
Sarah Nawrocki
Locusts

In the summer the locusts spit on my arms when I walk down the street.
It's not because I'm hurting them or because they hate me. They just don't
know what I am. They see me coming and worry I'll put them in a bag and
carry them home. They treat me like an enemy their own size, try to poison
me with one drop. Sometimes I think it is raining and I look up at the sky,
but then I remember that rain consists of many drops, all coming down at
once.
I don't like locusts much. I have read that they lay their eggs inside
twigs, and when the babies hatch they fall to the ground, dig holes and
burrow down like it's their own funeral. They stay there for 17 years. All
that time they suck on root juices, shifting around in the soil, finding
the best roots. When they come crawling out they look around for their mothers,
search for a drink of water, wonder what their names are. No one is there.
The mothers have died years ago. I don't know what happens to the fathers;
the book I'm reading doesn't say. But I do not like locusts. I would not
take one home and care for it. I would not talk to it and make it feel more
comfortable. It is not my favorite animal.
The spitting, though. If I had that spit. Imagine what would happen if
I used it on someone who pushed me down or bit me or called me a bad name.
Think how this person would fall paralyzed to the ground, would die a few
seconds later. Think of the surprise. My own killer spit. As it is, my saliva
is only good for the first stage of digestion, and at night it also keeps
my mouth from drying out if I breathe through my nose. Now that I'm 52 it's
hard to breathe quietly; Lucretia says I snore on purpose.
For a while, each night before I went to sleep I would concentrate on
having saliva as potent as mace. I would envision my victim covering his
face, saying ow ow ow ho boy what is this stuff, and his words would run
together, his ears would shrivel, his eyes would turn to prunes, he would
pick them out and eat them. His hands would flutter to the ground and land
palms up. I would act surprised, mumble something about a new brand of chewing
gum, say a small prayer. The prayer would go something like, Please make
sure he has a good bed and healthy meals in heaven. Sorry, God, it was an
accident.
The God part is not so much for God as it is for me and any bystanders
who happen to be listening. They should be on my side from the beginning.
The first person I spit on was a young woman, probably in her mid-thirties,
at the produce section of the grocery store. She was examining the lettuce,
her eyebrows knit together, her teeth large and square. Her hands grasped
each head and shook it lightly. I did not want to hurt her; I just thought
it would be good to practice. The way she frowned-as if choosing the best
head of lettuce were a serious matter, as if it would solve everything.
The way her feet pointed away from each other, the way she stood on her
toes, her well-manicured hands. I could not help myself.
I have, it turns out, a natural talent for this sort of thing. I did
not miss. My aim was true. Right on the neck. The woman reached her hand
back absently to wipe the drop away. She did not look up. I waited for three
whole minutes, and she did not do a thing. The lettuce drew all her attention.
I decided I would have to practice even more. I picked through the apples
and felt for bruises and I told myself, Martha, you just have to be patient.
My mother and father named me Martha almost by accident. Before I was
born they spent months tallying a list of the names they loved. As they
said each name, they must have imagined certain characteristics. For example,
if I had been named Zill, the most beautiful name in the world, I would
have had a passion for skydiving and late night walks in the rain. If my
name were Em, short for Emily, I would have developed a penchant for canning
home-grown vegetables, and I would have been afraid of the dark until the
day I died. And if I had been named Richard, well then, of course I would
have been a boy.
But I am named Martha because one day when my father was driving down
the road that goes to the next state, the list, which rested on the dashboard,
flew out the window. It was summer and my father leaned his arm out the
window and whistled the first lines to all the songs he knew. He did not
notice. My mother sat at home, holding her pumpkin belly with one hand and
drinking a glass of water with the other. Neither of them noticed. Their
precious list was gone forever. Their plans for the color of my hair, my
likes and dislikes, the size of my feet. My ability to cook and draw and
swim.
They must have scratched their heads, rummaged through the entire house
for that little scrap of paper. They probably tore their hair out. Maybe
they wept, threw things. The list of my names lay in a puddle by the side
of the road. But instead of starting all over, instead of trying to remember
the 20 or so names, they looked at each other, crestfallen, and said, Guess
we'll just have to name it Martha if it's a girl and Herb if it's a boy.
And that was the end of that. I was a girl and Martha is my name. I have
mop hair that used to be the color of pinto beans and large feet and crooked
fingers that bend in several directions, and a good brain.
