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short fiction

The Grieving Scar by Frank Gaughan

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.” 

An illustration of a honeybee painted in warm orange and yellow tones against a black circular background.
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.

Categories
short creative nonfiction

Swan Song by Sarah Safsten

Swan Song | Sarah Safsten

One Sunday night about a year ago, you were practicing Chopin’s Nocturne in E Major. I can’t usually name the song you’re playing, but this time I could; it was the same melody Mom used to play for me at bedtime. I was five years old; she was sitting on the pink-cushioned bench at your old Yamaha piano in our living room, and I was lying in the bottom bunk in my dark bedroom down the hall. There was a yellow triangle of light on the carpet. The melody lilted through the slightly open door. 

On that Sunday night, you didn’t know I was listening. But I was. I was sitting at Mom’s kitchen table, forgetting about the card game I was playing, and I was listening. I heard a few wrong notes here or there, but it didn’t matter. You played those ending trills with such precision, and with such tenderness, that I couldn’t help but close my eyes, exhale, and try to memorize the sound. After the last notes faded, I wondered how many more times I would hear you play.

***

A few weeks after that night, you slept behind the closed door of Mom’s old bedroom, watching whatever was playing on PBS, and I stood near the baggage claim in the Orlando airport with goodbyes on my mind. If you had been there, I’m almost sure you would have been irritated by our group of noisy, disheveled ballroom dancers, goofing around and waiting for our 31 suitcases filled with rhinestone-studded, ostrich-feathered costumes to fall onto the carousel. If you had been there, I’m not sure you would have chuckled at my coach’s quip, “wouldn’t it be terrible if your suitcase got lost right before your swan song?” 

Swans aren’t one of our regular conversation topics, but if they ever come up, I’ll complain to you about the fact that swans don’t sing. It’d be nice if the myth were true. The image flatters our anticipatory grief—the graceful long-necked, wide-winged bird giving one last aria before sinking under the water. But, according to ornithologists, the Tundra Swan bellows a noisy high-pitched yodel, Trumpeter Swans sound like an old car horn, and the European Mute Swan is mostly silent. If swans do make a sound before they die, it’s most likely a hiss or a snort—their throat’s last, unmusical, involuntary rush of air. 

***

If you knew that I’ve said all the words you think are bad—and said them more than once, if you knew that I’ve watched violent movies, skipped church, voted for people you’d never vote for; if you knew that I’m obsessed with The Beatles, that I believe things you’ve spent your life arguing against, that I’m a lesbian—I don’t know what you’d say. 

I don’t feel close to you in the way some granddaughters feel close to their grandfathers, although I’ve seen you almost weekly since you moved in with Mom. Most of what I know about you is what Mom told me. She said that before you lived with her, when you lived in your trailer, you would forget to eat or drink—you would just sit in your chair for days and days. Several times, she found you home alone and unconscious between August and November. Once, you fell and smacked your head on the sidewalk. It was then Mom knew she had to be your full-time caretaker. I wish we had decades to learn to know each other, but if I were in your shoes—living on for seven years after the death of my partner, losing my independence, still paying student loans at 79 years old—my fingertips would be itching for their finale.

***

After I wrangled my suitcase off the carousel and found my hotel room, most of my team headed to the pool. I crashed onto the bed and didn’t get back up for a while. The next day, I stayed horizontal too, half-watching Netflix on my phone, half-thinking about swans. I didn’t get up until two hours before our call time. What are you supposed to do when your last time is only hours away? I ate a granola bar.

***

I’ve never seen a piece of music stump you. If you were a swan, you’d be the most prolific singer in the flock, so much so that ornithologists would believe they’d discovered a new species that really can sing (perhaps they’d call you the first Cygnus Cantare). 

One night, during family dinner, you listed your favorite pieces you’ve ever played – songs by Schubert, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Prokofiev, Copland, and Debussy. Of Chopin’s “Nocturne in B Major Opus 62 No. 1,” you said, “that one’s a beast to play, by the way. A whole page of trills. But I love it.” I chuckled under my breath, knowing that if you, a master pianist, called it a beast, then I’d never have a hope of playing it. This was the first moment after you moved in with Mom that I almost felt like I knew you. I’ve since made those pieces into a playlist, and as I listen, I hear the echo of notes played by other pianists, but I try to imagine it’s your hands playing those notes on our Yamaha piano with the pink cushioned bench and the chipped middle-C key.

***

Did you feel your shell crack—peeling like a hard-boiled egg before your last recital? Did the pieces of your shell slide from your nervous sweaty hands like mine did on the night I danced for the last time? I looked at my reflection in the dressing room and breathed through my litany of lasts: Zip up this dress. Step into these shoes. Whisper backstage. Listen for my cue. 

***

I’ve inherited your short-fingered, piano-playing, exceptionally sweaty hands. Even as I write this, I have to stop and wipe the sweat off my keyboard, and I think your hands are a curse—I really do; they are a curse that causes my fingers to slip off every chord that requires precision. And I think damn it, Grandpa, why couldn’t you let me inherit something less embarrassing?

But then I look down—no, that’s not quite right—I never actually look down at my hands, because I still obey what you taught me when I was a fledgling pianist: “Don’t look down at your hands.” You covered my hands with a book of sheet music so I would have to rely on feel rather than sight. I’ll start again:  

I sense my hands in my peripheral vision, typing these words without thinking, stretching across each gap like caterpillars stretching across leaves. And during these times, it’s your hands I bless. 

***

Did you know the average swan’s wingspan measures between six or seven feet, but some swans boast wingspans of up to ten feet wide? Imagine having wings as tall as Michael Jordan. Wings taller than a refrigerator, or taller than a Christmas tree. Swans can run up to 30 mph over the water’s surface, beating their gigantic wings before taking off. Imagine running at a two-minute mile pace on top of the water, beating wings longer than a king size bed. Though this feat would be impossible for human bodies, swan bodies are made for flight. They’re the perfect balance of light and heavy: many of their bones are hollow, making them light enough to fly, but they also have huge, dense chest muscles which allow them to operate their enormous wings. They’re covered in 25,000 feathers which repel water and catch air currents. Don’t you wish you could taste what they taste when they’re charging across the water on the cusp of flight, their bodies performing precisely according to their design?

But your body hasn’t performed very well lately. Though you haven’t told me so explicitly, I’ve seen your trembling hands, the slowness of your steps, the wobble of your balance. I have to speak louder and slower for your ears to catch my words. It’s during these moments that I think of you performing in your heyday with all the power and dexterity of a young swan. I imagine you seated at solemn church organs and grand pianos in performance halls. Your elbows stretch out like wings across the keyboard. I wish I could have seen you then.

***

Unlike us, swans don’t need to worry about budgets, day jobs, or the cost of concert attire (okay, I’m torturing the analogy a bit here, but stay with me). You had to fight for tenured faculty positions at a university, make do with living room stages instead of grand concert halls, try to convince reluctant kids to practice, advertise piano lessons on tear-off flyers at Allen’s grocery store, and sell insurance to make up the difference. 

