The Grieving Scar | Frank Gaughan
Carson never understood why Susan left him. She explained why on more than one occasion, but in Carson’s mind these explanations were akin to a complicated mathematical formula: holding one part in his head invariably pushed another out of mind. One Saturday afternoon—the last Saturday afternoon—Carson sat on the couch holding his head in his hands. From the kitchen, Susan brought him a cup of chamomile tea.
“I accept that you’re leaving,” he said while warming his hands on the teacup. Susan had grown to hate the smell of chamomile and tried to hide this fact by scratching her nose.
“But,” she said.
“But I still don’t understand why.”
It was an outburst, one she wanted to suppress even as the words left her mouth: “Maybe you should take notes, then.” A pause followed, like the kind that happens after an ancient Sequoia topples at the teeth of a chainsaw. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said that. It was hurtful. I know this is difficult for you.” She stepped into the kitchen and took a swig from a bottle of three-day-old Chianti. There was no way she was going to find her hairbrush now or do a final sweep through the apartment. Whatever. If it wasn’t in the boxes in the living room, she didn’t need it.
She returned to find Carson diligently writing on a legal pad.
After twenty minutes, he asked. “Can I read it? Out loud?”
She hadn’t smoked in nine years, hadn’t even thought about smoking, but the urge to smoke was overwhelming. She wanted a Parliament, the kind with the recessed filter.
“Sure,” she said.
“You are leaving me because you feel unfulfilled. No other person can fulfill another on their life’s journey. However, another person can and should support you in pursuit of fulfillment. After careful reflection, you have concluded that I can never be this person. Regardless of how much I have changed or agree to change, you no longer want to be involved with me.”
“Yes,” said Susan. She spoke the word with a long exhalation.
“Thanks,” he said. “I understand now.” He offered to help with her things: four boxes piled in a two-by-two stack in the hallway. The robot vacuum, having already programmed the apartment’s layout into its circuitry, was persistently banging into every inch of these boxes in an effort to reconfigure its map.
“I have it,” she said.
“Do you want the vacuum?” he asked.
The vacuum had been a joint purchase, an expensive one, made to keep the place cleaner and thereby resolve one of their issues.
“It’s all yours,” she said.
From the window he watched the cab driver load the boxes into the trunk. The car stopped at the light on the corner and turned south down 2nd Avenue. He did not ask where she was going, and she did not tell him.
The vacuum let out a plaintive bleating sound, which signaled it was trapped somewhere. Carson followed the sound. He preferred to keep nothing under the bed, believing that leaving stray boxes and shoes under there invited bad dreams and dust bunnies, but when Susan moved in, he agreed to store his ski boots there to make more of their limited closet space. The vacuum had gotten itself knotted up in the boot’s bindings. As he cleared the obstruction, he saw that Susan’s hairbrush must have fallen from the nightstand and then been pushed under the bed. He recovered the brush and studied it for a moment: flat on one side, rubber-tipped bristles on the other. It was the kind of brush you might find at Walgreens. He could throw the brush away, but what if she returned or contacted him to ask for it back?
He checked the drawers of the nightstand that once held her bedtime items: phone charger, book light, Carmex, hand creme, a case for her glasses. All gone. He could have put the brush in one of the now-empty drawers but decided instead to set it on top of her nightstand. “The nightstand,” he corrected himself, and then adjusted the brush so that its length was aligned with the length of the room.
#
“How long would you think about her if you were in my situation?” Over the next four years, Carson asked versions of this question to a lot of different people. Answers were surprisingly varied.
“Three days. Same as Jesus,” said Mike Bennington—the most bro-like of his friends. Carson had a hard time liking Bennington, at least at first. Being around him was like being around an untrained Bull Mastiff, but Bennington was loyal, as Mastiffs are, and when most of Carson’s other friends had either stopped talking to him or started avoiding him, Bennington stayed around.
Carson resolved to speak with Trish, who was technically his boss, but also one who enjoyed giving frank advice about all variety of matters. “If you keep using non-stick cookware, you’re going to die.” In previous conversations about Susan, she had already given him advice. “Just stop ruminating. Put on a podcast. I like true crime, but you could find shows about trimming bonsai trees or whatever it is you like.”