My brain has never given me any trouble, and I can say with certainty
that if it had been me who had lost the list of names, I would have sat
right down with a pen and tried to reconstruct it. I would have gone straight
through the alphabet, and I would have said to myself, "a" recalls
Anastasia and Alyssa and Allerine, and "b" reminds me of nothing
interesting and neither does "c", but "d" is definitely
Desiderata and Desdemona and Diamond Darling and Dalia. I would continue
this way until I ran out of letters. And when I got to "m," Martha
would not have come to mind as one of the better names.
It is obvious that in my sister's case my parents did not lose the list;
she was born with good fortune. Her full name is Lucretia Miranda Cala.
All her names end with "a," whereas only my first and last names
did, before I got married. My middle name is Jane. That was part of the
accident, also.
Lucretia is seven years older than I am. I will turn 53 in twelve days.
Lucretia says I have had enough parties and that this year we will just
sit in the front yard and sing the song to me and eat pound cake. We will
see. I have told Lucretia time and time again that pound cake tastes like
moist cardboard, and that I want a small secret thing for a present, maybe
a sparkly glass eye or a marble to roll around in my hand. Maybe a piece
of luck, a horseshoe, for example.
Lucretia used to have brown hair down to her waist. Her eyes blinked
wide open and closed again; she was easily surprised. She fancied herself
a joketeller, a comedienne, and she told jokes to herself while she cleaned
the toilet and dusted the furniture. She was never in love with anything.
All her life things have fallen into her lap: good grades, invitations to
fancy events, men with perfect eyes and Valentines held anxiously behind
their backs, her own house. As far as I can tell, she still cares little
for these things.
Now, Lucretia's hair falls out in the shower and while she sits on the
couch. I find the long silver strands; sometimes they wrap around my arm
or one of my toes. Always I am careful to hide them. They upset her like
that, lying scattered throughout the house, intertwined with the shag of
the carpet. She complains she is going bald, that it is a sign of death.
So I put them in the cat food bag since I am the one who feeds the cats
and I know Lucretia will not look there.
Every day I go to the grocery store. Lucretia sends me in the morning
and at night, and during each trip I pick up two or three items. We do our
shopping this way, product by product. One day I will buy frozen peas, paper
towels, and apples, and another day I will get chocolate pudding-Lucretia's
favorite dessert-and a can of olives. I walk the three blocks to the American
Food Store, past the small boy eating pillbugs, the four grey houses all
in a row, the construction workers in their bright orange hardhats, the
shuttered windows, the whirring locusts, the parked cars.
Lucretia points her finger. Out out right now, she says. Go pick up some
plastic wrap, a bottle of juice. Leave me. She says I wander around the
house too much, click my teeth, wave my hands. But she imagines this. I
know people see twice as much as they really see, their minds making up
most of the pictures, changing colors, covering up shadows. I know it just
like I know I have an ingrown toenail.
The yesterdays creep into my head, mice in the corner, twitching their
fine whiskers, showing their teeth. Closing my eyes does not help. Neither
does tapping my feet and humming Christmas carols. They ask, soft and shrill,
where are those yellow button-up-the-side galoshes you had when you were
seven? Where is he, that bald-headed man, the brown plastic glasses on his
nose, your husband? What was the first thing you learned after you were
born? How do you know you look the same in the mirror as you do to other
people, when you have never seen the color of your eyes and the shape of
your nose for yourself?
When we were young, Lucretia used to give me things. People called her
beautiful. Long limbs and a smart face. She did not need presents the way
I did; people gave her more and she valued them less. For example, the time
Albert Sanders gave her a rock shaped like an egg. Lucretia was 16 and our
parents said she could go on dates. She dated Albert first: calm, nice,
a moose, thick-bodied and eager.
I came into her room once and she was sprawled on the bed reading, absorbing
the words, her face very still.
"Can I see your egg-rock again?" I asked her. I liked to touch
the smoothness. I liked the fact that Albert had found it in a field, that
he had not bought it in a store.
Lucretia put up her hand to shush me, her palm flat as if she were directing
traffic. "Wait a sec," she said.
She did not have any pictures anywhere. The walls were white and blank.
Almost a motel room; anyone could have stayed in it.
