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Saturday, June 16, 2012

Fiction #36: Aimee Henkel

Waiting for Jason Lee

Jason Lee was the most handsome person I had ever seen. Tall and lean with a tendency to stoop, when he walked he veered to the left as if he was listening for his name to be called far off in the distance. His eyes were bright and clear and the deepest blue this side of a dark evening. The first day I saw him I was walking to school with my brother James, and in those days I was a Jesus freak, so none of the neighborhood girls asked me to walk with them for fear I might try to convert them all to being Christians, and then they couldn’t smoke or drink or play hooky, so James and I passed the time talking about what teachers we had, what time we would meet after school. We lived less than a mile away from our middle school, and we walked rain or shine. We wished we had family to drive us, but since momma went to work about 7 am, there wasn’t anybody. In fact, if we hadn’t lived with grandma, I’m not sure we would have gone to school at all, but she made sure we were up and out and well-fed to boot and she wasn’t fooling around about that.

None of us kids met Jason before the start of the school year, though he’d come in July, so when I saw him walking ahead of us, I wanted to say hello, but his sister made me nervous. Her clothes were strange. She wore long white socks under a pair of knickers - which wasn’t how we wore knickers at all - and wooden clogs that thumped like bass drums on the sidewalk. Her sweater, too bulky for the sweltering fall weather, had bright green, yellow and purple stripes, and she had rolled the sleeves to her bony elbows, making donuts above her forearms. Her red spiral notebook was stuffed with multicolored paper and pages hanging out.

Jason and his sister followed the boisterous parade toward the middle school as kids joined other packs of kids, everyone talking and shouting. Eventually my brother moved off to walk with his friends down the spooky path, and knew I’d better walk a little faster if I wanted to walk with someone, too. James and his sister were right in front of me as we entered the deep shade of the cut-through and they step-clomped over the wooden bridge. Everyone threw a penny over the bridge on the first day of school, which he didn’t know about, and as they walked over the bridge without stopping, I felt I had to do something.

"Hey!" I said, a smidge too loudly. "You can’t go over the bridge without throwing in a penny. It’s really bad luck. You’ll get bad grades all year." Jason Lee stared at me, and I was sure my new bright red pimple, exquisitely limp brown hair and so-thick-as-to-be-opaque glasses would scare him half to death. It seemed he thought I was crazy; I could see it in his eyes. His sister simply turned on her heels and kept going, but Jason half-smiled and tossed in a dime.

"But it’s got to be a penny," I insisted and handed him the penny I had saved for my brother. "If you don’t, I swear you’ll have a stretch of F’s a mile long all year."

Jason Lee regarded me in that way he had, leaning to the left and smiling, his mouth partially open, his eyes narrowed. He took the penny and tossed it over the side of the bridge, then leaned over and watched it float gamely to the bottom of the creek, where it was lost in the mud among dozens of other pennies we had thrown in over the years.

"So now I get A’s?" He turned and winked, then walked up the short hill leading to the high school. I wasn’t sure if I ought to follow him or just pretend like I was just being a Good Samaritan and leave it alone. Of course, I couldn’t let him walk to school alone, since his sister had left him, so I jogged a little to catch up.

"I’m Eustace and I live a little ways up the street from you. Are you new?" I said. Jason Lee grunted in that way boys have when they don’t want to answer a question and here it is being asked anyway. He turned and stared at me from at least four inches up and I could smell new leather and roses and lavender, which must have been his soap mingled with the flowers in the gardens up at school.

"I’m not much for friends, okay?" I could feel the heat start from the tips of my toes and rise, like I had just drunk hot tea on a sweltering, humid day, reaching up, up, up through my shoulders and into my neck, bursting like fireworks on my cheeks. So I just walked past him; what could I say? But I had fallen in love with him just then, and I couldn’t say why. Maybe it was the way he said the word, ‘much’ or the slight tilt in his head when he muttered ‘okay’ or it was the way he put his wide, square hands in the pockets of his brand new jeans; to this day, I couldn’t say what it was. All I know was that I wanted to know him in the worst way, and not in a sexual way either, although in hindsight I have to say there was an awakening someplace in that physical area I wasn’t aware of until much later. And, like every girl, I had some experience with wanting. I had drooled over Rob Lowe in Teen Beat and written letters to William Katt from Greatest American Hero. Just because I was a devout Christian didn’t mean that I wasn’t interested in boys or sex, I just knew they had their place.

This was an altogether different feeling anyway, and it consumed me from the moment I had it. I imagine it is a lot like stepping on a live wire, or seeing someone you love get hit by a car, or maybe it’s like losing your breath after staying underwater for too long and then coming back up only to realize the air is so thick that it doesn’t satisfy.

Later, after days of questioning the sisters of friends and friends of friends and following him home almost every day, except the days when I had detention, I learned that he was seventeen, lived in the old cottage in back of the apple fields - mostly because there used to be lots of ancient crab apple trees in the yard - and that he was living alone with his younger sister. Misty Franklin’s mother was a teacher in the middle school where Minerva went, and Jason Lee had written himself in as her guardian. Apparently their parents had died in a tragic car wreck and as far as anyone could tell, he wasn’t able to drive, didn’t work and had no means to support them, though he took the bus every Saturday and Sunday morning and arrived home with two bags of groceries on Saturdays and a bag of bagels and the newspaper on Sundays. The rest of the days he walked to and from school with Minerva, spoke to no one and did whatever was asked of him by the teachers in school.

As it so happened, my brother and Minerva became good friends, although it was something I couldn’t understand from the beginning.

"How did you meet her?" I asked on Sunday, when he and I were fighting it out over a good game of Galaga on Atari. I had a bowl of chips to my right, and was lying on my stomach, where I had better command of the joystick. James was sitting on the couch, his power position.

"She likes art. We sit next to each other in art class."

"Does she really like art? She seems retarded." One of my ships is sucked up by the mother ship and held in its beam. Then they become two fighters, which seems like a good thing, but the second fighter gets destroyed so easily.

"She’s not retarded, she’s different. Her parents are dead. Her brother is a nut case." My last fighter is blown up, and James whoops. My grandmother calls down from the kitchen. "Your grandfather is sleeping. Shut up." Granny makes us crack up when she tells us to shut up, pipe down, close your pie hole, that sort of thing. It’s like spontaneous poetry.

I sit up, turn to look at him. "Nut case? He seems awesome. So cute, but don’t tell her I said that. God, I’d die. Oh, sorry God. I mean gosh."

"You’re a nut case, too, religious fanatic – you’re perfect for each other." James’ last fighter dies and he throws the joystick down. "It’s not any of your business, even if you are in love."

"What makes you think that?"

"He knows, I know, Minerva knows you’ve been asking about them. She thinks you’re demented. He can’t be bothered. Like I said, you’re a nut case."

"But what makes him a nut case?"

"What makes anyone a nut case? He’s not social, he doesn’t work, doesn’t talk to anyone. He won’t learn how to drive, won’t eat eggs or cheese, doesn’t like chemicals, and won’t take showers in hot water. He won’t even ride a bicycle. He’s taken some kind of vow."

"What kind of vow?"

"Minerva doesn’t know. It’s like it changes every day. It gets worse and worse; now he won’t drink water except at night, he won’t turn the lights on when she’s not home. She wants to call their aunt in California, but I think she’s too old to come out."

"Maybe we ought to help him. Tell someone in Guidance." My brother just shook his head and trooped upstairs.

I thought about James Lee for weeks on end, watched him and wondered if he was getting skinnier by the day, but I couldn’t tell. He favored clothes that hung off his shoulders, single color pastel polo shirts and washed out jeans. He had one pair of hiking boots, torn at the toe and worn down at the heel, and one day I saw he had a cut on the side of his hand covered with a large gauze pad. I started to wonder if maybe he was cutting himself out of some unearned guilt, perhaps over their parent’s death, and thought I might help him. I had nothing to lose by talking about Jesus.

I followed him to school earlier than usual, mostly because he had started to notice me and leave earlier, too. I thought I might be a nuisance to him, but in that fevered, unknowing passion I had - so that I was dreaming of our wedding on a secluded island in Fiji or a deserted church in the middle of a Maine wood - made me reckless. Minerva walked with James now, so I had nothing to worry about there and only had to run just a little to catch up to him. The gardens were just beginning to wilt and die, the golden trees drooping with heavy seeds and the deep loamy scent of molding wet leaves seeped from the ground; I wanted to share it with him, the glory of the season, the excitement I felt for the coming holidays, how much I loved Halloween, and more, that soon I would be fifteen and I believed as no other teenager did that my ugly duckling stage would be behind me. I had hoped and prayed for my fifteenth birthday for as long as I could remember, hoping on that day I would lose 30 pounds, my skin would clear and my eyes would sparkle and simmer with long, black lashes and emerald green flecks.

I caught up to him just as he went onto the narrow path, and I was forced to walk behind him, so that I felt like a mouse chasing a cat.

"Hey Jason Lee," I called, mostly out of breath. I tripped over an unearthed root and nearly landed on my face in the green brambles beside the path. He turned slightly to acknowledge me.
"So, what happened to your hand?" He looked at it and sighed, then stood to face me on the path, regarding me.

"Why am I so important to you?" Jason Lee dropped his book bag on the ground. "I don’t get it."