I had to work multiple jobs to pay for dance lessons, scour the internet for discount shoes, and haggle for used ballroom gowns. We’ve never said it out loud to each other, but we’ve felt the gap between our dreams and reality—and the bitterness it leaves behind.

***

Do you know that us grandchildren joke that your catchphrase is, oh, for goodness’ sake, said in the most disapproving, cantankerous tone? I play a classic rock cover of Beethoven’s Pathetique Sonata? Oh, for goodness’ sake. The Beatles are my favorite band? Oh, for goodness’ sake. My sister and I once went skinny dipping? Oh, for goodness’ sake. Sometimes your crabbiness is funny, even endearing. 

But how easily you cross the line from curmudgeonly to cruel. How easily you dismiss your daughters, berate your son, criticize your family. I know there’s pain underneath that cruelty; you carry all sorts of burdens and heartaches in addition to your unrealized dreams. But if I were bold enough, I might tell you that I’m depressed too, and yet somehow, I’ve managed to not kick the family cat or crack derogatory jokes about queer people. You act as though we, your progeny, disappoint you. Giving you grace isn’t easy.

But when I catch you sitting alone in the living room while everyone else plays games in the kitchen, I see myself in your face. I’m 53 years younger than you, but I know how it feels to be weary, bitter, and depressed. I’ve had my own prickly, irritable moments—times when I’ve been too much of a storm to be in the same room with. Your hands are just as damp and restless as mine; you, like me, are an unapproachable introvert who looks away when someone tries to meet your eyes.

***

If you asked me what the last time felt like, I’d tell you that even though I tried to memorize every moment, I could only hold on to fragments: three solitary notes, a violin, two long strides, a turn. Heat in my hamstrings. Tight heels, slick hardwood floor. Feathered hem floating behind me. My teammate’s face. My heart folded inside a tango’s drumbeat. A pause, then crescendo into my favorite part. The slight creak of floorboards. Applause. 

These are all the fragments I carry, two years after my last performance. You weren’t watching my final steps. And when it’s your turn to go, I might not be there to watch yours. After you’re gone, I will be left trying to hold just a few pieces of you.

***

If I knew I could trust you, I’d tell you I felt hollow the morning after that final performance. I was supposed to return my gown to the team storage closet on my way to work, and though I’ve worn countless costumes over the years, that dress was different. I’d been practicing my goodbyes for months (practice is what you taught me), but I wasn’t prepared to give this raspberry-red gown, stitched for my body, to some other woman on next year’s team. 

As I got dressed to leave, my face grew hot and my throat tightened. I sat against the wall of my bedroom in just my underwear and cried. My partner found me there and held me. I think of you and your shaky hands, and I suspect you know what it’s like to careen downward.  

***

Two years have passed since my last performance. I’m still practicing and failing at this goodbye; it’s coming as fast as a swan can sprint over water. So I’ll just say one last thing before I go: I’ve been practicing Chopin’s Nocturne in E Major. Most nights after dinner I rest my sweaty, too-short fingers on the keys and play mostly wrong notes. But don’t worry, I’m still practicing. I’m looking at the sheet music (not my hands), and stretching my elbows out wide like you taught me. 

Someday I’ll play it well. Maybe, when that day comes, the melody will find you through a slightly open door.

An illustration of a honeybee painted in warm orange and yellow tones against a black circular background.
about the author:
A black and white portrait of a woman with shoulder-length dark hair, sitting in a chair, wearing a black shirt, with a serious expression and minimal makeup.

Sarah Safsten (she/her) is an essayist, writing teacher, and multimedia artist. She earned her MFA in Utah, where she currently lives and teaches. Her work was a finalist for the 2025 Ninth Letter Literary Awards and has appeared in journals including Apricity, Sky Island Journal, Dialogue, and others.

Categories
short creative nonfiction

Rearview Mirror by Brad Snyder

Rearview Mirror | Brad Snyder

It was early morning, and the California fog was slowly dancing to the beat of the moonlight. Chris was behind the wheel of our rental car, clutching it with the concentration of a high school student eager to prove he could be trusted to drive. We were the Slow Car, the one that other cars whizzed by on their way to work and, if Californians were anything like our hometown New Yorkers, possibly cussed at under their breath.

It was May 2012 and I was in the back, nestled next to precious cargo: a daughter we’d named Emma, three days old, born on a foreign coast to our surrogate Samantha, who had carried our future for nine months. Who on many nights sat in bed with baby-bump speakers placed against her stomach so our future child could recognize her dads’ voices from our recorded readings of Goodnight Moon and A Fly Went By. Who insisted in the delivery room that Chris and I be the first to hold Emma.

Chris kept his eyes locked on the road.

The winding freeways of that golden state, which darted forward beneath a sprawling system of elevated highways, produced a maze reminiscent of my childhood Hot Wheels sets. It felt at once mammoth and strangely communal, each car filled with people moving along feats of modern engineering like thrill seekers on an amusement ride.

Halfway into our journey, Chris asked me the same question he’d already asked twice since leaving the hospital.

“Is she okay?”

***

I was a senior in high school in 1993, when Pearl Jam released its second album, Vs. While my friends had, by then, sworn allegiance to either Vedder or Cobain or both, I’d not yet found any connection to the grunge rock sounds, three-quarter-length shorts, and long hair coming out of Seattle. To be honest, I felt deserted on Long Island, clinging to the safety and nostalgia of Billy Joel, who once provided the soundtrack for our suburban teenage nights. But by freshman year of college, even as I still played plenty of Billy, something about the change of scenery, about the sudden sense of freedom, produced a shift within me, and the sonic sounds of Pearl Jam came pouring out of my speakers daily.

Though the most popular song on Vs. was “Daughter,” the one that spoke to me like a muse was track eight, “Rearviewmirror.” It began with a repetitive guitar riff, a power chord that carried the promise of an explosive energy to come. After six glorious seconds, a pounding drumbeat and the rest of the band’s guitars propelled the pace into new territory. The rhythm took hold, as if announcing the presence of something sacred.

Then, Vedder, with his longing, mournful, Olympus-like voice, launched the song’s lyrics:

     I took a drive today.

                 Time to emancipate.

***

In the car with Chris and our newborn on the way to the airport for the flight home to New York City, I answered Chris’s question.

“Yes, she’s okay,” I said. That was me pretending to have enough confidence for the two of us.

An hour before, the hospital’s discharge nurse had grown impatient with us as Chris fiddled with the car seat’s installation. Maybe she’d worked the night shift, and our departure was all that stood between her and a break. Maybe she’d expected the two dads would be better at the task. Or maybe she wasn’t much into the idea of two dads. Though all the other nurses had treated us like minor celebrities, jockeying to be in the delivery room, this one, with her furrowed brows and pursed lips, had seemed bothered by everything about us.