Finally she looked up. Her lips were thinner than usual. "Over there,"
she said, "on the dresser by the mirror."
I picked up the rock. It was the size of a chicken egg, white flecked
in with grey. I rolled it around in my hand and rubbed it against my cheek.
In the mirror I watched myself pretend to crack the rock in two, pour out
the contents, scramble them up in a pan. I made gurgling, hissing noises,
the sound of an egg frying.
"Shh," Lucretia said. "I'm trying to read."
I said nothing. I rolled the rock along the top of the dresser. I wished
I had a smooth gift, a boy to ask me places. I wouldn't mind if he was a
moose. Nine years old, my face plain as dough, I would not mind at all.
Lucretia slammed the book shut. "Just take it, Martha. Just take
the stupid rock," she yelled. "Anyway, I don't even like Albert.
A rock is a rock. You find them on the ground."
I watched, fascinated by the sudden transformation: one minute reading,
the next furious. I paid careful attention to the way her face creased up
in anger.
"Take it. It's yours. It means nothing." She propped herself
up on her side, opened her book, pretending to read again.
"Thanks."
She gave me things in this way often. But somehow they were never as
nice as when they had belonged to her. I wished I could leave them in her
room, could go in to examine them from time to time as if they were pieces
in a museum, on display.
The second person I spit on was a small boy, perhaps two years old, blond
stringy hair matted with food. It was in the supermarket, too. His face
was squinched, red from crying. He reached his arm out to his mother. On
the floor next to the shopping cart lay a half-eaten cookie. The boy had
opened his mouth wide, filling his lungs with air to let out a howl or sob
in a kind of terrible mourning. His mother faced the shelves, glancing over
brands of raisins, perhaps, or comparing prices per ounce.
I could not bear the sound. I know I should have felt sorry, especially
since a cookie must matter quite a lot to someone who cannot see over a
kitchen tabletop or tie a shoe. I know loss is proportional to possession,
that it could be graphed on a chart by a famous scientist. But this boy
bothered me. I gathered the spittle to the front of my mouth, walked slowly
over, deposited a drop or two on his head. His mother turned around, a box
of raisins in her hand. She gave me a concerned look, but she had not seen.
The boy stared at me. Mama she drooled, he said. His voice, now that
he did not cry, was high and wobbly. Nonsense, his mother responded. She
scratched the side of her face, put the box back on the shelf. They continued
down the aisle.
This day marked the third week in which I had spent at least an hour
each evening developing my talent. At night I sat on the love seat and thought
of cells with different skills, with super protoplasms and abilities to
produce deadly chemicals. Lucretia read in the rocking chair. Every few
seconds the back of the chair hit the wall. With each dull thump she said
"sorry". This is what we did with our evenings.
But I had been thinking hard. I knew when the boy did not die that the
food and leaves stuck in his hair must have saved his life. There was no
other explanation.
I met Bartlet Johnson in the eleventh grade. He had moved in with his
Aunt Jessica because his mother had run away. No one could find her. She
left in the night, and the next morning when Mr. Johnson planted himself
at the head of the table, expecting his breakfast, he did not realize he
had a long wait in front of him. He sat for a full 25 minutes, got all the
way through the news and sports sections of the paper, and still only the
placemat lay before him. No eggs, no bacon. Mrs. Johnson had left no note.
This was Bartlet's favorite story, the one he told most often. When I
met him he was telling it. The night of our wedding reception, all the friends
and acquaintances standing in a cluster around us, he told it. Sometimes
he said his father was a stern businessman, frowning mostly and wearing
a great deal of black and navy; other times he was jovial, raw-faced, the
manager of a gas station, wearing a crusher on his head to work in the mornings.
But always his father decided Bartlet must go live with Aunt Jessica,
his father's sister. And always, Bartlet said he thought his mother had
gone to find her fortune. The country she went to varied, but the result
was the same. Mrs. Johnson no longer wished to attend the town Ladies Guild
tea parties. She did not want to partake in Sunday afternoon dinners. The
hill country did not suffice. She planned to see the ocean, a mountain or
two, but no more flatland.
I first saw Bartlet leaning against a stop sign, hands pushed down in
his pants pockets, legs so long and gangly they looked as if they wrapped
around each other three times. It is true that his skin had a yellowish
pallor, that his hair already receded from his 17-year-old forehead. He
coughed periodically, and had the nervous habit of rubbing the thumb and
index finger on his left hand together, brushing off invisible particles.