"Well, I guess I am in love with you, and that’s about all there is to it. I wish I wasn’t because then I could go on with my life and stop thinking about you all the time, but I can’t. I never met anyone like you before and I think I won’t ever again, so before I lose this chance to tell you how I feel, I wanted to make sure you knew and I hope you won’t think I’m an idiot because that would break my heart and I am too young to have my heart broken, besides I know I am not that pretty, but when I hit my thirteenth birthday I am going to change."

Jason Lee whistled low and blushed bright red, like apples in the sun on a cool fall day, and he smiled so that it reached through his eyes and into mine. "That was some speech. You’re only fourteen?"

"Yeah…" What else could I say after that? I wanted to sink into the ground like a puddle of water, get lost in the creek.

Jason picked up his book bag and sighed, slinging it over his shoulder and tightening the bandage with his teeth. "What do you think happened to my hand?"

"Want to know the truth? I was thinking last night that maybe you cut yourself like those priests in the middle ages as a kind of purification ritual for your parents death, that somehow you thought it was your fault and then you –"

He turned on me then. "Who told you my parents are dead?"

I blanched. "Well, I asked around."

"They’re not dead. They’re drunks. My mother is in prison. She killed my brother in a DUI. My father is in a long term rehab. He had a stroke last year from too much booze and now he’s got a brain like a rotten vegetable. Screw them." Jason kicked a rock and sent it skidding into the creek. "Shit."

"It could be worse, right? They could be dead and you’d never see them again."

"That’s the whole point. I don’t want to see them. Everything I do is so that I can make it on my own and take care of Minnie."

"Minnie? Really? That’s what you call her?"

"What else?"

"She just doesn’t look like a Minnie to me."

"She’s only Minnie to one person. Me."

"Right." We were at the steps of the school now, our classmates and friends pushing past while he and I stood aloof and locked in a strange sort of goodbye that held everything and nothing all at once. "I’m sorry about your parents, really. And I feel stupid about everything I said, even though it’s true. I wish I had written it in a letter or something. I’m a freak, but at least I know it."

"That’s okay. I get it." Jason turned and walked up the stairs to his homeroom, and as I headed downstairs to mine, I knew that was the beginning of my learning all about Jason Lee Mansfield.

***

We walked home together every afternoon. He met me at the school steps and we took the path slowly. He didn’t talk much at first and we walked silently to my house, where I would see James and Minerva eating crackers and cheese they’d scrounged from grandma’s refrigerator. I’d have to wait downstairs until they were done eating before we could eat our milk and cookies, mostly because there were only two chairs in the upstairs kitchen, and too because Minerva made me nervous.

I’d write in my journal or read, and wait for Jason Lee to call and invite me over, which he started to do once he saw I wasn’t going to blab to the whole world about his family. At first we sat outside in the warm fall sunshine, and then, when it got too cold, he would light a fire in their small stone fireplace and we’d sit in front of it. I couldn’t tell you what we discussed, books, friends, teachers, classes. He told me stories about his parents, where they’d lived; it seemed like hundreds of places, how little they’d had to eat growing up, how he’d had to steal and forage when they were homeless or living in their mother’s car. But still, through it all, they’d gone to school clean. It was the main reason he felt contempt for them. If only they had been dirty and ragged, the school would have taken them away, but his parents were smarter than that, and made sure no one knew. He and Minerva were threatened not to talk, and they didn’t despite being hungry and tired and cold all the time.

They had come last from a trailer park in Virginia, but he couldn’t tell me how long they had been there or why they had left. He guessed his mother had run out of unemployment money and his father wouldn’t look for work. It was all the same to him, the failure of his parents. He expected it, planned for it. He had yet to visit his mother in jail, although she wrote to him constantly. He figured it was just for money and never opened the envelopes.

Their cottage was a one room caretaker’s shack, part of an estate that had been parceled off and made into a development. It was set back from the road and hidden by a hill so you couldn’t see it from the road. The white paint was peeling, the windows were all cracked and split, and the roof needed repairs. The concrete step leading to the crooked front door was crumbling and the doorbell was falling out of the doorframe. When you stepped inside, the smell of burnt wood and old coal hung in the air like a wet blanket and the furniture, which came with the place, leeched it out. The floor was made of painted pine and gapped in spots large enough to put Jason’s foot into, the dirt underneath cold and black, like tar in spots. Just opposite the door was the brick fireplace, their only source of light and heat. Jason was afraid to keep a fire burning while they were in school, so when he got home there was ice on the inside windows and their pipes were frozen. It got so that they wouldn’t turn the water on in the winter and took warm birdbaths on mornings when Minerva heated the water. The cottage was paid for by his uncle in Connecticut, and he sent them a little extra from time to time, so at least they had money for emergencies.

They ate mostly what they could buy with food stamps, since Jason knew how to work the system to some degree and he could make due with whatever anyone gave him. He was a vegan and ate only what was easiest to buy, rice and beans, canned vegetables whatever was on sale. There was not much else for him to do, being on the limited budget, and he swore he would, when he graduated high school, get into community college and somehow find a way to earn a living so Minerva could finish high school and get her diploma, too. That seemed to be his driving obsession.

As I began to spend more time with Jason, I could see the merits of his lifestyle. Rice and beans were fine for me, as was vegetables and tofu and polenta; who didn’t like pasta? But there was more to it; he lived in a world of deprivation even I couldn’t go to, despite living in near poverty at my grandmother’s. James and I knew what it meant to be broke and we watched our mother work three jobs to support us so that I had ballet lessons and we both got new clothes and birthday parties. We ate what our grandmother served us and we had heat and hot water; Jason had none of those luxuries and it seemed as if he didn’t miss them the way James and I would have. He didn’t expect the normal luxuries of life and that was what made him much different from me. I wondered if he would ever expect something better from his life, he was so resigned to the dinginess of it all.

In a strange way I was proud of him, too, that instead of letting the state take him and Minerva away to a group home or foster care, he was taking on the whole burden himself, which takes a lot of courage, and he was sacrificing a lot to do it. He could work or leave school altogether, he could have been a mechanic or a clerk, or worked his way up in some state job, but he didn’t. He had dreams and they meant something to him, which was one of the reasons I liked him so much.

That winter I didn’t see much of Jason, though it was a lot harder now not to see him, since we had grown so close. Whenever I stopped by the cottage, trudging through some of the deepest snowfalls we’d had in years, I was turned away at the door by Minerva with some excuse, no heat, no water, Jason was sleeping, and on and on. Jason always smiled on our walks to school, said he was feeling tired, overwhelmed, but I didn’t believe that either. There was more to the story and I was determined to find out. One afternoon I left school early, pretending to be sick and getting a note from the nurse. I walked to the cottage, just to have a look around. I knocked, hoping the door would swing open, but instead it was locked. I turned to walk away, but then the door opened.

The man at the door was about 60 years old, stooped and blonde, with streaks of grey throughout his hair. His eyes were wrinkled and tired, a little out of focus, as if he hadn’t had to look at something specific for a long time. His hands trembled on the edge of the doorsill and he gripped it tight to hold himself up. He wore a long terry cloth robe, red slippers and his legs were bare. I smiled and looked away, not sure what to ask or say.

"Is Jason Lee here?" I scratched behind my ear; the striped wool hat my grandmother had given me for Christmas itching, making my ears sweat.

"No, he isn’t." The man coughed and brought up phlegm and spit it onto the woodpile next to the door. I thought how completely disgusting spitting was and why people felt they had to do it, and my mind wandered to people who spit tobacco and on the sidewalk, and who spit gobs of green mucus on the sidewalk and we had to look at it as we walked to school.

"Are you his dad?"

"Who wants to know?"

"I’m a friend of his and if you are his dad, he’s told me a lot about you, and I am glad you are here and maybe you’re getting better after your stroke and all, and I hope things aren’t too crowded in there, but maybe now you can move into a better place –"

"No, I’m not staying; I just came for a quick visit. I have to go back to the hospital. They won’t let me stay out long. At least not where I am." He cackled and I saw all of his teeth were missing in the front and it made him look brittle and weak. I wondered if he had false teeth, or if he hadn’t bothered replacing them. I wondered why on earth people would let their teeth go rotten in their mouths in the first place, and how painful it must be to feel them get holes and go black and then fall out, or have someone pull them out for you because you can’t to eat anymore with those rotting bones in your mouth. My mother had always made us go to the dentist twice a year, no matter how broke we were, because she couldn’t stand the thought of us having crooked, rotting teeth all our lives. Thank God she did, because crooked teeth is one sign of poverty, and she didn’t want us looking broke.

Suddenly his father looked up from the frozen ground and saw Jason behind me, and I froze, not thinking or wanting to think about what he would think about me snooping around his house. But instead of getting upset about it, he pushed past me and said, "You might as well come in."

His father laid down on Jason’s old grey Army cot and threw the one blanket Jason had over his bony, grey legs and closed his eyes. Within minutes he was snoring. "That’s pop." Jason leaned against wall. His eyes searched mine, and I smiled. "He seems nice."

"He’s sleeping it off."

"How did he get here?"

"Took a cab, I guess. He’s been here a while; three sheets to the wind when he got here. "

Within a second Jason kissed me; he had been staring at the counter one minute then quick across the kitchen the next; his lips were soft and smooth; he was the perfect kisser. I was spellbound.

"I love you. I’m sorry I didn’t say it sooner."