When we finally drove away, and there were no more doctors or nurses, we felt the weight of our new and awesome responsibility. Chris’s instinct was to slow down. We’d driven enough on the freeways during previous visits to know that Californians drove fast. We’d also noticed that some drivers took multi-tasking to unusual lengths. Like the woman who propped an open book onto her steering wheel for rush-hour reading at seventy-five miles an hour.

We had seven pounds and two ounces worth of reasons to be cautious.

***

It is said that the riff Vedder played at the beginning of “Rearviewmirror” was among the first guitar parts he’d ever written or played with the band. I didn’t know that then, but it makes perfect sense. There is a majesty to the chords that Vedder strums—they sound innocent and pure and true. Like a first love, or a summer’s night.

Each time I heard the track, whether on my own stereo or someone else’s, I stopped whatever I was doing to let the song’s pulse flow through me. The music felt like breath. It could send me soaring on an imaginary cloud. It could also transport me to the times I watched my high school friends from afar, a distance made greater by the secret of my sexuality I wasn’t yet ready to reckon with. The way my friends would gather around tables filled with red Solo cups overflowing with Pabst or Rolling Rock. The way they sang the lyrics of Pearl Jam’s earliest songs, as though joined by an invisible thread.

 It felt good to understand.

***

The signs pointing us to LAX told us we were almost there.

I looked again at the sprawling lanes of the freeway that dwarfed the expressways of my suburban youth, and marveled at the way the overhead exit ramps seemed to tilt on their axes. There was maybe an order to the chaos. I went through my mental checklist for the cross-country flight home. Like a trial lawyer, I had a folder of legal documents testifying to our child’s relationship to us in the event someone questioned what two men were doing with this tiny baby. I had the American Airlines form a doctor had signed to certify Emma’s fitness to fly at under one-week old, my signature acknowledging a series of far-fetched risks. I had the diaper bag packed with the onesies and diapers and tiny bottles of formula.

Emma was still asleep in her car seat. I offered her the pinky of my right hand by placing it against her tiny knuckles. Just as she had in the moments after her birth when the nurse placed her in the warming bed, and Chris and I stood over her in awe, she grasped my finger.

She held on the rest of the way. 

***

When I was a law student in New York City, I watched the towers burn from my dorm on Mercer Street. A few weeks later, I set out on a road trip from New York City to Michigan to visit my then-boyfriend, Jeremy. I was too fearful about getting on an airplane in the wake of the tragedy, but I needed to find refuge from the city, refuge in Jeremy’s arms. At the time, I was out to some friends but not out to my mom and dad. Something about the smoldering smoke, the posters of the missing attached to fences and lampposts, and the awful smell that none of us wanted to name made my continued hiding feel ridiculous.

So before the trip, I wrote identical letters to my divorced parents letting them know who I really was, using words I was sure I’d never use—how I was gay and how I didn’t want to keep my life a secret from them any longer. Then, on a morning in late September, I stood beneath sunshine in front of a blue street mailbox, knowing that if I worked up the nerve to drop the letters inside, an unstoppable momentum would take hold.

Finally, after a deep exhale twenty-five years in the making, I let go. The metal on the collection slot handle rattled and squeaked as I closed it, a signal there was no turning back. I walked east a few blocks to pick up my rental car.

In those days, my first order of business when entering a car was to prepare the soundtrack. I laid out the stacks of CDs in their jewel cases on the passenger seat with a plan for a steady rotation of my favorites—Billy, Bruce, Greenday, Magnetic Fields, Nirvana, and Pearl Jam among them—for the nine-and-a-half hour drive. I’d taken at least a dozen discs with me, sounds that covered the seasons of my young life. It was an easy ride out of the city through the Holland Tunnel beneath the Hudson River, a route that could sometimes be filled with traffic that made you anxious for daylight. But things were slower in the city—people had left, routines had gone sideways, and nerves made us think twice about where we were going. Soon enough, I’d crossed the Pennsylvania border from New Jersey on the interstate I’d travel for hundreds of miles. 

During the ride, my mind raced with the fear of how my parents might react to my news but also with excitement for a new way of being. It would be at least a day or two until the letters arrived on Long Island. My secret, in a way, was out into the universe though not yet known, creating an in-between that felt both dizzying and intoxicating.

A few hours into the trip, I reached for the Vs. album with my right hand and placed the gleaming disc into the player. The frantic energy of “Go” kicked off track after track that invited me to press the gas pedal closer to the floor. When I hit ninety miles an hour, “Rearviewmirror” came roaring through the car’s speakers. I turned the volume all the way up, and the bass caused everything in the car to rattle.

Then, I looked in my rearview mirror. What would I say if a cop pulled me over at this speed? But I didn’t see any police cars behind me. I saw nothing but empty road and the blurring dashed lines of the highway, proof of my speed and a yearning unleashed. I floored it. The timid Dodge Neon shook like it’d been startled awake. Awake like me. For a moment, I wondered if a car could come apart from being pressed too hard, too fast. But the needle on the odometer beckoned. One more push. And then, I hit 100. I kept it floored there for a euphoric minute.

I’d never driven so fast. It felt electric.

***

As Chris took the exit for the airport, he glanced in the rearview mirror to look at our child. Despite her slumber, she puckered her lips around the pacifier, moving them forward and back like a bird pecking for seeds. Chris’s eyes met mine in the glass. He raised his eyebrows and stretched his lips nervously. It was a gaze filled with anticipation and worry, and also with love. It was a look that bore witness to the little miracle of our lives. In the mirror, we could see many things—the road behind us, yes, but also one another, and our child, too, all captured in the same frame.

We could see that though we’d arrived as two, we were heading home as three.

***

In “Rearviewmirror,” Vedder may be singing about an abusive parent or a love gone wrong or even a version of himself he no longer recognizes. Toward the end, the protagonist is “far away” from someone or something, and the hard-earned distance feels euphoric. Whatever the backstory, the heartbeat of the song can be found in its brief chorus, when Vedder sings of seeing things “clearer” because of what’s appeared in the car’s rearview mirror. There are moments, Vedder is suggesting, when the mirror does more than just let you see what’s behind you.

There are moments when it also lets you see what lies ahead.

An illustration of a honeybee painted in warm orange and yellow tones against a black circular background.

Bonus audio of Brad reading from his essay…

about the author:
A man with glasses smiles while seated in front of a bookshelf filled with books, showcasing a warm and approachable demeanor.

This may sound hokey (and I’m suddenly feeling very Californian as I write it), but I think it’s about being able to cultivate a habit of recognizing the beauty all around us. When I can approach a day with some gratitude for the gifts hiding in plain sight, I feel like I’m living some version of “the good life.”