Three or four kids stood around him. As I approached it looked as if the
kids were paying special homage to road signs. But it was Bartlet, voice
low, emphasizing the importance of the story, of what would happen next.
This time his Aunt Jessica, whom we all knew as Mrs. Culver, was a witch.
All through supper the night Bartlet arrived, she had pretended to play
the piano on the dining room table, and would only speak to him when he
stared at her. She chanted to herself every night, muttered things under
her breath, wore dirty aprons, raved about baked beans. She had eight cats
and they all bit. She said reading was the devil's pleasure. She would not
let Bartlet draw pictures; she claimed it was voodoo. She had eyes that
flashed green in the night but remained dull all day long.
Of his mother, Bartlet said only a few sentences. She had gone to find
her fortune, probably in Australia but who knows, maybe Canada. She had
black hair with a little bit of grey. She knew how to play the flute.
Bartlet's father had a long nose. He wore a brown crusher to work. He
liked bacon for breakfast.
We stood there transfixed, gathering his words like marbles, stowing
them in our minds for future reference. Bartlet's Aunt Jessica ranked among
the most popular and respected women of our town; our mothers invited her
to every luncheon they gave. To imagine her wandering the house in filthy
aprons, talking of voodoo and the devil, thrilled us to no end. We waited
for Bartlet to tell us more. But he shut his mouth into a straight line,
crossed his arms and just stood there, the stop sign a few feet above his
head. Tom Jasper invited him to his house for a game of football. I continued
on my way home.
So, really, the first time I met Bartlet he did not meet me. I remember
this and wonder if it means anything the way a horoscope or a fortune would.
One day a few months after Bartlet disappeared, Lucretia showed up at
my house. When the doorbell rang I was brushing my teeth, and I had to spit
all the paste out fast and wipe my mouth.
"Coming," I finally yelled. I nearly tripped over Bartlet's
old golf clubs laid out in the middle of the living room floor. Every afternoon
I examined the contents of the closets-I liked to rearrange the objects
by shape. Just the day before, I had begun to put all my long, thin belongings
in one closet: mop, broom, candlestick holders, vacuum cleaner, tarnished
coat rack.
I looked through the peephole. Lucretia was itching one of her ankles
and did not see my eye through the hole. I opened the door. "Oh hello!"
I said. "I didn't know you were coming. Is everything okay?"
Lucretia stood up straight. She nodded. "You've got a fleck of white
stuff on your chin." To show me she pointed to a place below her mouth.
"Thanks."
I wiped the toothpaste away. Lucretia peered past me into the room, taking
in the golf clubs, the sofa against the wall, the coffee table in the right
place.
"May I come in?"
I moved to the side and followed her into my own house, watched her stop
and sniff.
"I'm roasting chicken for supper. Would you like to stay?"
I said.
"No, thanks. No. I was just in your neighborhood, you know, taking
the bus to that coat store up the street. Winter's coming." She stretched
her arms out, one on each side, and then she yawned. "Well. Nice seeing
you." She smiled, but I saw that she was staring at the golf clubs.
"You don't want to stay?"
We had not even sat down yet. We'd barely made it past the foyer into
the living room.
"I've got to catch the bus back."
And then Lucretia turned to leave, brown leather pocketbook draped over
one arm. She walked briskly across the lawn on out to the street, her steps
so careful and dignified.
These visits happened again and again. Lucretia arrived, stayed a few
minutes, then said she had to go before I could give her anything to eat,
before we had a chance to say much of anything. Sometimes she just asked
me questions. Why didn't I have any photos of Bartlet anywhere? Why had
I moved all the furniture into one room? Did I rearrange my house every
day?
But now that we live together at her place I no longer have to answer.
Five months of staying alone was enough, Lucretia had said one day. She
said I would be better off living with her. At Lucretia's house the routines
keep us silent, which Lucretia would consider an improvement. The living
room is always a place for reading and watching television, and the pictures
on the walls are all paintings, no photographs, no one we would recognize
and start to talk about. I go to the grocery store, Lucretia reads, sometimes
we take the bus to other parts of town.
Bartlet did not have handsome eyes or graceful hands. He was a terrible
dancer. He only loved me for a few minutes, long enough to ask me to marry
him and to wait for me to say yes. Then in a few days we were married, just
like that. We were together for 16 years.
