Saturday, September 1, 2012

Revised Short Story


Borrowing
            She sleeps noiselessly in her bed, pristine Egyptian cotton sheets shrouding her frame-- bony knees and small feet and breasts like cotton balls.  She sleeps alone, her toes pointing toward the middle of the bed where she dreams her daughter is curled up.  A new pile of folded tissues is carefully placed on the nightstand close to the woman’s head, and a few tiny white pills are scattered next to their opened orange bottle.  The shadow from a polished table lamp veils the contents of a journal the woman received as a Christmas gift; it is one of those with the inspiring quotes at the bottom of each page.  She thought it too sentimental, so she never wrote in it.  However, last night the woman weepily pored over the quotes and tore out one that especially resonated.
            When the woman wakes up to January early-morning chill, she pulls her feet onto the cold hardwood and sinks down immediately, hands tracing the small crevices between floorboards.  She imagines her life starts moving backwards, and that twenty-four years from now she will be just a dot, small enough to fit comfortably through the cracks.
            “We do not inherit the Earth from our ancestors,” her timid voice echoes in the otherwise soundless room, “we borrow it from our children.”
            When it was July and sweltering the woman wore sunhats; she had one for every outfit and she liked the way they shaded her face and made her look mysterious to passersby. 
            The city streets were ragged, deeply scarred by millions of heels walking the same route to and from work, or shopping, or a night out.
            “Why do you only hold my hand when other girls walk by?” the man asked her one syrupy humid day when she wore her sunflower-yellow hat. 
            She felt threatened, sometimes, by the girls’ curvy figures as they cascaded down the road, but she didn’t want to admit that.  The woman leaned down to pick a dandelion weed from the gap in the sidewalk and saw her boyfriend pause to examine his reflection in the glossy glass wall of a law building.
            “Because I like to show you off, of course,” she laughed, “and because I can’t have you running away from me at the sight of another beautiful lady.” 
            At that she skipped forward and turned around so that he could look at her smooth legs and flat stomach.  When the man caught up, he grabbed for the dandelion and tossed it into the road.
            “Other women are beautiful, but you are my sunshine,” the man chuckled, eyebrows raised.  He tugged at the brim of her hat and circled her slight waist with big, mannish arms.
            In the suffocating nights, they would both cling to each other like two Eskimos in a blizzard of white sheets.  Their toes would point toward one another until the sunrise, when they would wake up and step onto the morning- cold hardwood, cursing at the same moment and walking together to the bathroom. 
            She was sitting on the porcelain toilet of their bathroom when she found out.  She had just returned from an early-morning stroll, and was still wearing her sea-green sunhat.  A shopping bag draped over her elbow with three tests concealed inside, hidden between the shampoo and conditioner she bought.  He was reading the Sunday paper on their bed, black and grey letters masking his boyish face. 
            “Hottest weather we’ve had all season,” he grumbled.
            She agreed and retreated into the bathroom, wiping a line of sweat from her upper lip.
            As she waited for the results of the first test, the woman thought about what the baby might look like, if it existed.  Surely it would have his strong hands, and her perfect posture.  Positive.  She opened the second test, still splayed on the toilet, underwear around her ankles, having saved some urine just for this event.  Surely it would be a girl, so she could dress it in little sunhats and teach it how to be a strong woman, eventually.  Positive.  The woman pushed her sunhat lower over her eyes, pulled up her underwear, and walked out of the bathroom.  She saved the third test, maybe in case there was a mistake.
            When she walked out, she stood next to him to touch his strong hand; her other hand tensed behind her back, holding the test.
            “Did you fall in?” he asked devilishly, folding the paper and patting the space next to him.
            She took her hat off and dropped the test into his palm.  When his big fingers closed around it, she thought he might snap it in half.
            “We could have a beautiful little girl,” she exhaled, smiling at him timidly.
            He carefully placed the test on their nightstand, and lowered his head to examine his hands, which were illuminated by sunlight spilling in through the window.
            When he looked up, his face was all shadow—the face of a man.
             “Can I make love to you?” he murmured into her ear, and she fell into him.
            Afterwards, he pulled up his pants, grabbed the Sunday paper again, and turned toward the door.
            “I don’t think I’m ready yet,” he said earnestly, eyes still dark, “but it’s your choice.  Really it’s your decision because it’s your body,“ he managed to smile solemnly, “and I’ll be here to support you no matter what.”
            “O.k.”
            “O.k.  I’m going to let you think about things; you can call when you make a decision.”
            Support me?  What does that even mean?  The woman pulled on a different hat and stepped outside, the alarmingly bright sunlight casting dark shadows all the way to her neck. 
            For weeks, she would cradle the cell phone in her hands, but would not call him.  She spent hours in her scant yard, picking dandelions and blowing the seeds into space.
            “They may be considered weeds, but I just think nobody gives them a chance to be flowers,” the woman told an onlooker beneath her fuchsia sunhat the morning that she made her decision.

            When she walked in, the woman told herself the clinic was friendly and very clean.  Sterile, she thought.  The best way to be under the circumstances.
            “Perhaps you should take your hat off while you’re inside,” the doctor leaned sideways to get a look at the woman’s shadowed face.
            She smiled, and tugged the brim down to her nose.  All she could see then were the white, crumply sheets beneath her, and when it was done, the red blood trickling hotly down her legs.
            Months pass, and the winter is frigid and welcoming to her barren body, and the snow is so white it is empty.  All of the dandelions have been frozen in the ice, out of sight.
            The woman slips two white pills out of the orange bottle and lets them sit on her moist tongue.  She reaches under her bed for the sunflower-yellow sunhat and tugs it down to her nose.
              When the bedroom is especially quiet, the woman wonders who she’s borrowing her Earth from, if not her lost child.


           


Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Daughter

I found out today that you have a daughter now, a beautiful baby girl.
I think, you will be a great father.
I think, I am happy that you are content. 


I remember the time we spoke of the future and how I would always be a part of your life, the girl who came to family dinners, the one who would babysit your children.  You must have seen the woman I would become, back then.  You made me the woman I am!

You won't read this, but I wish you the best!