"What?"

"I love you. You’re a great friend, and I just wanted you to know that."

"Thanks. I love you, too." I said. My mind was spinning. Then, I didn’t know that was the last time I would ever see him. If I had known that, I would have clung to his shirt like a cat scared out of a tree and never let go, but he wasn’t one to talk about what his plans were, or to tell a soul where he was going. Even Minerva kept a tight lip with James before they left. I spent a lot of time pining over him, wishing he had given me a chance to say good – bye, and for the longest time I wouldn’t date anyone else, until my mother got to calling me the soul of stubbornness, and wouldn’t I ever get over this Jason boy. I thought I never would. Even in college, where everyone thought I was strange because I wasn’t boy crazy, and I never had a date. Somehow I had this strange feeling he was coming back, that in the end he would find me and we would run away together, like I had seen in so many day dreams.

Over time, I became a teacher, met a man who was willing to wait, and eventually we got married and had kids, but I never stopped thinking about Jason Lee, the way lovers do, and no one ever kissed me like he did.

*

Aimee Henkel has lived many lives, and although she wasted the first few on bad living, the rest have been mainly productive. She studied fiction and poetry at NYU, Manhattanville and the Sleepy Hollow Writer’s Project and has been publishing in literary journals since 2010. She lives two lives at the same time now as a writer and a mother to two small children.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Fiction #36: James Lewelling

Preparations

I have actually had the experience of being invisible in the visible world though it was very long ago, I recalled, lying on the floor contemplating the growing numbness. It was in the city in which I had lost all my friends due to my becoming an acute pain in the ass, I recalled. Of course at the time I did not know that I had become an acute pain in the ass or that I had actually lost all my friends though I felt the force of it. At the time, I only knew I’d had enough of the city and was ready to go someplace else. I was ready, in fact, to go back to school. I had been out of school for a while and when I got out of school I had felt I would never go back but as it happened after being out of school for a while suddenly—in that city where I was losing all my friends—I thought, maybe I will go back to school after all. Maybe now—though I had never contemplated a return when I left—I will go right back to school. What’s more I’ll go back to school in some city other than this one of which I’ve had enough. So I made preparations. I secured a job and a place at a school in another city and then I unemployed myself in the city where I resided. I don’t know why I decided to unemploy myself. I don’t think I did decide to unemploy myself. That is, I didn’t weigh any options or make any reasoned decisions. It was more a case of suddenly becoming aware of the possibility and finding oneself incapable of not exploring it. It was a form of license actually to unemploy myself. I unemployed myself only because I found I could—under the peculiar circumstances that then pertained—unemploy myself. I did merely because I could. It was a "why not?" decision, as it were.

I had just enough money, I recalled, contemplating the numbness. I’d saved it up. I never knew why I was saving money, and I hadn’t saved a lot. I hadn’t saved enough to take a trip, for example. I wasn’t planning on unemploying myself. That’s for sure. I hadn’t saved up the money in preparation to unemploy myself is what I mean. It was more a matter of fulfilling a vague feeling of obligation. One saved money because one was obligated to save money. One saved money in case something happened, and one suddenly needed money. It was a matter of prudence. But as it turned out, nothing happened. Instead I used the money to unemploy myself. I remember thinking about leaving that city. I remember thinking, I am leaving this city in the fall to go back to school in another city. I am leaving this city in a couple of months. Everything I am doing in this city now I will be leaving in this city in two months. That will be it for my activities in this city. I do not anticipate returning to this city. In two months, I will have left this city for good. That’s when I realized I could unemploy myself. I had just enough money. I had just enough money for food and rent and just a tiny bit more for small luxuries—like booze and pool, for example—and expenses and the security deposit on my apartment would be enough to set myself up in the new city where a job and school awaited me. It was summer. I had enough money for food and rent. I didn’t have to work. I could wander around the city, I thought, with all the time in the world. I will unemploy myself, I thought. I bought forty cans of ravioli and arranged them in my cupboard. I am like a machine, and these are like batteries, I remember thinking.

It was during the summer that I unemployed myself that I first experienced invisibility, I recalled, lying on the floor, contemplating the numbness. This is how it works: first you figure out that even though people are around, no-one is paying attention to you. Then you figure out that not being seen is the same thing as being invisible. Then you understand that being invisible is pretty much the same thing as not being there at all. Sure you are there, but from the perspective of other people, all the other people, you are not there; you are someplace else. Similarly everyone else is not where you are; they are someplace else. Then you are truly invisible. Then you have the world to yourself.

I walked around that city with the whole world to myself. At first I walked around monuments and famous places. But after a while, I had had enough of those monuments and famous places and started walking around pretty much any place at all. I walked around completely ordinary places like streets with houses and apartment buildings but none of these streets with houses and apartment buildings were completely ordinary. They couldn’t be completely ordinary because I had become invisible. Even the most ordinary street or house or apartment building in the world becomes a bit strange when you are invisible. It’s strange because it’s part of the whole world and you have the whole world to yourself.

It’s true after a while other invisible people started coming up to me and introducing themselves. Homeless people mostly. Homeless people at that time were pretty much invisible and there were quite a few of them. When the homeless people came up and introduced themselves to me, they didn’t introduce themselves as homeless people; they introduced themselves as invisible people. It was quite interesting. They didn’t ask for money. That’s how I knew I had truly become invisible. Like anyone else living in a big city at that time, during my visible life, I had been approached by homeless people on a regular basis but on every single occasion—during my visible life—these homeless people approached me to ask for money. When I became invisible, for a long time I wasn’t approached by anyone at all. But after a while—a week or two of wandering the streets of that city with the entire world to myself—occasionally I would be approached by a homeless person who was also invisible and on no occasion did this homeless person ask me for money. Don’t get the idea I was walking around un-bathed in rags and was not asked for money because the homeless people mistook me for a fellow homeless person who didn’t have any money. It wasn’t like that at all. I bathed and dressed the way I had always dressed and bathed. The only difference was that I had become invisible. The homeless people did not mistake me for a fellow homeless person but rather took me correctly for a fellow invisible person. It was also interesting that not one of these people who introduced themselves to me wanted to be my friend or establish any relationship with me at all. We—each of us—had the whole world to ourselves. No-one wanted to spoil it. They introduced themselves to me and that was it. I think they did that just to be re-assured of their own existences. I think after a prolonged period of invisibility, one might begin to doubt one’s own existence. A feeling of unreality would set in. One might fear losing one’s marbles altogether. At that point, you would have to find another invisible person to introduce yourself to just to re-assure yourself that you were really there. Visible people would be useless because even if they responded to you they would respond only to the visible you without knowing the invisible you were there at all.

I still became visible every once in a while to see my friends. On each occasion that I made myself visible in order to see a friend, I lost that friend a little bit by being an acute pain in the ass. But as a true pain in the ass I didn’t know I was being a pain in the ass. Further, I didn’t have the faintest clue that I was losing my friends. However, I did feel the force of it. That is, I felt lonely. In any case, towards the end of this period, I left the city.

*


James Lewelling’s  first novel, This Guy (which he has also recently re-published as an e-book), was published in 2005 by Spuyten Duyvil, his second, Tortoise, by Calamari Press in 2008. Over the years, his short fiction has appeared in a variety of literary venues ranging from The Cream City Review to The Stranger to The Evergreen Review to Fence.  He has been writing fiction since 1988 while at the same time teaching and working abroad in Morocco, Turkey and for the last ten years in the U.A.E.  At present, he is writing fiction and taking care of his family as a stay at home dad in Abu Dhabi.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Interview: Heather Birrell

http://heatherbirrell.com/
 
Please tell us about your interest in the short story by

(a) telling us a bit about your recent collection (e.g., how did it come about? does it have a recurring theme? do you have a particular story or passage that's a favorite?)

The stories in Mad Hope (Coach House, 2012) were written over a period of ten years -- during that time I went back to school to get my BEd, became a high school teacher, worked on a novel, and had two children, among many other things. 

I certainly didn’t have any kind of connecting thread or theme in mind as I was writing the individual stories.  It wasn’t until very late in the process that I came up with the title for the collection, which is taken from a line of dialogue in the story ‘Geraldine and Jerome’. 

I had a number of different ideas for titles, but I always feel bad selecting a ‘title‘ story -- I think it puts a lot of undue pressure on that story to somehow be representative of the collection, and I don’t like the (perhaps inevitable) ranking (this one strongest, this one least successful, this one most meaningful) of stories it perpetuates. 

And while many of my working titles felt fitting, none truly captured the collection’s spirit. 

But once I had chosen Mad Hope, and done some shaping and ordering of the stories with my editor, it really did seem wonderfully apt. 

So while I would say the stories are quite different in setting and character, perhaps their common ground is in their belief in ‘mad hope’ -- a crazy, over-the-top, unbridled yearning for a better day despite desperate or desperately sad circumstances.    

(b) recommending a short story or collection by someone else that you admire (and why?)


One of my favourite stories of all time is Sherman Alexie’s “What You Pawn I Will Redeem”.  A subverted quest narrative, it tells the story of Jackson Jackson, a homeless Spokane Indian on the streets of Seattle attempting to buy back his family's powwow regalia from a pawn shop.  It is strange and funny and heart-rending and has one of the most gorgeous, soul-soaring endings I have ever encountered.