He called me Mar instead of Martha. I wanted to tell him to feel free
to call me Zill but somehow I never got around to it. I did not love him
the way he loved thunderstorms or the middle of the night. But I loved all
the stories: the way his father turned into a very different man every day,
the fact that one week his Aunt Jessica was a millionaire with connections
to British royalty and the next she had such a bad memory she could not
recall her last name. Bartlet's eyes gleamed. His face grew sharp. He looked
past me as if he were watching a movie.
He hated children and cats. He thought camping was silly. He could not
eat dry cereal without vomiting. He demanded bacon and eggs for breakfast,
just like his long-ago father before him. He was afraid of the dark. We
had to sleep with the bedside light on. I wore eyeshades. He gave me the
same present for my twenty-ninth and thirtieth birthdays-a manicure set.
His face grew yellower with the passing years. The years passed like stones.
Lucretia never married. She planted a garden, taught third grade, sold
her vegetables, bought herself a house. She giggled at her own jokes and
did not care whether anyone else found her funny. Her favorite type of joke
is a pun, the kind where the words in the joke mean something else. She
also likes useless sayings. For example, she loves it when people say, He's
feeling under the weather, or, She can't see the forest for the trees. Everyone
knows, Lucretia says, that there are no forests around here. And it is impossible
to be under the weather, especially since one can never see the weather;
one can only see what it is doing.
She does not like slapstick, however. She does not find it funny to see
me falling down in the garden or on my way to the grocery store, although
I find this particularly amusing. It is as if my feet have a mind of their
own-of course, Lucretia would at least find this, the saying, funny-and
even though I tell my feet to take a step or two forward they disobey. So
I find myself gazing at the sky when just a second ago I saw parked cars
and the end of the street. But this only happens once in a while, hardly
ever, nothing to pay special attention to. Myself, I like the cartoons they
have on television, the ones where the characters skid or slip on banana
peels and yell, "whoaaaaa." I like the way they run into walls
and fall down stairs even though they are trying hard to watch out, to take
care.
The second time I met Bartlet, the first time he met me, I told him I
was sorry. I had seen him ahead of me on the sidewalk and had to run to
catch up with him.
"What for?" he asked. He was carrying a bag of groceries home
to his aunt.
"For your mom running away. And I'm sorry your aunt's a witch. She
looks fine to me."
"Yeah. She looks fine to everyone. But I know because I live there.
That's the trick. Living there you see a lot more."
I walked next to him toward his street, the silence between sentences
neither awkward or comfortable. It had just rained, and steam rose up from
the asphalt in slow curls.
"So what's your name?" he said, peering in the bag. "I
can't believe how much kleenex my aunt buys."
"Martha."
It was then I realized he did not remember me from the stop-sign meeting.
This didn't bother me, though; I knew I did not have his caliber of stories.
No one in my family had run away. We all still lived in the same house,
four of us sitting in the same chairs each night at supper, Lucretia a teacher
now, our parents still our parents, me continually worried and in high school.
"Oh," he said, his face blank and neutral.
"My name's an accident. It could have been something better. You
shouldn't judge me by my name."
But he wasn't listening. "Look at that dog," he said. "It's
hurt."
I looked. Mrs. Gibson's dog, old and fat, limped across the street. "Probably
a thorn in its paw," I said, then tried to call it over. "Here,
dog. Here." I took a few steps toward the animal, but it stumbled off
in the opposite direction.
"I'm Bartlet," he said.
"Yeah, I know."
He turned, surprised, then rubbed his fingers together.
"We met," I said. "By a stop sign a few days ago."
I put my hand out and we shook. His palm felt rough, dry; the skin of an
orange.
I know I did not love him, but he was easy to listen to. It seemed as
if I would be able to love everything else but him all at the same time.
Always I imagine Lucretia in a blue fancy gown, the material crisp and
shiny. It is a picture I carry in my mind: my sister with thin white arms
stretching to encircle the world, her skin healthy, no regrets. She holds
many things: a tin of chocolates an admirer has given her, the future tied
in a ribbon around her waist, a grocery receipt, a small mirror shaped like
a heart. I watch her laughing, head thrown back, mouth open. She laughs
and laughs, so happy with a joke she has just told herself. I carry this
picture everywhere, and when I actually see Lucretia I am surprised that
she looks so different, jeans on, wrinkles around her mouth and under her
eyes, hands on her hips.