But on this occasion, while they ate lunch in the office kitchen, he mentioned he had tried the podcasts with no positive effect. He still thought about Susan all the time.
“Susan?” she said. “The girl from—”
“Today’s the fourth anniversary of when she told me. When she left me.”
“And since then, you’ve been—”
“I tried the podcasts like you said.”
“Been dating?”
“Not successfully.”
She picked up a slice of orange pepper with her fork and considered it from all four sides, then ate it. “There’s no telling. It might be forever.”
“Forever?” asked Carson.
“Until you die,” she said. “It’s just something that’s always with you—like a mole.”
“Or a scar,” said Carson.
“Sometimes, grief is like that.”
In the year that followed, Carson set up camp under Trish’s perspective. Susan was a grieving scar. He continued with his job, which involved exporting information from a database to a spreadsheet. He condensed this information and added pictures and graphs to create slides. Other people, who did not have time to figure out how to look things up in a database, or even to read the information in spreadsheet form, looked at the slides and argued with one another, or sometimes they celebrated, or else just walked away. He wondered about these other people—Trish and her Zoom room full of C-suite suits, his mother, Bennington, all the people who had stopped talking to him, Susan, and whoever it was that Susan was talking to now—all of them. Did they, too, carry with them grieving scars? Did everyone just walk around like this, or was it just him?
#
Bennington set him up on a blind date.
Carson didn’t want to go and nearly called twice to cancel, but this date seemed so efficient that it was easier to show up than cancel. She picked the day, the restaurant, sent an invite to his Google calendar—all without even talking to him.
“What do you want?” Terry had all the get-some! energy that came with a job in pharmaceutical sales. They would never work out. Both knew as much, probably even before they met in person, but certainly by now. Still, they were nice enough to one another and maintained a pleasant enough banter to conclude their white tablecloth dinner with a cab back to Carson’s place where they had sex. It was her idea. “Do you want to have sex?” she asked. “No strings.”
That morning, Terry gathered her things for the first and last time. She sat on the couch where, five years prior, Susan said “Maybe you should take notes,” when Carson expressed difficulty understanding why she was leaving.
“You never told me,” said Terry, pulling on her running shoes and lifting both feet as the robot vacuum completed its morning rounds. She was dressed in gym clothes; last night’s outfit had been folded Marie Kondo style into her seven-hundred-dollar leopard print handbag. It occurred to Carson that she knew she would spend the night with him, even before meeting him, and she knew also that she’d be going to the gym at precisely this time. Remarkable, he thought, and wondered if better scheduling would benefit him as well.
“About the other woman,” she said.
The words hit Carson like a virus. He reached for the table to steady himself.
“The woman?”
“Her hairbrush is on the nightstand. I don’t care. It’s obvious she doesn’t live here.” She waved her hands at the drab decor. “But if you’re on the market you should be honest about it. If you aren’t being honest already.”
The last bit seemed to him like a conciliatory gesture, one put forward to allow a possibility that seemed unlikely in her mind.
“She’s gone,” he said.
“As in, she passed away?”
“No.”
Terry nodded as if delivering a terminal diagnosis. She stood and shouldered her bag. “There are drugs that will treat the symptoms. I sell baskets of them. But the problem is you.”
“I cannot not be me.”
“There are all different versions of you. And me. All of us. You’re a good person,” she said and kissed him.
“I don’t want another version,” said Carson.
“That’s what I’m talking about.” She sighed in a way that recalled Susan’s expressions of exasperation. “You can try to think of her one thought less each day. That will helpmore than the drugs, honestly. But you’ll still be you, and that’s the problem.”
He appreciated the advice and took it to heart. If the goal was one thought less each day, then it occurred to Carson that moving the hairbrush from its place on the still-empty nightstand would be a good idea. Yet it did not seem right, after all these years, to just throw the thing away. Instead, he placed it in a Ziplock bag and then set it on the shelf, beside the Q-tips, under the bathroom sink.