Brad Snyder’s writing has appeared in HuffPost Personal, River Teeth’s Beautiful Things, Sweet Lit, Under the Gum Tree, Hippocampus Magazine, and elsewhere. He holds an MFA in Creative Nonfiction Writing from Bay Path University and serves on the board of directors of Short Reads, an online literary magazine of flash nonfiction. Brad lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his husband, daughter, son, and sometimes-warring cat and dogs. You can find him at bradmsnyder.com and on Instagram  @bradmsnyderwriting.

Categories
short creative nonfiction

The Laundry Hangs at Noon by Ginger Tolman

The Laundry Hangs at Noon | Ginger Tolman


I landed in Comiso long after the last bus, my phone missing, my luggage ruptured. I bundled it together and hailed the singular taxi. Dante’s English was better than my phrasebook, and he was a storyteller. He pointed out the passing silhouettes of ancient olive trees, we were further south than Tunis, the sand I would sweep off my balcony tomorrow would be Saharan, try the scacce at the panificio. He spoke of death, of grapes grown on volcanoes, how blood was shed every harvest, and the wine that came of it.

We pulled up to my daughter’s neighborhood, dark and questionable, precisely her taste. Dante glanced in the rearview mirror. 

“Is this address?”

I shrugged.

“It’s what I have written,” showing him the note on the napkin.

He shrugged.

“I wait; I too have a daughter.”

He unloaded my luggage and lingered. I rang Chloe’s apartment, she ran down with Cuan, a bulwark of a dog, who barked and bolted towards me for kisses. Chloe, my budding stoic, hesitant about hugs and affection, wrapped me up tight in her arms and didn’t let go. The driver watched, smiled, and left us with a wave. 

It was April. I had never heard of Ragusa, did not know much of Sicily. Photos and maps showed me something small and picturesque. A Unesco listing gave it legitimacy for baroque architecture. It had survived one of the world’s most massive earthquakes when Mt. Etna erupted in 1693, killing 60,000, destroying villages and triggering tsunamis. In the U.S., we were hanging witches in Salem.

My sister had died the previous December. I was by her side and Chloe was by mine. With grief bellowing at me, I quit my job, fired my husband, poured wine all over it, and lit a match. So, when my daughter suggested I join her in Italy in April, to create something, or just breathe, it didn’t seem any less prudent. 

In six weeks I would adventure drive Chloe and Cuan back to her work in London via Italy, France, and Belgium, in an older Volvo with failing brakes.

That night, my bed felt like a board with sheets on it. The sun came up earlier than planned, and with it the sound of neighbors making love. Really going at it. My hips hurt and I hadn’t seen any Saharan sand yet, but I trusted it would be plentiful, so I got up to forage for coffee and a broom. 

Chloe scooped out Lavazza from a foil pouch and fixed me one espresso, then another. She scraped jam onto a small piece of dry toast. Italian breakfast she said, rusks, lunch will be different. We’ll find scacce, a local food of lore. Now, let’s walk to the old town. 

I live in Park City, Utah at 7700 ft at the top of 342 steep and splintery steps from Old Town. Steps without much oxygen. Ragusa sits at about 1000 ft with 340 steps down to Ragusa Ibla (their old town) from Ragusa Superior. Slick and shiny marble steps, rounded on the edges.

We half-walked, half-jogged down the steps descending through the Valle dei Ponti. Vistas shifted from storefronts and bridges to Chiesa domes and walls wet with moss and vines. Nine churches in Ragusa Ibla alone. The Church of the Souls of Purgatory to the Church of Santa Maria, founded by the Knights of Malta, and tiled with Caltagirone tiles that glinted and winked their blue. Homes carved into white rock, jasmine pushing out of cracks. Chloe grabbed my arm and pulled me into a stone alcove, small windows peered into an abandoned shop, shards of glass crunched everywhere. 

“Our taco stand. We can buy it. They don’t have tacos. Great stopping point down the steps, shaded, little benches, we can serve from the windows.”   

She smiled and kept running. We often discuss where to open taco stands to create our generational wealth.

Men on stools sipped espresso in button-down shirts and lace-up loafers, newspapers in hand. A refreshing lack of ball caps and athletic shoes. The lace and shadows of ornamental wrought iron pulled us further down the steps. Women swept as if to stave off famine. Cats struck poses and lorded over the rooftops.

Bells tolled and all our grief and joy felt proper.

My HOA in Utah determined hanging laundry outside to be an eyesore, a code I ignore at my peril. Here in Ragusa, women were ratcheting open shutters to sail sheets against red tiles. Rainbows of head scarves and hijabs, black lace lingerie, button-downs and work pants, wine stains scrubbed out of crisp aprons. The white flags of handkerchiefs men still kept handy for the tears of their women, or to blow their nose.

It was hot at 11am, and my jet lag was storming. The air was dry and then wet and then thick and I could feel my temperature spike.

By the time we were on the piazza, I felt ill. 

Chloe looked at me. We spoke in unison.

“You should sit down.”

“I should sit down.” 

I sat in front of a small cafe on a wooden bench. The shopkeeper looked at me, walked inside, and returned with an ice-cold beer. He gently pressed it into my hand, and I pressed it onto my forehead, rolling it around to cool my face. We both laughed.

“I think you should drink it.” 

“It’s a little early,” I laughed.

“You’re a lot of red, and getting more red,” he stood next to me.

Chloe took the can from me and popped the tab, handing it back. 

I took a swig.

The shopkeeper left and returned with an arancini cut in fourths, a bit of gelato in a paper cup, and a hand fan.  

“Mangia, mangia, you can’t drink without eat” 

Try me. I thought.

“Why for you to Ragusa?” 

My sister died, I thought. I tended her, buried her, steadied her children, and I needed to leave. To poke at the chasm, she left while in unfamiliar territory, without reminders in every angle of light and baked good.

“My daughter lives here,” I said.

My daughter. 

Chloe is the type that can land on hot lava, kind of did, and still succeed. If she had a tinder, it would read: I like cold beer, dogs, and human remains.

Her love for human remains turned into a highly specialized field of skeletal and dental bioarcheology, tracking disease and migration through bones. It took her to UCLA for her bachelor’s, and University College London for her master’s. UCL ranks fourth in the world. She would walk the same halls as Attenborough, Ghandi, and Ricky Gervais. She would be the first graduate of higher education in our family.

On my annual visit, she met me at the train station, her coat cuff frayed, buttons missing, the sole of one of her boots flapping a bit as we walked, hair almost brushed, and her blue eyes sparkling as she talked about her studies, and if she could sneak me into the lab, would I like to hold the skull of a 900-year-old medieval British woman? Yes. Yes I would. Cradling that smooth, tiny skull, I cried. I was thinking of women, of my daughter, and what we can do with time.

With graduation imminent, my sister Joy stated she would be accompanying me to London and since we all sunburned easily, let’s tack on a heritage trip to Ireland. 

A few weeks before wheels up, she called, her voice measured.