Favourite collection(s)?  That’s difficult.  I love Grace Paley (anything by) for her voice and authenticity and commitment to politics and women’s issues and strangeness and wild leaps of empathy and imagination.  And Deborah Eisenberg is an enduring inspiration for me.  I find her thoroughly modern and marvellous and so adept at tracking the tiny calibrations of sensation and thought that occur in a character -- and yet her ‘concerns’, for want of a better term, are large and outward-looking.

(c) reflecting on the 21st century and the short story: Are they a good match (and why)?

I think the short story is a good match for any century. 

I love short stories because they do the mess of a consciousness in flux so ably, so nimbly, and they are not restricted by some of the big canvas concerns of a novel. 

There will always be people who are interested in examining and mining small, distilled ‘short story’ moments for meaning.  These are my people.

Also, I don’t really buy the whole notion that the short story is a good fit for our technology-obsessed, shrinking attention spans because

a.) I think eventually we will OD on the skittering bouts of engagement required by social media and its like and crave (or possibly fetishize) a deeper, more sustained relationship with narrative/text and

b.) I think short stories often require more (and more intense) concentration and work than novels (or at least some plot-driven novels) do. 

So maybe I am saying it’s a good fit for the 21st century!

Interview: Adam Marek

http://adammarek.co.uk/blog/


Please tell us about your interest in the short story by

(a) telling us a bit about your recent collection (e.g., how did it come about? does it have a recurring theme? do you have a particular story or passage that's a favorite?)


The stories in Instruction Manual for Swallowing (ECW, 2012) are about what happens when ordinary people collide with bizarre, fantastical situations.

There’s a story about a man who discovers he has testicular cancer on the day that a Godzilla-like monster attacks the city he lives in. There’s one about a guy who works in a restaurant for zombies.

In another, a man risks his life to destroy the robot wasps that have nested in his garden.

I think my favourite story in the book is Belly Full of Rain – it’s about a couple who discover they’re pregnant with 37 babies. They meet a specialist who says he can help them carry the babies to term, but some modification is necessary.

There’s not a single recurring theme that runs through every story in the book, but they’re all about real human anxieties manifested in monstrous, funny, absurd ways.

I wrote the collection over about four years. It was published in the UK a few years ago by Comma Press. This new North American edition from ECW Press has two new stories and an interview.

(b) recommending a short story or collection by someone else that you admire (and why?)


There are things you can do with a short story that you could never get a novel to do. Its shortness means you can ask the reader to suspend their disbelief to a much greater extent. Short story readers do not necessarily expect everything to be explained, so the form is perfect for the kind of odd, experimental, fantastical stories that I enjoy writing and reading.

Two of my favourite authors who really stretch the form in this way, writing about the absurd vs the mundane, are Haruki Murakami and Karen Russell. I’m just nutty about them both.

My favourite of Murakami’s three story collections is Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman. Murakami has a real gift for making the weird seem so ordinary, and the ordinary seem so odd, all with prose that’s clean and soft as snow.

My agent introduced me to Karen Russell’s story collection St Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, and I’m so grateful to him. Her stories are waaaaaay out there (a girl falling in love with a swamp ghost in an alligator wrestling park, for example) but told so beautifully, with real solidity.

(c) reflecting on the 21st century and the short story: Are they a good match (and why)?

Do you mean, is the short story relevant today? Of course, yes. I hear a lot of people talking about how the short story is the ideal form for all the new reading technologies. Its shortness makes it ideal to read on your phone or Kindle in the little gaps in your busy day, train journeys and whatnot.

It really bugs me when people say that though. There’s an implication that the short story is a perfect match for short attention spans.

I believe that great short stories require much more attention than novels. Being so pared down, the whole meaning of the story can turn on a single sentence or even word. If you miss it, you miss the point. They’re not junk food you shove in your gob to fill a hunger hole.

They’re nourishing mouthfuls that deserve to be chewed and savoured before swallowing.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Fiction #35

New fiction! Issue #35 ...
Submissions now open for #36.

Special thanks to all who have been submitting. You are inspirational.

Fiction #35: Jillian Harvey

The Garden

The window above the sink faced the neighbour’s back yard. As Susan washed the dishes, a man she hadn’t seen before stepped out the screen door into the yard. He was tall, with longish hair and a beard. He stood with a mug in his hand, looking at the garden patch.

New renters. She had noticed the owner around a lot lately, carrying tools and paint cans in and out. This was her new neighbour then.

A woman came out of the house and joined him. Her hair was long and straight, parted in the middle, and she wore a loose shirt and wide-legged pants. The man said something to her and pointed at the patch of earth; she nodded.

The dishes were washed now, and Susan decided to dry them instead of letting them drain as usual. She watched as a young girl, four or five years old, ran out and took the woman’s hand, then ran away to peer in a shed behind the garden.

That night, after feeding the baby and rocking her back to sleep, Susan went to the kitchen window and checked the neighbour’s yard. The outside light was on, and she could see the garden soil freshly turned, and bedding plants waiting in flats on a bench by the back door. She stood for a moment, trying to imagine life inside that door. The man would leave for work in the morning, driving the flappy-sided pickup.

Sometime later the girl would play in the yard while the woman drank from a mug and looked at the garden. Probably not coffee, they seemed too healthy and alternative for that. Herb tea or mate´, something bitter and exotic. Elise rumbled in her crib, and Susan turned back to the bedroom.

*

Susan pushed the stroller round to the back door. Elise had fallen asleep and she wanted to haul the stroller into the laundry room at the back, where she could leave her to sleep. As she felt for the keys in her pocket she glanced over across the low fence. The neighbour woman was squatting in the garden, long hair falling forward as she reached to set bedding plants in the soil. Susan opened the door and fussed with the baby’s blanket a bit as she watched. The truck was gone and the little girl probably at kindergarten, and the woman had some time to herself and her garden before the family came home. Susan bumped the stroller into the narrow passage and went on into the kitchen. Standing back from the window, she watched the woman work. 

Their own garden had been a tangled jungle of raspberry canes, weeds, and volunteer tomatoes when they moved in. Susan’s husband had turned the soil with a rototiller borrowed from his father.

“If you plant the rows wide enough I can weed with the tiller,” he suggested. She imagined the spinning tines close to the delicate corn and tomato plants and shook her head. “It gives me a reason to be out there. I’ll just pull them by hand or use the hoe.”

Working in the garden, while Elise slept in the stroller, gave Susan an excuse to talk to the new neighbour. Her name was Jan. The man was not her husband and not the girl’s father. They had met at a music festival last summer and he had come to live with Jan and her daughter at her mother’s place in Vancouver.

“Mom was getting pretty fed up with it. All these people under her feet, she said. I mean, the people were her daughter and granddaughter, but I guess we were making her life too busy. I don’t know. So I signed up for the horticulture diploma at the college here. I love working with plants; they’re so straightforward. Jed got a job in a kitchen. Mom said she’d keep Maia for me, but I said I didn’t want to cramp her style. Jed’s a good father figure to Maia, anyway; they’ve really bonded.”

*

Susan was a reluctant driver. She didn’t like how this made her dependant on Jack to ferry her around, as they lived a fifteen minute drive from town. She tried taking the infrequent bus, struggling to take Elise out of the stroller and hold her while trying to fold the stroller with the other hand, then lugging baby and stroller up the steps, dropping the stroller, and going back for the diaper bag on the sidewalk. The driver and other passengers watched disinterestedly, and she felt pressure to hurry and not hold everyone up.

“Fare?” said the driver as she collapsed into a front seat.

“Oh, yes.” Susan shifted the baby on her knee and started sorting through her bag, grabbing at the stroller as the bus lurched forward.

When she told Jack about it, he suggested that they do groceries together at the weekend. “It’ll be faster and easier,” he said. Susan felt like crying. She was so busy trying to be stoic and efficient; she didn’t always admit to herself just how overwhelming the transition to motherhood was.

“I don’t know how my Mom did all this and made it look so easy,” she said. She was sitting at the kitchen table with the baby on her shoulder. Jack cleared the dinner plates and ran water into the sink.

“Mine too. But by the time we were noticing our mothers, they’d been doing it for years and we weren’t babies any more. I bet your mom sat up in the middle of the night crying while she fed you.” This was a reference to the previous night, when Susan had been sobbing so hard while the baby suckled that Jack woke up.

“I just feel like you’re working so hard already, going to work every day, and then helping me out in the evening and at the weekends.” She glanced at him, worried, not sure how much she could expect of him.

“What makes you think I don’t like that? She’s my baby too. And anyway my workday ends at five but yours is twenty four hours. I can help you out. Those guys do stuff together,” he added, nodding at the neighbour’s yard out the window. “It’s a lot easier once your kid is older, like theirs.”

“He’s not the dad, Jan told me yesterday. He’s just some guy she met at a music festival.”

“Well, they look like a family. Always working in the garden.”

*

Susan didn’t want Jan to know how much she watched her, didn’t want her to think she was weird. Although maybe she was. Maybe she was going a little crazy, at home all day with the baby. She wasn’t sure exactly what the point of her life was, who she was anymore. Elise’s mother, that much was obvious; the milk that filled her breasts and leaked from her nipples when the baby cried told her that, as well as the nights she spent alternately feeding and walking, or lying staring at the dark ceiling imagining the many awful ways a baby can die, and sobbing quietly so that Jack wouldn’t wake up.