A fresh start, he said to himself, and opened a spreadsheet on his computer. He noted all 1,440 minutes in a day, one row for each minute, one column for each day. For the next several weeks, he set about logging the degree to which he continued to think of himself and Susan together. Up to this point, he had only figured the answer vaguely and with phrases like “All the time.”
Carson did not drink, but he found the results “sobering.” That was the word he used while sitting in a bar with Mike Bennington. Carson did not like bars, since he did not drink, but Bennington refused to meet him anywhere else, and always seemed to drink steadily, something just shy of heavily, when he was with Carson.
“Dude, you are messed up. Have you considered, I don’t know, a lobotomy?” Bennington tapped the chart that Carson had presented to him. Along the horizontal axis were the days of the week, Monday through Sunday. Along the vertical axis were the numbers 0-1,500 set up in 100-point increments. Each day of the week had a bar, and none of the bars was below 700. “No normal person does this.”
“I didn’t say I was normal, just that I’m trying to think of us—Susan and me—one thought less each day. It’s hard to do that without knowing how often I think of us.”
“Eight hundred times?”
“Monday’s seven-fifty-three was my highest.”
“That’s all the time. Like once a minute.”
“Once every 1.9 minutes, better to say once every 2 minutes or 30 minutes of every hour.”
“You will never fix a chart like this by making charts like this. You got to fix your life. None of this is about Susan. Hell, she’s already married.”
“She’s married?”
“You think of her 800 times a day, but you don’t follow her on Insta?”
“I don’t like social media. It gives me anxiety. And I don’t think about Susan, per se. I think about us.”
“This thing here.” Mike tapped the chart. “Is not about Susan. Or us. It’s about you. Fix your life, you’ll feel better.”
The bartender delivered hamburgers and french fries, and for half a burger, they ate in silence. Bennington ate like he’d just been released from prison. Fortified, he returned. “Let me ask you something. When you’re thinking about her. Or us.” He put air quotes around the word. “What are you thinking about? I don’t want to be crude with your girl or your ex-girl, but are you thinking about doing her?” He smacked his fist into his palm.
“No,” said Carson.
This baffled Bennington, so he tried again. “I’m just saying that there’s this thing. Psychologists have written about it. You get a song in your head. An earworm, right? One time I had the theme song from Walker, Texas Ranger in my head for three days. You know what I did?”
“No.”
“I played it louder. In my mind, I played it louder, and I gave it this huge finale with tubas and cymbals and all kinds of crazy piano. He broke into song: “The eyes of the Ranger are upon you, any wrong you do he’s gonna see.”
“And?”
“I was able to finish season six without having that stupid song in my head. It’s not even an issue anymore. I could binge-watch a whole season right now, two seasons, no problem.”
Carson’s portobello mushroom burger sat there. He ate a few fries, removed the pickle from the mushroom, and set it on a bar napkin. Seeing that the relevance of his point might be lost, Bennington continued. “We can probably find a girl who does this kind of thing for money. You see what I’m saying? Start with a lap dance, see where things go.”
“When I think about Susan. Us. Together. I don’t think about having sex.”
“So you’re like… on vacation together, then? Like that time you two went to the Grand Canyon? Maybe we go back there? Burn her picture, throw it off the cliff, swig of whiskey, we’re done.”
“It’s not vacation, exactly.”
“So then?”
“You’ll think it’s silly.”
“I definitely will.”
“I picture us in this ball of blue light. We’re ourselves still, but we don’t have bodies anymore. We’re beings, glowing lights—like stars—and we’re inside this bigger cloud of glowing blue light, like we’re in a nebula. Together.”
#
Carson consolidated Terry’s and Bennington’s advice into two sentences and wrote them neatly on either side of resume paper that he had trimmed to wallet size: “One thought less each day” and “Fix your life.” The advice to think about Susan “one thought less each day,” was difficult but at least chartable. The steps necessary to “fix your life” were obscured by any number of variables. You might as well say “make a lasagna” to someone who did not know there were such things as cheese and pasta—or grocery stores and ovens for that matter.
Carson resolved to speak with Trish, since she seemed to him a reliable source but had not yet offered advice so much as an assessment.