“Gig, I have stage 4 ovarian cancer.” 

I laughed. 

Silence.

“What does that fucking mean Joy?” as if my anger could ward it off.

“It means I’m fucking dying.” Her tone was flat.

Joy did not swear.

“It means not long, Gig.” 

There’s a game that children play, or used to. It takes two. On a decent swath of lawn, face each other, cross your arms in front of you in an X and grab your partner’s hands also crossed, then start spinning in a circle as fast as you can, hanging on until you can’t and let go, or fall together on the ground, accepting grass stains and laughter. This was a primary cause of sprained wrists and dislocations. There really wasn’t a winner; it was simple endurance. Joy was letting go. 

Joy and I were two of eight children, most of us adopted. She was seven years older than I, two siblings in between us. We became the closest in our family, not in age but in shared secrets, whispered stories. She was a beauty; I was a tomboy. She attempted to pretty me up, plucking my eyebrows, detangling my waist-length red hair, shortening the hem of my Mormon knee-length skirts, desperately trying to teach me poise. She did, just in ways she didn’t expect. I taught her that dirt was fun, and play is good. We swam naked once, and I never saw her happier or more beautiful. She was my first phone call, every time.

We kept to our travel plans and watched Chloe graduate, gown a bit askew, but on. The halls of UCL reminded us of Hogwarts. We sipped champagne at the hosted reception and tried to soften our American accents. We brushed aside our collective imposter syndrome, switched to Pimms Cups, linked arms, and rubbed shoulders with intellectual royalty. 

In Ireland, we visited St. Brigid’s Well, known for miracles of healing. In its damp cave, artifacts beg and barter for a different ending. Water dripped lightly on our heads. It smelled like prayer and fear and loss. Joy crossed herself. We were all former Mormons, so crossing oneself wasn’t a thing. I rolled my eyes. She held Chloe’s hand. A Madonna wore 1000 strings of rosaries. I dropped a coin into a dark circle of water. Bartering with God and Brigid.

Back home in Utah, sitting vigil with Joy, news of a job for Chloe in Sicily came through.  

“My angels made it so!” said Joy, raising a toast of icy vodka and a hit of her CBD vape. Along with swearing, she had taken up weed and a bit of the drink on her last road. 

She died that night and pulled the stars right out of the sky. 

Six weeks in Ragusa, my body acclimated to time zones and daily scacce. I embraced the sassy flirtations of Sicilian men and iceless Negronis. I had hiked the granite steps countless times now, explored the Val di Noto and hidden crypts. I had walked home late under full moons down small alleys where bands of roving hooded teenagers hunted for the perfect Nutella crepe. I had sweated my body weight out and put holes in my shoes. The last few days, as we prepared for the drive to London, posters were plastered next to funeral notices and dance contests. A festival. Three days of a religious pilgrimage through the streets of Ragusa in homage to the dragon slayer, Saint Giorgio.

On the final night of the festival, we wandered down the steps and made it to the Basilica, sardines in a tin of people. We found a table near the front and ordered wine and artichokes in anticipation of something humble, reverent, and quiet. Ready to cross ourselves in false worship.

I was sipping wine when the cannons exploded. The table shook. A sound system blasted Italian pop music, then the tale of Saint Giorgio, The Dragon Slayer, was projected with grand imagery onto the cathedral, which appeared to be artfully melting.

The night darkened and the church stopped melting, images of a curved crucifix wrapped the cathedral and the world in its embrace. A procession of men in regalia with a relic-filled arc atop their shoulders snaked up the street. Then fireworks. Explosions screeched into the sky, spirals and bursts of sparkling ecstasy rained down on us. Mt. Etna blushed. It was daylight at 10 pm and it seemed the earth was breaking in two. Dragons were indeed slayed. We were laughing and crying, leaning into each other. “Spirit neutral”, Chloe had said when I was hoping to feel or sense the presence of our lost loved one, “Sicily is spirit neutral”. We did not know about the dragons.

The next day, we packed the car for London and took it to the local garage for a final assessment, maybe a repair if we could manage the cost. On the wall, a dusty framed Madonna perched next to a poster of a voluptuous naked brunette, cigarette dangling from her lips, leaning towards us and winking. Angelo rolled out from under the car, eyebrows furrowed, and asked us how far we planned on driving it. 

I think a lot about dubious roads. Ones I’ve taken by choice, or force, or at random. The wild and dusty roads that leave us breathless and in love, or jailed in loss. I think about the roads my daughter and I had traveled, together and apart. Of all the risks that creep out of the cracks, or are simply standing with their thumb out asking for a ride.

“London” I said. 

He sat up, crossed himself, raised his eyes to the Madonna and the brunette, pulled a hanky from his pocket, wiped sweat and tears of laughter, then blew his nose. 

Stuffing the hanky back in his pocket, “You’ll be lucky to make it to Pisa.”

We loaded the dog and headed north. 

An illustration of a honeybee painted in warm orange and yellow tones against a black circular background.

A portion of this essay read by the author:

Ginger’s essay was selected as the 2025 Honeybee Short Creative Nonfiction Prize winner by Brenna Womer. Brenna had this to say about the piece…

“With a strong sense of new and unfamiliar place, this essay is a succinct and poignant time capsule of a shifting season in the writer’s life. While relishing in quality time spent with her ambitious, adventurous, eccentric, and accomplished daughter where she’s living for the summer in Sicily, the writer stirs with grief, loss, excitement, ambivalence, longing, love, and so many more emotions. It seems that the trip is a kind of reset for the writer, a recharging and readying of herself—body, mind, and spirit—as she launches into the next of her own life, not knowing exactly what’s to come but, by the end of the essay, seeming open to whatever the Universe has waiting in the wings. This essay, with its beautiful insights—”Bells tolled and all our grief and joy felt proper”—and compelling juxtapositions—”Rainbows of headscarves and hijabs, black lace lingerie, button-downs and work pants, wine stains scrubbed out of crisp aprons”—is smart, rich, vivid, and thoughtfully crafted. I so enjoyed the ride.”

about the author:
A woman with red hair and glasses poses confidently in front of a film festival backdrop, wearing a white jacket over a red top.

Ginger Tolman is a documentary filmmaker and an emerging writer living in the mountains of Utah, just off a ski run, and above the shenanigans of the pubs of Main Street. Her 2020 film, “A Piece of Me,” was an Official Selection for the NGO IFF and Berlin Shorts Film Festival. “Soufra,” a collaborative film, has won numerous awards, notably an Official Selection for NYC DOC. This is her first published piece other than an occasional op-ed. She continues to work in national and international nonprofits in advocacy and development.

Categories
flash creative nonfiction

I like when my ass hangs out of my shorts by Rose Marie Torres

I like when my ass hangs out of my shorts | Rose Marie Torres

I’ve been approached by three different men at the library in the last month. 