A friend of Jack’s stopped by one afternoon before he was home, and Susan invited him to come in and wait. She brought coffee for him, mug in one hand and baby on the other shoulder, then sat with him in the living room, conscious of her unbrushed hair and the lilac fleece bathrobe an aunt had given her. She patted Elise’s back and tried to remember how to make conversation. The friend stretched out his legs and looked at his work boots, which she had told him not to bother taking off; the carpet hadn’t been vacuumed since the baby was born anyway.    

“So,” he said, smiling at her then down at the coffee mug. “What does Susan do all day?”

She stared at him, amazed, and he smiled expectantly.

“I take care of the baby,” she said, wondering why he even had to ask.

“Yes, but apart from that. That doesn’t take all day, does it?”

Susan looked down at her bathrobe. Elise had been fussy today and she hadn’t been able to put her down long enough to dress. She didn’t like to shower unless Jack was there, worried something would happen while the water blocked off sound. Once, she had tried sitting Elise in her car seat on the bathroom floor, but she had cried the whole time and milk poured from Susan’s breasts in the warm water.

"Well, I take care of the house too,” said Susan, looking at the unvacuumed floor and thinking of the pile of dishes in the sink. She had rinsed the mug he was using under the tap with one hand before pouring his coffee. “With the baby, there’s not a lot of time for anything else.” Jack came in then and rescued her from more questioning.

Why do I have to justify my time? she thought later. Isn’t caring for a new life enough? But she knew it wasn’t, not for her.

*

Susan and Jack had met the summer before while they were both travelling in California. They spent the summer together in his van, travelling from beach to beach and sometimes to the mountains. They married in the fall in her parents’ back yard in Oregon. Susan was already two months pregnant, and had informed the head of her university department that she would not be returning to her studies. The Head of the Department of Languages was a small man with balding hair and a beard, and bright brown eyes. He steepled his fingers and leaned forward on his desk.

“You were presented with the top prize in German last year; the German Institute of Oregon gave you an inscribed thesaurus.”   

“Yes,” she said, eyes on her hands in her lap.

“You were in the top three in French and your translating teacher tells me you have a natural gift for simultaneous translation.”

“Yes.” She looked out the window behind his head. He sighed.

“Is there nothing I can do to change your mind?”

She shook her head. He stood up to shake her hand.

“I think you’re making a mistake.”

Susan left without responding.

It was October when she came to Canada, newly married and pregnant, to the mid-sized city in southern BC where Jack had grown up. They drove across the border in Jack’s van, a few boxes of her clothes and books in the back. Her mother had said not to bother clearing out her old room at home, as if she expected her back soon enough. She would pack up the rest of her things and bring them when the baby was born, she said, and Susan wondered if she was waiting to see if it was worth the trouble, if Susan would be home before then.

Jack rented a small house from his father, next door to the house he had been born in. His parents had moved to a larger, newer house when Jack was still too young to remember, but had later bought the neighbouring house as a rental property.

“I remember the old couple who built this house,” Jack said. “I used to visit with Mom. An old Italian couple, I think. They had a huge garden, and Mom used to come over and can produce with the wife.”

Jack’s mother had died of lung cancer a year and a half ago, while he was away finishing his journalism degree. The move back was because he was worried about his dad, alone and “almost helpless,” he said. “I had to show him how to do laundry. Load it up to here, measure the detergent; he’s beyond helpless in the house.”

*

Bill tried to take an interest in his son’s life. The boy had a family now, for goodness sake. A young wife and a little daughter. He had married very quickly, and those types of marriages didn’t always last, but the girl seemed nice enough. A bit dazed by the speed of it all, the new town, being a mother so young. Frances had never been bewildered like that. Never still in her bathrobe at dinnertime. She had waited so long to be a mother, and had embraced it fully when it finally came.

Bill was twenty four and Fran twenty when they married, and they had expected to be parents soon. When Fran still wasn’t pregnant two years later, she had gone back to work part time at the community newspaper, where she wrote a weekly article for the women’s page. It was a household column, with recipes, tips on house cleaning, organizing a dinner party, handmade gifts, and so on. Fran enjoyed her work, but was always home before Bill so that smells of dinner cooking met him as he came in. On days she wasn’t at the newspaper office she often experimented at home, testing new cleaners or making picture frames from coloured cardboard. Fran was always singing. “I like to hear people sing while they work,” she would say, and she sang while she starched and folded napkins for an article on setting a festive table, or tested a recipe a reader had sent in. She was always ready with a laugh, always saw the bright side; she could look out on a cloudy, rainy March sky and find the one tiny patch of blue. “I think it’s clearing,” she’d say.

She was almost thirty and Bill already in his thirties when she became pregnant. Bill had settled into a comfortable life without children, but Fran was ecstatic. She resigned from the newspaper and threw herself into preparing for motherhood. Here was the project she had been practising for all these years, the real one finally. Jack could, perhaps, have been a spoiled, overprotected child, only child of older, doting parents; but his was a calm, thoughtful nature that responded well to his parents’ attention. As a child, he was content to spend his time working alongside his mother in the well-ordered house, and it was their frequent visits to his mother’s old workplace that formed his decision to become a journalist. As a young teenager Jack was already working for the paper: running errands, folding flyers, researching archives. He planned to seek employment at a large national publication after graduation, maybe even move to the US where there were so many more opportunities. That all changed when Fran became ill, the cancer moving quickly so that she was dead two months after the diagnosis. Father and son were both lost, drifting in their grief, without Fran who was the glue between them. Jack managed to finish his degree, then bought a van and took off travelling. Bill rarely heard from him until he came back with a young, pregnant wife.

Bill missed Fran humming in the kitchen; wherever she was, there had been sound and movement, and now the house was so terribly empty.

*

Midsummer was already past, and the days were shortening and the nights lengthening towards winter, but the heat was just reaching its peak. When the baby woke in the night, and fed and cried, and wouldn’t go back to sleep, Susan took her outside into the summer air like a warm bath and walked her around the yard, rocking her and looking at the hills across the highway. Inside, the house still held the heat of the day, even with all the windows open to the night, but outside it was pleasant to walk in pyjamas and bare feet, the earth still warm underfoot. In summer here in the semi-desert it never really cooled off. Their house sat exposed in the middle of the yard, nothing protecting it from the insisting sun. At night Susan could smell the heat rising from the asphalt roof, could imagine heat waves shimmering off the house seeking somewhere to dissipate in the bleached landscape.

Exhausted as Susan was, she still welcomed the chance to go out into the mellow night and feel what slight air movement there was, rustling the hedge of apricot saplings lining the driveway. This was when she loved the sun, which made her life a misery of sweat and irritation during the day: now when it was gone below the horizon, and its heat released from the earth and the house walls felt gentle and unthreatening.

Raised voices from the open windows next door drew her head. She stopped walking to listen and the baby whimpered and turned her head on Susan’s shoulder. She felt exposed now, in her pyjamas and bare feet; the open back door was on the other side of the house. She walked to the door, shoulders hunched, and as she reached it the voices grew louder and the screen door slammed open, and Jan stumbled out backwards followed by Jed, who was shouting and jabbing a finger at her face. Susan hurried in and went to the window. Jan was screaming and punched at Jed with both hands. He stumbled back then grabbed Jan by the shoulders.

Jack came up behind her and asked what was going on. “We should call the police,” she said. “I don’t like the look of this.”

“Do you think we should interfere? Everyone argues sometimes.”   

“This is more than arguing. I could hear them when they were still in the house. He’s grabbing the shovel – oh God, Jack, you have to go out there – what is he – the garden! He’s smashing the garden! Jack!”

“Alright, maybe if I just go out and make my presence felt he’ll calm down.”

Jack went out the back door and Susan ran for the phone.

“It’s already been called in,” said the dispatcher. “There’s a patrol car on its way right now.”

Susan looked out the door. Jack was re-stacking a pile of lumber, letting the planks slap down loudly. Jan was alternately screaming at Jed to stop and crying with her hands to her head. A police car pulled in and two officers emerged.   

*

The next morning, Jed’s truck was gone as usual, but it didn’t come back in the evening.

“Good riddance,” said Jan over the fence. “He had such a temper. That wasn’t the first time.”

“I feel so bad about your garden,” said Susan, looking at the young plants hacked and lying around the churned up soil. “All the work you put into it.”

“My arm is bruised where he dragged me around.” Jan pulled up her sleeve to show Susan. “Such a control freak. Everything had to be his way.”

“You always seemed like such a happy family to me.”

Jan shook her head. “I’m better off without him. I’m going to take Maia down to my Mom’s for a visit; we need to get out of here for a bit.”

*

When Jan and Maia left for Vancouver in Jan’s old Subaru with the dreamcatcher hanging from the mirror, Susan felt let down, empty. She washed the breakfast dishes while Elise had her morning nap, and looked out the window at the quiet yard, the screen door that had been left hanging open. That afternoon, after their walk to the mail box and around the block, with Elise sleeping in the stroller next to the chain fence, Susan swung over the fence into Jan’s yard. She stood for a moment looking around, orienting herself to the familiar scene closer up. Details came into focus that couldn’t be seen from the kitchen window: the garden tools leaning against the wall on the far side of the screen door, the pattern of red brick between the door and the garden, the deep grooves in the seat of the wooden bench.