He waited for their weekly catch-up and reviewed with her all the charts relevant to the week’s slate of upcoming meetings. She smiled at some, frowned at others, and when the meeting concluded, he said, “How do you fix your life—if you think it’s broken in some way?”
“Oh shit. You’re quitting,” she said.
Carson had not thought of quitting, but now that she raised the idea, he began to wonder about the possibilities.
“Do you know how long it’s going to take for me to train someone else? And who am I going to hire? You know what salary the last little snot-nose asked for? Right out of school with an MBA. An online MBA for Christ’s sake.”
Carson did not know but figured it was quite a bit higher than his current rate.
“You have another offer?” she asked.
“I don’t think so.”
“You’re just on the market? All right. I can do 5,000.”
“I don’t see how that would fix my life.”
“I’ll go retroactive to the beginning of the year, but that’s the best I can do. You’ve seen the budget. You make the slides! You can’t ask for something unreasonable.”
“I think I am!” said Carson with the kind of enthusiasm he had last expressed when sighting a raft of otters in the Prince William Sound.
“I get it,” said Trish. “Sometimes, you got to get rid of one thing before the new thing will take its place.”
“Do you think that’s what happened? When Susan left me, did she want to get rid of me so that something new would take its place?”
Trish looked at him over the top of her glasses, and that was the last they saw of one another.
After taking a week of silent meditation, Carson responded to a Craigslist ad, which read Wanted: Man with a Van for Odd Jobs. Must be willing to take RISKS.
After several bizarre exchanges of texts and a Zoom chat, Carson arrived for the in-person interview at AAZO’s studio. Everywhere around the studio were bits of Manhattan street trash in various states of transformation. Take a seven-dollar umbrella, the kind you buy from a vendor on the corner when unexpectedly caught in a rainstorm. Let the wind flip it inside out several times until it tears and then, after an effort to right the thing, watch it blow from your hands and get run over by a cab. Now let it marinate in the gutter for a few days. All kinds of stuff suffered similar indignities: take-out containers, Starbucks coffee cups, an old sneaker, a frame for eyeglasses missing the lenses, and one stem. AAZO collected these items and placed each one reverently into a pine wood box, cut to fit.
“In another life, born at another place and time, I’d have been a carpenter,” she said, moving her hand over the grain of unvarnished pine board. “Or an undertaker.”
AAZO upholstered each box, decorated it with lace and a lustrous fabric in colors that complement the item at its center. A bumblebee yellow for the black umbrella. Yellows and blues for the Starbucks green. Thus adorned, AAZO filled the interior of the box with gallons of polyurethane, adding blue and silver stars—the kind you get for good behavior—as she pours the clear varnish in layers and with great care so that no air bubbles remain and the result is a coat of thick, translucent plastic with shining stars suspended over an artistically glorious box with a piece of unadulterated garbage at the center.
“It’s the same stuff you use on floors,” she said of the varnish. “I get it at Home Depot by the bucketful,” she said. “The guy knows me. He sees me and brings the big cart and says, ‘More floors, Mr. AZZO,’ and I tell him every time. ‘I am woman! Don’t you see the tits?’ I don’t think he does. You see them though.”
The words were more a command than a question, and Carson looked anywhere but her chest and said, “Seems like a classic silhouette to me.” AZZO wore flannels over white tee-shirts and always had at hand things like hammers and sanders and tape measures and safety goggles.
“And your van?” said AAZO.
“I don’t have a van,” said Carson.
“The ad said man with a van.”
“The ad said, ‘Man with a Van for Odd Jobs. Must be willing to take RISKS.’ I have three of the four characteristics.”
“Typical,” said AAZO. The lights in the studio blinked out, and they were in darkness until AAZO removed a flashlight from the desk drawer and turned it on, placing the beam of light beneath her chin. “You must have a van.”
Carson took the flashlight and placed it under his chin. “I know someone with a van. He can help with your light problem too.”
The issue at heart and the reason for the van, she explained, was that she felt stale, unoriginal. “There’s only so much you can do with garbage,” she said.