The first time, I was trying to find a free table near an outlet. He followed close behind me for a while, swerving in and around too many bookshelves for it to be a coincidence. He tired—after I’d circled the building multiple times and climbed two separate flights of stairs—and let me be.

The second time was after I found said table. I’d put my headphones on to watch a documentary on how the brain shapes our reality and we shouldn’t trust what we see. The man tapped my shoulder, and I reactively pointed at my earbuds, signaling I was busy. He bumbled his way through some line before realizing I wasn’t into it. He muttered some obscenity and walked away.

The third time I was reading Salman Rushie’s latest novel, Victory City. I had just reached the part where Pampa Kampana is forcefully blinded by a hot iron rod after being sexually assaulted when I saw him walking my way. I thought he was approaching because he could see there were tears in my eyes. Maybe to offer a tissue. 

You shouldnt sit like that, he said.

I
m sorry? I replied.

You. Shouldn
t sit. Like that, pointing underneath my legs that were perched atop another chair.

(For context, I was wearing a dress. I don’t think you need context.)

If you want to sit like that, you should really cover yourself. 

Then he turned and walked behind the front desk, going into a room just out of view. He worked there, I realized.

Thanks, I mumbled, because what else was I supposed to say?

It’s not even a big one—my ass. I’ve always thought it more like two squishy plums than a single ripe peach. Sure, my hips make up for that, wide like my mother’s and her mother’s and our Mexican mothers. 

But it’s not a dump truck if you get the picture. Maybe an SUV with a solid amount of trunk space.

My thighs, I will admit, are larger than most. They dimple when I sit on the floor and create holes in my jeans from where they rub. 

I can’t imagine wanting to hide them. 

When my brother and I go home, it’s an unspoken tradition that we visit our local Taqueria for dinner on Friday night with our parents. We drink margaritas, make rancheros, and take multiple rounds of shots. Except for my mom. We’ve decided that Betty shouldn’t do shots. She gets loud, and then my stepdad Hector has to take her to bed. 

Hector doesn’t like when I wear short shorts. I think he thinks he’s being protective. 

My brother wears short shorts too, white ones that are tight around his thighs and make his dick bulge, but only I am told something.

Hey! Wheres the other half of those shorts, missy? 

Up this fat ass, I say, biting into my beef fajita taco. 

My best friend, Mirely, and I aren’t into the same kinds of clothes. We’ll shop together and watch the other one try on outfits, but we never share clothes. She’s much smaller anyway, so I don’t think anything of hers would fit me comfortably. 

I visited her a couple weeks ago, and when she opened the door, we were wearing the same black athletic shorts from Target. 

She laughed. 

Dont you just love them? I want every color. I just hate that I have to keep pulling them down all day. My ass hangs out so bad.

I say, And?

Listen as Rose Marie Torres reads her essay…

about the author:

When I hear “the good life,” I think about a world where people have the ability to be and express themselves. I imagine a society that provides basic rights and basic human needs. I see a time where people are not persecuted for traversing land their ancestors sowed. And I hold hope.

A native of South Texas, Rose Marie Torres is an MFA candidate at LSU with a focus on screenwriting and creative nonfiction. Since 2023, Rose has been the Creative Writing Program Assistant for the LSU English Department. She has been supported by the 2025 Tin House Winter Workshop and can be found in Latinitas Magazine, Hothouse, and more.

Categories
flash creative nonfiction

I Am a Body Lying in the Grass by Allison Hughes

I Am a Body Lying in the Grass | Allison Hughes

On my walk to work in Jamaica Plain, I think of something I want to tell you. Something I see or feel or remember, typically, as I pass the first pond on my route, the one with a walking path that was fenced off for months due to renovations. Today, the fence is gone and the pond is a swamp, more brown than green, like the time you visited me in November. I told you we weren’t stopping here to eat our takeout Thai food because the water was kind of icky—lots of geese traffic. I don’t know when the renovations to the path occurred, if ever, but I want to tell you that they did. 

On my way to work a couple of weeks ago, as I walked by that first pond, I saw a woman sitting in the grass on the opposite side of the road. She held her cell phone up to her ear with one hand, and with the other she held onto a dog who lay limp on its side. I paused, waiting, hoping to see the rise and collapse of its chest. Its pale yellow fur, uninhabited by wounds, blended with the dry, spring grass. A heart issue? I wondered. I kept walking. I did not want to know the outcome. I did not want to know I saw a dead dog. 

Do you remember? In November, we walked to the second pond on my route to work, Jamaica Pond, to eat our takeout Thai food. This walking path was free from construction, only obstructed by runners, strollers, and couples carrying cups of coffee, all lapping each other around the pond. I ate chicken pad thai and you ate basil fried rice. We sat on rocks cushioned by fallen leaves and watched a dog chase a tennis ball through the water. 

The sun dipped, the color of burnt butter setting in your eyes. I asked to take your photo on my disposable camera. My pointer finger hovered over the shutter button, anticipating a pause in your monologue about posing. I complied and took the picture while you were mid-sentence, and then another while you laughed.

You returned the favor. I sat with my arms around my knees. You strived for the perfect angles and direction and lighting but returned to your original position. That was the third time I felt a strong urge to kiss you but didn’t. 

On my way to work a week later, I walked by that first pond, and a bicyclist almost hit me. Am I invisible here? Am I a walking ghost? 

At least run over my pinky toe. Rip off the nail and give it room to grow. Leave me evidence of my near-death experience. I’ve been hit by a car before, was left with no mark, not even a bruise on my elbow. I told you this on our way to my apartment, right before you sprinted across the road to avoid an accelerating car. I watched your backpack, heavy with a handful of books, thud against your shoulders with every stride. 

I waited for the walk sign and then we skipped on the sidewalk. The irony of almost being hit by the kind of car you once owned, you joked, once we were reunited on the same side of the street. A Toyota Corolla. 

During our last morning together in your bed, I asked if you ever had braces. We were naked and I wanted to touch your teeth. You didn’t have braces, but I did. In middle school. Braces, glasses. acne. 

You dweeb. I would’ve pushed you into the lockers, you told me. 

And sometimes there are things I don’t want to tell you like I never would’ve interpreted that as flirting and you are beginning to leave a bruise. 

During our first morning together, in your bedroom that I flew across the country to see, you asked to kiss me. Yes please, I said. We dressed and undressed and dressed again. You called your mom back during our walk to drink tea and told her your plans for the rest of the year. I pointed to the mountains that enclosed the city, our surroundings shrinking with every step. You planned to move and move and move every few months. You looked to the mountains and back to me. The cafe was packed and the plastic chairs outside hadn’t been shielded from the snowstorm that fell the night before. We barely spoke and I chose the wrong tea. 

I like you but I don’t want to be with you, you said, navigating our way through a construction zone to get to the liquor store. We live so far apart and I don’t know if we’ll ever see each other again. 