My mother did not have any boy babies, just me and Lucretia. I once asked
her if she wanted a boy and she shrugged her shoulders. She said it was
the luck of the draw. I never had any children myself, not while I was with
Bartlet and definitely not after. I did not want them eating all my food
and stepping on the spider plants growing in the living room. I did not
want to worry about their fragile bodies getting hit by cars or tripping
down the back stairs. And I did not want to wash their clothes. The only
thing is, now that I will turn 53 in twelve days, it would be nice to have
some relatives coming to my party.
Bartlet will never return. I have been waiting 18 years now, time enough
to be born and become a legal adult all over again; or, if I were a locust,
time enough to drink root juices under the ground for 17 years before arriving
in the world.
An evil person stole Bartlet right off the porch. One evening during
the summer he sat on the front steps to eat an apple. When I went out to
see if he wanted to watch some television with me-in the evenings it was
how we passed the time-he was gone.
His matchbook and cigarettes lay on the top step, so I thought he had
ventured around the block for a night walk. Not that he had ever liked walking
before, but there were his cigarettes, one poking up out of the pack for
good luck. People do not just disappear and leave their cigarettes behind,
I told myself. He'll be back in a few minutes, I said. And, a few hours
later, I thought he better get his little pear face in this house right
now.
Finally, I called the police. They told me not to worry. An Officer Rochester
said they could not do anything until morning anyway since I had no proof
that Bartlet intended to come right back inside the house as soon as he
had finished his apple. This officer did not believe me for a second, I
could tell. He thought I had soft brains and a worrying nature, that I wrung
my hands constantly.
In the book I have been reading, it says when locusts reach their full
size they can fit into a rectangular box. Insect scientists, who study this
all the time, have created a formula to find the normal surface area of
the locust. If the insect, with wings and legs carefully plucked, is fit
snugly into a box, its surface area should equal one-half that of the box.
I cannot imagine how this practice contributes to the world of scientific
knowledge; in order to be measured, the locust has to die. I think of myself
all dead and ready to go in the coffin, not fitting because my arms and
legs are still attached.
But still: these locusts. I cannot trust them for a minute. Last week
as I was walking down the street, one spit on me so hard I fell down. I
scraped my knee and both my palms. Lucretia does not believe it was the
locust. She says I tripped on a rock or a crack in the sidewalk. She says
locust spit is not poisonous anyway, even though I have read parts of the
bug book out loud to her. And last night when I told her how I tripped she
just laughed at me. I did not see a pun in any of the things I had said,
and when I asked her what was funny she covered her mouth as if she were
coughing.
I pulled one of her hairs out of the couch and held it up to the light.
"Oh look," I said, "I wonder whose this is." A breeze
shifted the air, and the silver hair moved slightly.
Lucretia shook her head. "You are always trying to use my hairs
against me. But they don't matter. They used to grow out brown. Now they
grow out white." She smiled, all her yellow teeth in a row. "Just
shove it down under the seat and I'll deal with it later."
I wound the ends of hair around my index fingers. "Too thin. Awfully
thin for a hair," I said, examining it in the light. And then I slid
it back under the cushion like Lucretia told me.
Lucretia bumped the back of the rocking chair against the wall. "Sorry,"
she said, like always. Outside, the locusts rubbed their wings together,
furiously singing to the night.
I did not always think I would be a wife with a husband who disappeared
and a sister who loves puns. I thought I would fly like Amelia Earhart:
thick airplane goggles, leather jacket, fur around the neck. Planes to land,
oceans to cross. Red wool scarf and a strong handshake.
Instead, after Bartlet disappeared I guarded the house. It had a couch
and easy chairs and a coffee table. It had curtains and a teapot and a window
fan. Bookshelves, pictures on the walls, matching silverware, a radio. Two
quiet goldfish. Everything settled, calm. The hum of the heater in winter.
I felt as if I were someone in a photograph: I am Martha and this is my
backdrop. I cannot move my arms; they seem to be stuck. I wandered the rooms,
fished hairballs out from under the bed and placed them under the dining
room table. I shoved Bartlet's neat piles of magazines to the floor. I sat
on the couch and picked at my fingernails.