The garden was left in the aftermath of Jed’s rage, wilted plants scattered over the soil. The red bucket Jan used to collect weeds sat on the bricks and Susan bent and started pulling tomato vines, broccoli plants and wilted kale and throwing them in the bucket. By the time Elise woke up she had filled and emptied the bucket onto the compost heap four times, and raked the soil smooth. She swung back over the fence and stood looking at her work. She would have liked to have gone into the house and tidied up there too, but she didn’t even try the door to see if it was locked; she was afraid of her strong desire to walk through Jan’s space, to sit at her table and know what Jan would see when she sat there, look in the fridge, at the food left on the plates by the sink; lie on her bed, stare at the ceiling and the walls; fall asleep there and be found like Goldilocks, inhabiting a skin that was not hers.

*

The sun was rising later now, well past the solstice and heading to the fall of the year. Just as suddenly as she had left, Jan was back, and she had brought two men with her.

“Her brothers, probably. Or her dad. One of them looks old enough,” Jack said. He was reading the newspaper at the kitchen table. Susan stood back from the sink and watched the two strange men, who were holding cans of beer and looking at the garden.

“She’s never mentioned a brother,” she said. “And she told me her dad took off years ago. That’s why her mom’s so crabby.”

“Her mom’s probably crabby because her daughter drifts around getting into trouble,” said Jack, not looking up from the paper. “Maybe she replaced Jed already. Two of them in case one is another psycho.”

“Well, I think she’s nice. It can’t be easy raising a kid by yourself.”

Later, when the men were in the house, Susan spoke to Jan across the fence.

“I picked them up right at the top of the Coquihalla, on the way down to Mom’s,” Jan said. “Their ride took off and left them when they stopped at the washrooms by the tollbooth. I couldn’t leave them stranded on a mountain like that. Dave and me talked all the way to Vancouver. It was like we knew each other already; our connection was so deep, so real. Mom wasn’t into having him and Justin stay, so I left Maia with her and stayed at the boys’ place. We’re just back to get my stuff. I’m moving in with them. Dave and me are like soul mates; we both just know this was meant to be.”

“But what about your course? And your garden?”

Jan shrugged. “That’s just outer stuff. The details. What matters is finding your inner bliss and following that where it takes you. Love, you know?”

*

Susan was eating breakfast by herself. Elise was down for her morning nap, and Jack had left for work, leaving two cups of decaf coffee in the coffee maker. He worried that Susan drank regular coffee when he wasn’t there and that was why Elise woke up crying at night: “the caffeine is probably into your milk by evening and then it’s like you’re feeding her coffee for her bedtime snack”. It was ten am and Susan sat at the small table in her bathrobe, eating a bowl of cereal.

There was a knock at the back door. Startled, Susan looked out the back window and saw Jan standing on the porch.

“We’re heading back to the coast today,” she said. “I just wanted to say goodbye. There’s some plants in the house you might want to have. I’m leaving the door unlocked; you should go in and get them. I haven’t told the landlord I’m leaving, so do it soon before he realizes I’m gone and cleans the place out.”

Susan invited her in, but Jan said the boys were itching to get going, this place was too quiet for them, and she still had some things to pack. She turned to go.

“And thanks for cleaning up the garden, by the way. It was you, wasn’t it? I didn’t want to touch it; it was like Jed’s anger was still hanging there.”

Susan closed the door and poured the warm decaf down the sink, put on a fresh batch of regular coffee. She stood and looked out the window while it made.

She waited until Jack came back from work to go over to Jan’s. Jack was hesitant.

“It’s ok,” Susan said, “Jan said we should pick up the things she left me. Anyway, then we get to see your parents’ old place.”

Jack carried Elise. The door was unlocked as Jan had said. The house was partially cleared; there was a table in the kitchen, but no chairs. A coffee table and bookcase were left in the living room and a picture of a coastal scene on the wall. The marks of the bed legs on the bedroom carpet were all that was left there. The plants were sitting on the kitchen counter.

“Do you want them all?” Jack called. Susan came back to the kitchen.

“We don’t really need any plants. I’m killing the ones we have already.” She looked around, imagining Jan at the counter making dinner, chopping vegetables from the garden for soup while Jed helped Maia read a book at the table.

“Look, she left her gardening tools,” Jack said, pointing at a crate by the back door. “I guess she doesn’t need them now. You could take those.” He walked to the door and looked out. “Mom always liked to garden too. Dad’s let the yard go since she died. He’s let everything go, really.”
   
*

After Fran died, Bill met an acquaintance he hadn’t seen in a long time by the yoghurts in the dairy aisle.    

“How’s Fran?” asked the man.

“Oh, she’s dead,” Bill said. “Two months after they diagnosed the cancer.”

The man sucked in his breath, stricken. “God, I’m so sorry Bill, I had no idea.”

“No, me neither. Last thing I expected. You think the people who love life so much are invincible.”

After that he tried to pre-empt such questions: get the big one out the way right away. “Where’s that laundry soap with the lemon on the box? My wife died, I have to figure these things out myself now,” he would say to the clerk, see the surprise and pity cross her face, and think, ok, that’s done now.
Jack came to see him most evenings after dinner, often bringing leftovers in case Bill hadn’t got around to eating that day. He would put on some laundry, turn on lights, water plants while Bill ate the food Jack had warmed up in the microwave.

“You need an interest Dad, a hobby, something to get you going.”

Bill looked at him, then away again. “You shouldn’t be coming over here every night, son. You have a family of your own now. I can manage.”

“Doesn’t seem like it, Dad. Look at you sitting here with the lights off and not eating all day. Why don’t you just go over and see Susan and Elise in the afternoons? Susan’s stuck at home a lot of the time, and you’d enjoy seeing your granddaughter. Wouldn’t you?”

Bill bent his head to his plate. To be honest, it hurt to see the young soul that Fran would have given anything to hold, the grandchild she would never meet.

*

Lying awake at night, listening to Elise snuffling and sighing, waiting for her to wake up again, Jack breathing on her other side, Susan sometimes imagined walking away from it all. Pack a few clothes in a bag and go, back to the life she had had before. This usually ended with her crying, holding the quilt over her face, knowing that the strands that bound her to her child were already too strong to break without breaking pieces of herself. Sometimes her crying would wake Jack, who would pat her shoulder sleepily or pull her into his arms, where she would sob harder. He never asked her why she cried in the night, why a new mother would have such a weight of grief while her baby slept in the crib next to their bed, the innocent life that had changed theirs forever.
   
*

Bill sat at his kitchen table, staring at the empty chair on the other side, and wondered why he stayed. Why keep living? For Jack, came the easy answer, but what kind of father was he now, sitting here in the dark house, unable to get up to turn on the lights and be forced to look at the emptiness of his house. He dreaded Jack’s visit every evening, the way he studied him, sat in Fran’s chair and watched to make sure he ate. The boy had his own grieving to do; his mother had been close to him in a way Bill could never approach, this solemn child who seemed to be always watching him.

“Go out for a walk at least, Dad, get some fresh air.”

Bill didn’t tell him that he had stopped leaving the house during the day for fear of meeting people and having to talk about Fran, and see the wary pity on their faces. He walked at night, after midnight when the streets were empty. He walked past the little house in the big yard next to Jack and Susan’s, where he and Fran had started out. Since Jack told him the tenants had moved out, he had started going into the yard, to the garden.

*

Susan stood at the sink and held a bottle of breast milk under the cold tap; Jack had suggested they get Elise used to a bottle so he could take over some of the night-time feedings. She had overheated the milk and was trying to cool it down to the right temperature. She squeezed a couple of drops onto the inside of her wrist: still too hot. She put the bottle in the stream of cold water and looked out the window. Bill came around the corner of the house next door into the yard. He stopped and looked at the garden. Susan turned the tap off. Bill went to the house, opened the screen and tried the door; it opened and he stood a moment on the threshold, peering in. He glanced back over his shoulder and went in. Susan tested the milk on her wrist again and went to get Elise from the crib. When she had fed her the bottle and was burping her on her shoulder she checked the neighbour’s yard out the window. Bill was sitting on the bench beside the back door, hands in his lap and shoulders hunched forward.

*

Bill sat on the bench and tried to imagine Fran there beside him, Fran in the garden pulling weeds, pulling carrots and waving the leafy clump at him, smiling. He couldn’t see her. She wasn’t there. Not there.

“Bill.” He started and looked over at the yard next door. For a moment he saw Fran standing there with their baby son on her shoulder. When she spoke again, he saw it was his daughter-in-law at the fence, Susan, the young girl.

“Elise couldn’t sleep. It’s a lot more pleasant out here; it’s so hot in the house. Could you not sleep either?”

Bill turned back to the garden, the bare earth sprouting a faint flush of green weeds. Susan was still waiting at the fence. Bill got up and went over to her. The baby, his granddaughter, slept in her arms. He reached out and laid his hand on Elise’s downy head. So soft. He could barely remember Jack at this age. He looked at Susan, and saw how strained her face was in the white summer moonlight.

“Can I hold her?”

“Of course. She’s getting to be so heavy these days. There’s a seat here on the porch.” He crossed the fence and sat where Susan showed him. She handed him the baby, who snuffled and moved her head on his chest. He bent his head and smelled her milky-sweet scent.

“You go on in to bed, Susan. You must be exhausted. I’ll bring her in in a bit.” Susan looked as if she was going to say something, then just nodded and went in. Bill sat on the porch with his head bent over the baby. “Elise Frances,” he murmured. “Fran.”