“It’s not garbage anymore,” said Carson, holding up the crushed coffee cup assemblage. AAZO had cut a clean rectangle box with beveled edges and lined the interior with lilac print fabric. The silver and blue stars inside the thick varnish caught the light such that it seemed the cup had been frozen in time. “It’s beautiful,” he said. “Some part of us that isn’t wanted anymore is transformed. Or some part of us that is here no longer is brought back for our inspection, frozen in a blue cloud.”
AZZO’s smile lifted her whole face. “You have the job, but you will need a van. I want BIG garbage. Van-sized.”
The side panel of the van read Ben-E-Lectric and Sons underlined by a lightning bolt. Bennington was a third-generation electrician, his grandfather having started the business after returning from the Korean War.
“Trash ripe for transformation. That’s what we’re looking for. And we gotta go big!” said Carson as he climbed into the passenger seat. He liked his new job. It paid radically less than his previous one but that was part of the appeal.
Bennington made his way downtown. “Nothing that stinks, ok? I bring this van back smelling like a landfill and my old man’s going to have my ass.”
“I have an idea.” The weather had turned warm, and the days were growing longer. It was mid-May, and dawn brought with it the day when all the super achievers from Columbia and NYU had to move out of their dorm rooms. They left behind all variety of things, and everywhere across New York, enterprising dumpster drivers were preparing their salvage operations. Carson pulled a futon into the back, a floor-to-ceiling mirror, a collection of lampshades with ink prints of little mountain villages, a television set, a refrigerator, a microwave, a corkboard, a wine rack, three acoustic guitars, one twelve-string guitar, and a desk with the letters FZU WUZ HERE carved into the top, and a new portable vinyl record player designed to look vintage.
“She’s going to love this stuff,” said Bennington. “Makes me wish I went to college.”
AZZO had managed to get the lights back on in the studio through an elaborate series of daisy-chained extension cords and table lamps. Her reaction to the van’s contents was both less and more than they had anticipated.
“Garbage! Not even garbage. Pier One puke! Get it out. Out! Out! You’re fired. The both of you.”
“You haven’t hired me—yet,” said Bennington. “But I can tell you all this jerry-rigged wiring is going to cause a fire. You’re probably pulling 50 amps with this setup alone.” He gestured to the table saw, lathe, kiln, and other assorted workshop kits. “Feel how hot these wires are? Then turn on your microwave and you’ll have flames shooting out of the walls. And what’s in here?” He opened the door to the circuit breaker panel on the wall and frowned. “Yeah. Whole thing’s gotta go.”
AZZO stopped and smiled as if the stars had come into alignment.
“You do odd jobs?”
“Electrical jobs. Ben-E-Lectric and Sons. I’m the son. Grandson, actually.” He handed her a business card.
Bennington’s talents had bought Carson a reprieve from AAZO’s wrath, but if he was going to keep his job, he had to go big, and it was not clear how to go bigger. Nothing any bigger would even fit in the van.
He sat alone in his barren apartment, the same apartment he had shared with Susan five years ago. The robot vacuum made its rounds, as it was programmed to do. His phone reminded him that he was supposed to complete 20 minutes of box breathing. Part of a meditation regimen he had started in an effort to “fix his life.”
“Go big,” he said on the exhale. And then he knew, removing the hairbrush from under the sink. It didn’t seem right to just hold it in his hand. He worried that the bristles would get damaged if he shoved the brush in his pocket, and it didn’t fit in there anyway. For lack of a better plan, he found a brown paper lunch bag, placed the brush inside, and folded the top of the bag over twice.
AAZO’s studio was illuminated by the battery-operated glow of Bennington’s tripod floor lights, which created sharp divisions between brilliant illumination and deep shadow. Bennington had cut the power so he could replace the circuit breaker panel. Most of his head and part of his shoulders were concealed inside the hole he had cut into the wall. AZZO worked by flashlight with a hand saw and file, shaping a pine wood box.