Bartlet sold hats downtown in his very own store, which he called Johnson's
Hat Store after his last name. Businessmen came in during their lunch hour
to buy the newest styles, examining themselves in the mirrors that covered
each wall. Bartlet said men did not like to let others see them catering
to their own vanity, and if they did not have to turn their heads to find
their reflections, but only had to stare straight ahead, they would usually
buy the hats. Bartlet said this was the difference between men and women.
I told him men were all the more vain for not being able to admit it.
Sometimes I helped him unpack new shipments in the stockroom. White hatboxes
with the brand names etched on the lids in gilded, curlicue lettering, smelling
of leather, velvet, felt. I stacked the boxes maybe six feet tall in piles
around me. Once I accidentally bumped one. The boxes tumbled down, crashing
and hitting other boxes. Bartlet came running in the stockroom, said what
is it what is it, hand mopping sweat from his forehead. But when he saw
the boxes scattered all over, some of the corners bent, he shook his head
slowly and closed his eyes. He squeezed and unsqueezed his fingers.
"Mar. Mar. Mar." I watched his lips say my name, pursing, pushing
off each other, opening. "This mess, this mess, the boxes you damaged.
Probably forty or fifty."
"Sorry," I said. "I didn't mean it."
"I think maybe you should go home and never come back."
He said it as if he could not decide, as if he were discussing whether
or not it would rain, whether or not the corn would be good this year.
That was the last time I was in the stockroom. I went in the front sometimes
to bring Bartlet his lunches, which had been forgotten on the kitchen counter.
Out in the store his stride seemed quickened. His keys jingled in his left
pants pocket. Once I even heard him humming low and almost melodic.
When I moved in with Lucretia she let us get a cat. The animal is fat
and very calm. We found it in Lucretia's backyard one afternoon. It would
not leave. It just lay on its back with its paws in the air as if it were
an actor playing a dead thing.
We think this cat belonged to someone else before it came to live with
us; it does not scratch the furniture or jump on the table and eat the dinner
off our plates. And it is rather polite-except that when it arrived it was
secretly pregnant. We did not know this until we found the babies squirming
and mewing in the potato bin. Three we gave away and one lives under the
house. At night we hear it stalking mice. We call it Ida for no reason.
The way that first cat arrived, the way it played dead, I thought it
was Bartlet in disguise. I waited for it to impersonate other things-a rock,
Mrs. Johnson, a dog, Aunt Jessica. But that was just the way it slept; it
was not acting at all. Then I began to think that perhaps, just as this
cat had arrived-by accident, not even walking, just waking up in a new place-so
had Bartlet found himself sitting on someone else's front porch; apple still
in hand, cigarettes and matches left behind.
I could not decide whether I should begin knocking on people's doors
in nearby towns, asking if they had seen Bartlet, or whether I liked living
with Lucretia and the cats, going to the grocery store every day. And I
did not know what I would do if I found Bartlet eating someone else's supper,
selling hats in a different Johnson's Hat Store, telling the same stories
to someone else.
Yesterday I spit on Lucretia. We will both never forget it. I went to
the grocery store for some lentils; Lucretia wanted to make 15-bean soup,
but we only had 14 kinds in the house. I bought the orange ones because
they were on the shelf. A sunny day, the grocery store nearly empty, a Monday
with everyone at work. My favorite cashier, Janet, who never wears her nametag,
rang up the lentils.
"The store looks very clean today," I said. The cashiers like
it when I tell them this.
Janet smiled, her braces showing even though I know she hates to wear
them; in fact, she often talks without moving her lips. "Thanks, Martha.
Frank mopped the aisles this morning." She handed me my receipt. "Have
a good day."
When I got home, Lucretia was soaking most of the beans in the soup tureen.
"Here you go," I said, handing her the bag. She opened it up,
peered inside, drew out the package.
"They're orange."
"Yeah." I walked over, stood behind her, examined the lentils.
They looked fine. "So?"
"I need the brown kind. I told you brown. The recipe says brown
lentils." She spoke slowly as if she were carefully placing the words
before me.
I could not remember if Lucretia had said brown or orange. I just knew
she had asked me to buy lentils. "I don't think you said either way.
That's the kind Great American carries. The only kind. They probably taste
the same, anyway."
"But they won't be the same. Otherwise the recipe wouldn't have
specified. Ruined, possibly ruined."