*

Jillian Harvey lives in Nelson, BC. Mainly she is a single mother of four, and she pays the bills (almost) by working as a grocery store clerk, which at least has a more regular paycheque than her previous career as an organic farmer. Writing is her passion and what happens in the early mornings, lunch hours and in bed before sleep. She has written content for websites and her short story ‘Summer Range’ won second prize in the 2012 Okanagan Short Story Contest.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Fiction #35: Albert Choi

100% ORIGINAL

I went into the job interview not knowing what to expect.

The owner of the store, Mr. Merchant, was a middle-aged man. He was starting to lose his hair, and what was left of it was greying. As we talked, he smiled a half-smile, his bright white teeth just peeking through his thin lips.

He asked me only two questions.

The first: "Do you have any experience in shopkeeping?"

"Yes," I answered. "I was a customer service associate at Pages. It’s a booksto—"

"Good."

The interruption startled me, but I kept my cool. Recently, I had been going through a long string of job interviews, so I had gotten pretty good at acting "professional."

I continued. "If you’d like, I can tell you a bit more about my past work. I also have several positive references from—"

"That won’t be necessary."

I was again surprised, but didn’t say anything.

The buzzing fluorescent lights above us cast a cold glow on the white walls of the shop. It was being renovated and hadn’t opened yet. There was dust on the white linoleum floor, and on the empty chrome-plated wire racks. Each rack had three or four levels of shelves.

Apart from the shelves, and the two chairs we were sitting in, the room was empty.

He asked his second question: "Can you keep a secret?"

I blinked. What kind of interview question was that? "Uh… yes…?"

He squinted and stared into my eyes. I fought to keep myself from blinking, to endure his scrutiny without showing weakness.

Long seconds passed before he said, "Good. I believe you. You’re hired."

The interview had lasted five minutes at most. I was a little weirded out. There was something strange about the guy. That smile… it was permanently stuck on his face.

I should have turned him down and walked out. But then, I thought of the rent payment coming up soon, and of my almost-empty bank account.

"When do I start?" I said.

* * *

I got a call from Mr. Merchant three weeks later, telling me to come to work.

"We’re opening soon," he said.

The store was near the intersection of two busy streets, in the famous shopping district of the city. A prime location. The neighbouring shops screamed of class, with their mood lighting and huge clean windows.
The new sign above Mr. Merchant’s entrance, in plain Helvetica font, displayed the name of the store: FAÇADE.

I walked in, expecting to see the store fully stocked and ready for business. To my surprise, it looked almost like a carbon copy of my memory from three weeks ago. There was a new cash register on the counter at the back, but everything else was the same: the walls were still white, and the floor was that same boring linoleum tile. The fluorescent lights gave the whole thing that sterile hospital feeling. And the metal racks? Empty.

I stood there, in the pathetic little store which seemed to have nothing to sell. Even when the inventory came in, it was all so dull, and would never attract the high-society types that shopped in this neighbourhood.
It was depressing, and it became even more so when I realized that this job would probably not last long. I would be diving into the classifieds again very soon.

Behind me, a bell dinged as the door opened, and a young woman walked in.

"Hello," she said, taking off her toque. A mess of dark, curly hair stuck to the hat, and she had to brush it back down with her hands.

"Hi," I said.

"You working for Mr. Merchant too?"

"Yeah." I told her my name.

"I’m Annie," she said. "What’s up with this place? There’s nothing here."

Before I could respond, Mr. Merchant appeared behind the cashier’s counter. I hadn’t seen him coming; he was just suddenly there. There was a back corridor, which led to a stockroom, so I figured he must have come from there.

"Welcome, you two," he said, smiling his half-smile. "Now, your first task…"

* * *


Across the road from Façade, there was a kitchenware store called The Chef’s Dream. Annie and I were there, pushing shopping carts.

"Buy one of everything," Mr. Merchant had instructed us.

I didn’t know why we were doing this, and was getting embarrassed at the looks that the other customers were giving us. But still, I felt more comfortable than I was at Façade. Warm incandescent lighting, lush carpeting, the scent of potpourri in the air: it was a posh shopping experience. Of course, all that elegance and extravagance showed up in the price tags as well.

The cashier, a grandmotherly lady, rang us up. Pots, pans, knives; bowls, plates, cups; glass, ceramic, steel. The train of merchandise kept rolling on the conveyer belt. The cashier gave us a suspicious glance, so I said, "Yeah, we’re opening a restaurant."

She seemed unconvinced, but didn’t ask any questions, because the customer is always right, especially when the customer is about to walk out with a four-figure purchase. Even when we pulled out the wads of cash that Mr. Merchant had given us for this mission, she wasn’t fazed.

We brought the stuff back to Façade. Mr. Merchant immediately sifted through the boxes and bags of kitchenware, and his half-smile grew into a full grin.

"Well done," he said. "You two go home now. Tomorrow, we open at 9 sharp!"

* * *

When I arrived the next morning, Annie was already there. Mr. Merchant was nowhere to be seen.

"G’morning," she said, but she was distracted. When I looked around, I saw why.

The metal shelves were filled. Pots, pans, knives; bowls, plates, cups; glass, ceramic, steel: everything that we had bought yesterday. But, there was… more of it.

On one of the racks, there was a salad bowl that I remembered getting from The Chef’s Dream. I had bought one, but here was a whole stack of them. I looked at the price tag; we were selling it for half of what it was going for across the street.

Where had this inventory come from? An overnight delivery?

I had no time to think about these questions, because the front door opened with a ding, and our first customers came in. It was a young couple. They held hands and strolled around, enthusiastically pointing at whatever caught their eye.

"These placemats will be great for the new place," the guy said, and the girl nodded in agreement. When he saw the price tag, he beamed greedily, but his girlfriend was a bit wary.

"Where was this made?" she asked me. "Is it good quality? We don’t want any of that knockoff stuff."

"Um…" I began, not sure what to tell them. "Yeah, it’s good…"

Mr. Merchant was suddenly behind the cashier’s counter, having pulled his appear-from-nowhere act again.
He announced to the customers: "It’s 100% authentic, 100% original."

The couple went to talk to him. I couldn’t hear what they were saying, but Mr. Merchant must have impressed them with his sales pitch, because they were soon walking out with their new placemats, and some matching cutlery, too.

Annie said to me, "He just threw us into the job, didn’t he? No training or anything. I don’t even know what we’re supposed to be doing."

"Yeah," I replied. "Let’s talk to him later."

We didn’t get the chance. Customers kept coming, and Annie and I would greet them until they had real questions. Then, Mr. Merchant would appear, and we would watch idly as he gave his spiel. The customers left with bags full of purchases, and lighter wallets. Whenever it died down, Mr. Merchant would go to the back corridor and disappear. And when it picked up again, there he was. At one point, he was talking to seven or eight customers at once; they gathered around him like curious circus-goers around a sideshow barker. He played the part well, grinning the whole time.

"Those guys across the street, they’re trying to rip you off. My stuff is just as good, for half the price. I get it directly from the manufacturer. 100% original."

During one of our lulls, as Mr. Merchant was heading for the back room, I tried to follow him.

"Mr. Merchant, sir," I called out.

He stopped walking, but didn’t turn around.

"I was just wondering, what would you like us to do?" I asked. "Can you tell us a bit about the merchandise?
We could probably help you with the customers."

Still facing away from me, he replied, "No, no. I’ll have a special job for you… well, one of you. You’ll find out soon." As he walked into the dark corridor, he added, "And don’t come back here."

When it was time to go home, Annie and I discussed the incident.

"That was so weird," she said. "He’s really creepy."

"Yeah, no kidding," I said. "Whatever… I’m only working here because I need the money."

"Yeah, me too." She put her toque on, her dark curls peeking out from underneath. "You know what was really crazy? I think every single person who came in bought something. I’ve worked in a lot of stores before, and that never happens."

She turned off the lights, and as each fluorescent tube flickered off, I looked at the metal shelves. They had started the day loaded with goods, but now, they were almost bare.

* * *

The next morning, I arrived at work to find that all the racks were full again.

"Did you see this stuff come in?" I asked Annie.

"No, I just got here too."

"Oh. I thought maybe you saw a delivery truck or something." I looked for Mr. Merchant but, of course, he wasn’t there. "Wait here, I’m going to go check it out."

I headed towards the back corridor.

Annie tried to stop me. "Hold on… he said not to go back there."

"Don’t worry… what’s he gonna do?"

The hallway was dimly lit, and the door to the storeroom was shut and locked. A sign with big red letters read: KEEP OUT.

I looked at the gap under the door to see if there were any signs of light or movement. It was dark in there. I shivered; the hallway felt several degrees colder than the front of the shop.
When I knocked on the door, the sound was muffled, like I was underwater. I knocked harder, but the noise still came back hollow and weak.

"Mr. Merchant?" I called out.

From behind the door, I heard his voice, but it was so quiet that I could barely hear him. It sounded like he was shouting from a mile away.

"Go away!" he said. "I’ll be right out."

I obeyed, and went back to the front. I nodded weakly at Annie.

"I told you not to go back there," Mr. Merchant said when he appeared a few minutes later. His usual half-smile was replaced by a scowl. "You must follow my instructions."