We took the tram back to your house to drink cocktails with the apple syrup you made and the bourbon we bought. We undressed and dressed and undressed again. I finished and did not tell you. I took a deep breath, your cheek on my bare chest. Rise and collapse. I traced the jagged lifelines on your palm, rubbing two marks that hadn’t yet scarred. Burns? Bites? I wondered. But you had tripped and caught yourself on sharp rocks. There is so much of your life I’ll miss, I thought. 

When I walk by that first body of water, I feel nauseous from missing you. I want to tell you that I saw a dog lying peacefully in the grass, and not that it was dead.

Listen as Allison reads from her essay…

About the author:

When I hear “the good life” I think of Maine. I think of my first cup of coffee of the day, reading on the beach, winter walks, falling asleep to the sound of waves crashing on shore. I think of falling in love and healing from heartbreak.


Allison Hughes is a queer writer from Maine. She holds a BFA in Creative Writing from Emerson College, and her work has been featured in Wack Mag. She lives with her partner and their dog, French Toast, on North Haven Island.

Categories
short creative nonfiction

You Come Now You Leave Now by Ramona Emerson

You Come Now You Leave Now
by Ramona Emerson

It’s impossible not to take the people we love for granted. All that appreciation. How could we live? But there are a few things I would change if I could go back. I would have insisted we stand in line to see where the Constitution was signed when my dad came to visit me in Philadelphia a few months before his death instead of asking, “Do you really wanna wait?” I would have worked harder to loosen up when we went to Iceland on our last trip together. I would have taken more videos. Pictures are great, but videos bring a person to life in a way I never even thought about before I realized I’d never see him in motion again. I only have a few, and I don’t play them often. I don’t want to build up tolerance to his ghost.

The timestamp on this one says it was taken at 9 p.m. on February 8, 2023, one month before he died. My dad, sitting in his red recliner, is the only person in the frame, but I know my mom and our longtime family friend Cathy are there too. Over the months of his illness, the wooden table next to the recliner had slowly filled up with all his little items: incentive spirometer, headlamp, his weed vape in the elegant holder he’d made from a square of 2×4. Mugs and glasses of unknown contents. Drinking was easier than eating by then, and he always had several beverages going at once. 

You can hear by my halting breaths that I’ve been crying, or still am. I don’t remember taking the video. I’m sure I’d taken an Ambien, which I was doing a lot. (You can add that to my list of regrets.)

Cathy tells my dad he will continue to live in her memory as long as she’s alive. He doesn’t appear to take much comfort in this, saying that while he may be remembered for her lifetime, by the next generation – “In which we have absolutely no oar in the water” – “I’ll be gone.” 

Although my dad has apparently forgotten that we do have an oar, and she is sitting right in front of him, I take his meaning. “Should I have a baby?” I earnestly ask the room at large. I’m roundly ignored. It wasn’t until this year that I ever really thought about the fact that, absent some intervention, I’ll be the last person in our family. I’m a childless only child in my mid-30s without even a single cousin. This thought has become intermittently terrifying. I remember sifting through boxes of family photos as a kid, asking, who’s that? Hearing how my grandfather called my grandmother, Helen, his little hurricane. Who will I tell our stories to?

Several months after my dad’s death, the father of an investigator on the study I work on died. During a meeting a couple of months before, he had told the group he might be less available for a bit. His parents were ill, and he didn’t know how it would all shake out. I had told him I understood. That my dad had recently died after several years of illness. I remember how he’d looked at me sharply, and said, “We’re not there yet.” I’d been trying to empathize but, on some level, he’d taken it as a threat. This is what’s coming for you. And now his father is dead, and when I write him a condolence note I wonder if there’s some part of him that thinks I’m saying, I told you so. And I wonder if there’s some part of me that is. Grief doesn’t make you a good person. It just makes you a different person.

It’s a bright blue day in Iceland, and we’re headed west along a peninsula we refer to as, “Snuffles” because we couldn’t pronounce the Icelandic word and Snuffles is funny. This is our favorite kind of humor. The kind where you just laugh at words. It’s September, the fall before his death, and we’re on what we had enthusiastically declared “our last trip.” This wasn’t because we’d come to a circumspect acceptance of his mortality, but to guilt my  mom  into turning a blind eye to the exorbitant amount of money we hoped to spend.

That morning, he’d had another neuropathy related foot-slip while driving, and I’d taken over again. It probably would’ve been fine, but I hadn’t wanted to worry the whole time. I was feeling annoyed because he, thinking he’d be doing most of the driving, had insisted we get a manual, even though I hadn’t driven one since high school. I was sad too. He’d always been such an elegant driver: cocking his head just so and raising two fingers from the wheel at a passing acquaintance, turning his palm toward the shifter and pushing rather than pulling it into fourth, decelerating so smoothly you hardly noticed you’d stopped.

He was a terrible backseat driver, but his suggestions were so earnest and idiosyncratic that it was only moderately annoying instead of homicidally so. Still, I had to tell him to seriously stop after he said I wasn’t wiggling the gear shift the right way when checking whether the car was in neutral. The crazy thing was that I was doing it “the right way” – placing my hand loosely over the ball and giving it a rapid jiggle. It was a move I executed flawlessly because I’d watched him do it a thousand times.

It was a small thing, but the fact that he’d missed this detail showed his decline. There’s a possibly apocryphal story about a man throwing a punch over a game of pool and my dad catching the guy’s fist in his hand. Whether or not it’s true, it’s believable because it illustrates one of his most marked characteristics. He was unusually observant. He noticed the moment the guy started to swing.

At his funeral, my mom told me the most frequent thing people said to her after my dad died was that they liked him but never really “got” him. He lived on the same end of the same Pacific Northwest island for 48 years, and going anywhere with him included a stream of nods, hellos, and fingers raised from the steering wheel, but he had only a few close friends. He liked people and loved to chat but could quickly go from affable to far away. At dinner parties you’d look over and see him staring dreamily into the middle distance. “Is your dad okay?” I remember a friend asking one year at Thanksgiving. He wandered, and not just in his mind. You’d be on a trip walking around some foreign city and suddenly he’d be gone. This was very annoying, as was his response to being called on it. “What? I was just over there,” he’d say, gesturing vaguely away.

He was a specific kind of person, but it would be hard to say which kind. He had a dry sense of humor but wasn’t sarcastic. He was mischievous but almost never unkind. He had an easy physicality, probably from the years he spent outdoors chopping wood for a living, but he couldn’t have cared less about sports. He loved animals. Dogs especially. He always gave our late dog Bella the last bite of whatever he was eating. The effect was that he started hurrying through his food, becoming more and more anxious as she stared at him expectantly. Only once she had received that final bite could he relax. 