“Dude!” said Bennington. The beam from his headlamp traced Carson up and down. AAZO wanted BIG, as everyone knew. But Carson had nothing in his hands except a lunch-size brown paper bag. Bennington’s headlamp focused on the bag and then shook a back-and-forth no. “Don’t worry. I’ll talk to my dad. We’ll take you on as an apprentice. Union gig. It’s good.” Bennington’s head and lamp dove back inside the wall.
Carson removed the brush from the lunch bag and held it in his hands, presenting it to AAZO. She considered the object from all sides, not touching it, not even breathing. She looked around the shadows of the floodlights. She took a flashlight from her desk and studied the hairs entwined in the bristles. Finally, she said, as if discovering life on a new planet, “This is not garbage.”
“No,” said Carson.
“This is yours,” she said. “Very big.”
“No,” said Carson. “And yes.”
She put her hands on top of his, on top of the brush. “I will make it for you.”
“I don’t want it,” said Carson. “I just want you to take it.”
“I will call it—”
“Call it The Grieving Scar.”
AZZO banished Carson from the studio and began her work. Over the course of weeks, she built the box to be only slightly larger than the brush itself. She lined the box with auburn and yellow fabric, highlights to Susan’s hair wound in the bristles. In a break from past designs, neither the fabric nor the brush itself rested in the box. With blue fairy lights, thin as human hair, she suspended everything so the brush appeared to float weightless, and the entire creation glowed blue as an old star. When the varnish dried and set, AZZO shaved away the wooden box until it was no more and sculpted the edges of the varnish into rounded curves that looped into and out of one another at random intervals. The result—a dime-store hairbrush floating above a handmade pillow, surrounded by a translucent knot of blue-glowing polyurethane.
AZZO insisted on inviting Susan to the gallery exhibition. Carson refused at first.
“Did you lie?” she demanded.
“I don’t usually,” said Carson.
“You said,” she poked a finger into his chest. “Some part of us that isn’t wanted anymore is transformed. Or some part of us that was is brought back for our inspection, frozen in a blue cloud. This is what you said at the interview. And here we are.”
“Are you really dating Bennington?”
AZZO blushed, which Carson had never seen her do. “My next exhibition will be about electricity and magnetism.”
The exhibition—AZZO’s first in a dozen years—featured four walls filled with varnish-entombed coffee cups, umbrellas, lottery tickets, sunglasses, earbuds, a single shoe, but only the Grieving Scar took the center of the room. The artwork, the artist, caterers with trays of mini-chicken and waffle bites, and all the guests moved in orbit around the blue-glowing brush. People loved the thing. Gallery security put up a sign that said, DO NOT TOUCH, PLEASE, but people nonetheless felt compelled to hold their hands to it, as if it were a sun, or a fire, or the sounds of a congregation’s beloved prayer.
Susan showed up, although somewhat later than expected. Most of the guests had left. The waffle bites and champagne had been put away and, staff with small brooms and dust pans on handles discreetly flipped napkins off the floor.
“It’s Susan,” AZZO said. She took Bennington’s hand and moved them to the periphery. They were always talking, talking, talking as people do when the future is in front of them. Carson was happy for them and realized he had not felt this way in a long time.
“Sorry I’m late, Carson. The kid puked on me, so I had to change.” Susan had arrived alone, wearing the jean jacket with the Decemberists pin that she wore when they were together. They had met at the show. She looked good. Better. Hot in fact. Carson was pretty sure these five years hadn’t treated him so well.
“I’m glad you came. It’s a little weird, I know,” he said.
“So that’s what happened to my hairbrush.” She studied it for longer than he expected and like so many of the others that night, approached the sculpture to a point where security staff leaned in. She held her hands to the glowing blue light, circling as if she were a spaceship rocketing around its gravity. “I was cruel to you,” she concluded.
“Indifferent, maybe. Not cruel,” said Carson.
“Travis can’t tell the difference.” Carson knew this was her son. She took his hand and warmed it between her own. “None of us can.”

about the author:
Frank Gaughan is a fiction writer and educator based in New York. His short fiction appears in Arcturus, and he is completing a collection of contemporary short stories. His academic writing on composition pedagogy has appeared in College Composition and Communication and Inside Higher Ed. He teaches composition and ESL at Hofstra University.