"Sorry," I said. "I just wanted to ask… how did you restock everything? We were almost cleared out yesterday."

Mr. Merchant shook his bald head. "I’m afraid that’s not for you to know. Not anymore." He turned to Annie and said, "Please come with me."

To me, he said, "You’re on the cash register from now on."

She followed him to the back of the store, and looked at me with a shrug.

* * *

Several weeks passed. I wasn’t happy with being a mere cashier, and I even thought about quitting. That is, until I got the first paycheque. It was the biggest paycheque I’d ever seen. I swallowed my pride. Working the cash register would be just fine.

Every day, more and more customers would come in, and without fail, they would always buy something. Every day, fewer and fewer items were left on the shelf. And every morning, I would arrive to see the shelves fully stocked again.

On the day that I was assigned to the register, Mr. Merchant and Annie had gone to the storeroom together. She had come back with a stunned look on her face. When I asked her about what had happened, all she said was: "I can’t tell you."

After that, she had started working with the customers, just like Mr. Merchant, and she also spent time in the back. I bugged her for a while to tell me what was going on, but she stayed mum, so I came up with my own theory.

I suspected that Mr. Merchant had some kind of secret supplier, probably an illegitimate manufacturer of knockoffs. But I had seen knockoffs before, and they were usually poor imitations of the originals. The stuff we sold was high-quality, indistinguishable from the source. If we were selling fakes, they were the best fakes I could imagine. That was probably why Mr. Merchant broke out his "100% original" line so often in his sales pitches.

He was probably doing these hush-hush deals from the storeroom, and needed Annie to help with loading or unloading. She seemed determined to keep the secret, and I was pretty pleased with myself for figuring it out, so I didn’t bother her about it anymore.

Sometimes, Annie and I talked during the rare quiet breaks in the store, and we got to know each other. It turned out that we went to the same college and studied type design. Both of us had started with ambitions of striking it rich and creating the next big typeface like Verdana or Georgia. Both of us had come to the sad realization that there was no money in it, and so we got jobs in retail to pay the bills. Before long, our ambitions had faded.

With that shared, failed dream, we became friends, and I forgot about the secret that she was keeping from me.

I settled into the cashier job. It was boring, but those fat paycheques kept pouring in, and I had made a friend, so how could I complain?

* * *

Annie and I were having burgers at a mall food court one day when she said, "I have to show you something." She took out a key and held it in front of my face.

"Is that what I think it is?" I asked.

"Yes. You have to see the back room."

"How did you get that?"

She brushed her curly hair away from her face. "Merchant is usually very careful, but yesterday he left his key on the counter while he was talking to some customers. I took it and made a copy."

"Uh-huh."

"So anyway, he usually goes home at around midnight. Sometimes I stay until then to help him out, but he usually shoos me away not long after we close and you leave."

"Are you sure about this?" I asked. "I don’t want you to get in trouble."

"I won’t get in trouble if you don’t tell him."

"I won’t."

"Good. Meet me there tonight at 3 a.m." She lowered her voice to a whisper, even though there was no one else around. "If you have anything small and valuable, like a piece of jewellery… bring it."

* * *

I had a gold ring that my aunt left me when she died. I never wore it, and kept it hidden in a small safe in my apartment. It felt heavy in my pocket as I headed to Façade in the middle of the night.

Annie was waiting for me, and without saying anything, she unlocked the front door and let us in. We snuck into the back corridor, and faced the door that said KEEP OUT. I felt the same chill in the air that I did before.

She had the copied key in her hand, but then she fumbled it and dropped it. I winced as I anticipated the sound of metal hitting tile, but just like the time I had knocked on this door, the noise was muted. The key hit the ground with a tiny tink.

When we got the door open and went inside, the temperature seemed to drop a few more degrees. It was very dark.

"Turn on the light," I whispered.

"There are no lights in here," Annie replied. Her voice sounded far away. "Just let your eyes adjust."
I looked in the direction of her voice, and slowly began to see her silhouette. It was hazy, like there was smoke in the room. I blinked, but it didn’t help.

There was only one object in the centre of the room. I saw the outline of a cylindrical shape that was about waist-high. On top of the cylinder, there was a black sphere. I was seeing everything in shades of grey by then, and the sphere was the only thing that was completely black.

"What is this thing?" I said.

Annie ignored my question and said, "Did you bring anything?"

"Yeah," I said, and pulled out the gold ring. She took it and walked up to the sphere.

For the next few seconds, my senses shut down, like my eyes and ears stopped working. There was no sound, no light. I couldn’t even feel my feet touching the ground, and I stuck my arms out, trying to stop myself from falling.

And then, everything was back to normal again, or as normal as it could be in a very dark, very cold storeroom.

"Sorry, I should have warned you," I heard Annie say. "You’ll get used to it."

She stuck her hand right up in my face so I could see what was in it. There were two gold rings resting on her palm.

* * *

After that night, life was good. I almost enjoyed being a cashier. It didn’t hurt that I was making extra money from pawning gold rings. I regretted it at first because it felt like stealing, but who was I actually stealing from?

Annie and I used the device once every few days. We could only use it so much; one night, I tried to copy twenty or thirty rings, but by the end, they started coming out dull and warped. And of course, if we used it more often, we would risk getting caught.

Still, my bank account balance grew. At this rate, maybe I’d soon be able to quit and take a few months off. Or a year. Maybe I could work on some new typeface designs.

One morning, we arrived to see the store empty. Really empty… even the steel racks were gone. My first thought was that Mr. Merchant had found us out, and it was all over.

But then, Mr. Merchant appeared from the back. He announced, "Something new for you today. Next to The Chef’s Dream, there is a clothing store, called XY Fashion. Go there." He flashed his wolf-like teeth.

"Buy one of everything."

As I grabbed colourful polo shirts and khaki pants from the shelves at XY Fashion, I was sure what would happen next: Façade would soon be selling fine menswear.

I exited XY Fashion, carrying many bags. I glanced next door at The Chef’s Dream. A sad-looking man was hanging a sign on the window. In bright orange letters, it said: CLOSED - GOING OUT OF BUSINESS.

* * *

The next day, we started selling clothes, just as I expected. So we had driven The Chef’s Dream out of business, and now we had moved on to the next target.

If I was feeling a little guilty about making money from copied jewellery, I didn’t anymore. What I did was a victimless crime. Mr. Merchant, on the other hand, was using the device to get free inventory, and driving other legitimate shops out of business.

A couple of weeks later, I met Annie in the middle of the night for one of our missions. We just churned out copies as quickly as possible: rings, necklaces, bracelets, whatever. It had become such a routine that I didn’t even feel nervous about getting caught anymore. All I felt was the thrill of making money, literally out of thin air.

I heard the click of the lock being opened.

"Quick, hide!" I said.

"There’s nowhere to hide in here!" Annie said.

The door opened, and I saw Mr. Merchant’s outline against the light outside. His round bald head turned from side to side as he scanned the room.

"Who’s there?" he called out.

He saw us, and the bags of jewellery on the ground.

"What are you doing? Get out!"

He stomped towards me and grabbed my neck. Annie jumped on Mr. Merchant from behind, screaming. I felt something hit my head hard, and then I was on the floor.

I don’t remember what happened next, but I woke up at home with a headache. The sun was just coming up.

* * *

I must have fallen back asleep, because the next thing I remember was waking up to my ringing phone. It was Annie.

"Holy shit, are you okay?" she said as soon as I picked up. "I think I blacked out or something, and then I woke up at home…"

"Me, too! What the hell happened?"

"That guy must be stronger than he looks. Must have knocked us both out and… I don’t know, carried us home or something. Like I said, stronger than he looks." She paused. "Hang on, I have another call. Oh crap, it’s him."

There was a beep as she switched to the other line. I nervously listened to the hold music.
Another beep. Annie said, "He wants me to bring the key back. I still have it in my pocket. Can you come with me? I don’t want to be alone with that guy."

"Sure," I said.

"Oh, and we’re both fired."

"Yeah, I know."

* * *

Mr. Merchant was waiting for us on the front step outside Façade. He held out his hand to Annie. She gave him the key, and he put it in his pocket.

I remembered the job interview, so many months ago, and the second question that he had asked. Can you keep a secret? He didn’t have to say anything now; we knew that we couldn’t tell anyone about this. No one would believe it, and even if they did, there would be consequences. The threat in Mr. Merchant’s eyes and smile made that clear.

Annie and I stood there, waiting to be dismissed like schoolchildren before a strict headmaster. Cars and shoppers passed by on the busy street behind us, but we were barely aware of them; in that moment, it was just us and him.

Then, abruptly, his expression changed. The menace melted away. His eyes opened wide. For the first time, he looked like a regular person, like someone’s kind uncle.

I turned to look behind me. Where The Chef’s Dream used to be, a group of people were milling around. Must be the new owners, I thought. Workers were carrying boxes through the door.

Off to the side, a man, who seemed to be in charge, was talking to two people. The two had their backs to me.

I looked more closely at the man in charge. He was balding, with greying hair. He smiled a half-smile.
One of his two companions, a girl, turned around to face us. She had dark, curly hair.

Finally, the third person turned around, too.

It was like looking into a mirror.

*

Albert Choi lives in Toronto and works as a software developer.  He writes short stories in his spare time.  This is one of his first published works, along with a story that will appear in an upcoming issue of On Spec Magazine.