She turned away and opened the package over the sink. A few lentils scattered
on the floor.
"You don't have to use them."
She glared at me. "Might as well," she said, her eyes slightly
narrowed and her lips pursed, a look she had perfected years ago. Maybe
the day I was born. Maybe as soon as I could see and remember. It was hard
to say.
The earthy smell of beans absorbing water filled the kitchen. And then
I had to do it. Brown lentils. It was just a color, nothing more. My older
sister, always the beautiful one; her long hair and self-made career. The
hundreds of books she had read. Her life cradled in her own hands. A marble
to guard. I gathered the saliva and spit hard. The drop landed on Lucretia's
forearm; her sudden look of horror. Her mouth open, curled down a little
with disgust.
"See, I spit on you. There it is," I said.
Like the other times, this spit had no poison. Just the same old spit
cells producing the same watery stuff. But Lucretia's face, the degree of
offense, her hand holding a spoon in mid-air, as if she would either strike
me or drop it to the floor.
I stood taking in the meaning of what I had done. I had spit on my sister.
Meanwhile, slowly, methodically, Lucretia pulled a piece of paper towel
from the dispenser above the sink and wiped the splotch on her forearm away.
Then she folded up the paper towel square upon square, creasing each fold
carefully, shaking her head. "I would never do such a thing. I would
never spit on you. I just wouldn't."
Still I did not know what to say. "Oops," I managed. But "oops"
is never enough. "Oops" implies an accident, but probably doesn't
even exist in the dictionary. It's just not impressive. Yet I couldn't bring
myself to say I was sorry either-that I would never do it again, that I
did not mean it.
I went outside and sat on the front steps. Ida rubbed against my leg
and purred. Across the street the boy who ate pillbugs rode his tricycle
along the sidewalk, ringing the little bell attached to the handlebars.
His short legs pedaled furiously, thin bones, matching outfit. I imagined
my own self flying over the countryside, no longer sharing Lucretia's house,
my hands on the controls, red scarf flapping in the wind.
Bartlet and I sat on the double swing in Aunt Jessica's front yard. It
was July. Tent worms spun their massive webs around tree limbs, choking
them and turning the leaves brown. Locusts droned melancholy in the heat.
We rocked back and forth on the swing, Bartlet dragging his feet on the
ground. He began the story of the songs his mother used to sing to him.
"She had this awful voice, so the songs never made me sleepy. They
made me laugh." He looked at his hands, rubbed his fingers together
as he would countless times in the years to come. "And when I laughed
I didn't mind the dark. Of course, the night light stayed on. I still needed
the night light."
I nodded my head, trying to look serious. I was 18, my hair pulled back
and tied with a blue ribbon. I considered myself on the verge of wisdom
and great insight. Bartlet kept talking, his words filling up the still
summer air.
"When she sang happy birthday to me my father would look over at
her and frown. She sounded that bad. But they would both end up laughing,
and then we would eat the cake."
I searched my mind for something to add. "My uncle is tone-deaf,"
I said finally. "He was born that way."
"What?"
Bartlet looked at me, confused. We rocked back and forth in the swing,
neither of us saying anything. I wondered if he had forgotten I was there.
I was supposed to be his girlfriend, but sometimes I felt as if I were just
a part of the scenery. Bartlet would have been happy to tell his stories
to himself.
"How's your Aunt Jessica?" I said.
Bartlet wrinkled up his face in disgust, then wiped away the beads of
sweat forming on his upper lip. "You should see her. Lately she's taken
to calling the broom her lover. She says, 'The broom, my love, come dance
with me, sweep me off my feet.' And then she giggles hysterically. She turns
to me with the broom in her arms and says, 'Meet Bartlet. He's my nephew.'"
I nodded and kept my face neutral. If I asked too many questions Bartlet
might lose his train of thought and I wouldn't hear the rest. It was all
I wanted. To hear the rest.
"And the other day she puckered up her lips and gave her hand a
big kiss,and then she smeared it on the broomstick. I couldn't take it.
I left after that." He rolled his eyes. "A loon. That's all. A
grey-haired loon."
I sighed. "Too bad," I say softly. "Tragic."
And we sat the rest of the evening, me sighing and nodding-while Bartlet
slowly widened the circle that surrounded his tiny kernel of truth.
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