave Mike some money a few more times. We exchanged names and talked some more. These subsequent meetings made me question why I had been stupefied when he had first thanked me. When I hear a televangelist with a Rolex watch, an expensive suit, and a fancy hairstyle tell me that God loves me, it doesn’t move me in the least. Mike’s words are powerful not because he is a man who lives a life of luxury. His words are always powerful because he has no home, often no shelter, yet he is neither bitter nor resentful; it would be easy to succumb to anger and spite, but he doesn’t. Because my offering is so paltry, he could easily refuse it and ignore me, but he doesn’t. Instead, he tells me that God loves me, sincerely and without pretense. For this reason, Mike deserves my sentiment.

 

This work received a Gold Award in The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards of 2002.