He taught middle school for years, and one of his most strongly held convictions was that children shouldn’t spend all day sitting in a classroom. One of his classes was called Adventure Education and it culminated each semester in a week-long outdoor trip. I went along on one during my junior year of college. It started with a 36-hour train ride from Seattle to Southern California with 16 eighth graders and only got more harrowing from there. I swore I would never do it again, but he loved those trips and could remember them in elaborate detail even years later, always referring to his former students by their last names as he recalled the little quirks of their personalities. He took children seriously, which is probably why so many of his students adored him. A few absolutely hated him, and he got a kick out of that too.

After he died, my mom showed me a piece of worn yellow paper with a list of names written in his distinctive all caps handwriting. He’d told her that these were people who had been especially kind to him during his illness. During his last few weeks, she would frequently see him gazing at it, or sometimes just holding it in his hand with his eyes closed.

Has anyone you loved ever died really slowly? Toward the end of my dad’s life, I told my therapist Roger that I sometimes wished he would just die already. It had been over two years since his diagnosis, which is not even really that long, but I was tired of the false alarms, the dire phone calls and emergency trips home, sobbing in the gynecologist’s office because my mom had just called to tell me he’d decided to take the medication he’d been prescribed for when he was ready to go, but by the time I got to the airport that afternoon, he’d changed his mind.

Roger said this was the kind of thing people usually keep to themselves, but he was smiling because he loves this kind of stuff. He paused, seeming to weigh what he was about to say, and then told me that his first wife had died suddenly of a brain aneurysm. A week later at the wake he had caught his son laughing. Or at least his son felt caught. The color drained from his face when he looked up and saw his dad see him, but Roger had told his son what he tells me now, “Don’t ever apologize for living. Life wants to be lived.”

We celebrated what would be my dad’s last birthday on a balcony in Reykjavik. Seventy-four years old, and a plate of fresh bread, apples, Camembert, and a sliced Snickers bar. We toasted with Coke Zero in wine glasses, both of us wrapped in gray blankets against the evening chill. The trip was almost over, and I was feeling bad for how irritable I’d been. Annoyed at his memory loss and then feeling guilty for being annoyed.

I don’t remember what preceded it, but he started talking about how he had become invisible in old age. He said he’d first noticed it when we were visiting New York City 15 years before. The feeling of not being able to get the bartender’s attention. The sudden impossibility of ever getting the bartender’s attention again.

I told him this transition was probably more jarring for women since the difference between the vocal attention of youth and the later invisibility is so stark. He sat for a moment before responding and then said that invisibility is women’s consolation prize for having had to be at least a little bit afraid almost every moment of their lives.

I remember I was taken aback by this clarity from a person who by dinnertime yesterday couldn’t remember where we’d eaten lunch. I realized I’d stopped giving him the benefit of the doubt pretty much the minute we touched down in Iceland. I’d been so intent on cataloging his slips that I had stopped listening. Earlier, I had mistaken a joke for an earnest question and asked if he was being serious.

The way he held my gaze when he said, “No.”

In January, I call my parents and find them still in bed. I picture their wonderful room. The muted colors, the immensely inviting king-size bed, the sun flooding in through the French doors that open to the backyard.

They’re in a light mood. My dad starts talking about the dog, but stops mid-sentence, asking, “What is there really to say about the dog?” He moves on to the plot they’ve just purchased at the cemetery up the road. “It’s right next to Renee Neff,” he says, sounding delighted. Mrs. Neff was my fifth-grade teacher. She and her husband lived behind my parents until she died of pancreatic cancer a few years ago. 

I ask my mom if she got a plot next to my dad and she responds with her usual pragmatism that she will be cremated. I suggest her ashes could be buried, but before she can respond her phone rings. I hear her say, “We’re not diabetic bye,” and hang up. Then she texts me a picture of the casket they’re considering.

The Titan Seagrass is a coffin-shaped basket woven from willow branches and decorated with lengths of seagrass. It has two bittersweet reviews, giving it four and five stars. From Bob in Texas: “Beautiful and exactly what my wife of 50 years would have wished for had she been able to choose for herself.”

We were lucky my dad was able to choose for himself because it meant we had time. Two and a half years, and for almost half of that we knew he was dying. It’s surprising how hard that was to admit – even in the face of overwhelming evidence, even for the doctors (maybe especially for them) – but doing so was strangely enlivening. 

A year before, my dad was at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle for surgery that would remove the tumor by cutting out a part of his colon. It was supposed to last six hours, so that morning my friend Jamie and I had gone on a long hike as a distraction. The trail was called Mailbox Peak, so named because there’s a mailbox at the top that people leave stuff in. Even after almost five miles of steady climbing, Jamie somehow picked up speed on the final incline. She went straight to the mailbox – lowering the door with the reverence of an archaeologist opening a tomb – and began rummaging around in its assorted “treasures.” After setting aside a half-smoked joint and several troll dolls, she pulled out a crumpled piece of paper and asked if she could read me a letter to the universe. “No,” came my swift reply. 

We were almost back to the car when my mom called. By this point, it had been almost 12 hours since he’d gone into surgery. For a moment she didn’t say anything. I heard her ragged intake of breath. I felt dizzy. I remember thinking this is how it happens. “He’s alive,” she said. Then she told me the bad news. When they’d gone in, they’d found the tumor had spilled into the surrounding tissue, the blood stream. They’d spent the entire day removing as much as they could, but that didn’t change the news we got when he woke up. The cancer was terminal. Jamie drove me straight to the hospital. I remember it was a beautiful summer evening.

Because of COVID, only one visitor was allowed at a time. My mom came down and I went up. When I walked in, my dad opened his eyes and smiled weakly. “Boo Boo,” he said without raising himself from the pillows. I pulled the chair up to the bed and sat down. We talked for a bit. He recounted a story a staff member had told him about fleeing Chinese oppression in Tibet by walking across the Himalayas. As he spoke, his eyes filled with tears. I grabbed his hand, and we sat for a while just looking at each other, not saying a thing. I wanted to offer something comforting, and if not comforting then just anything. I wanted to look away. But I didn’t. No platitude could save us now. He wouldn’t get better. This is how it happens. How you go from one thing to the next. How you give comfort by not allowing yourself to get comfortable.

My dad was different after he found out the cancer was terminal. It was like a wall had come down. He was now easily moved to tears. Less witty perhaps, but so tender. He drew people to him. At one point, Cathy came to stay with him so my mom could visit me on the East Coast. She later told me it was the highlight of her year. That’s the thing about visiting the dying. We walk in, nervous we won’t say the right thing. Worried we’ll give up the game, accidentally reveal that they’re dying, but they know they’re dying, and worse (so much worse), they know we are too. We look down with our faces arranged in sympathy, and they look up and see the ignorance of a cow on slaughter day. They know how it goes by in the blink of an eye. 

On some level we know this too. It’s why we tend to avoid them. But if my dad’s death taught me anything, it’s that finding out you’re going to die is a good thing. Even if this knowledge is fleeting, which it always is. Like I’ll be looking out the car window watching the trees go by and suddenly think how someday I’ll be dead forever. I’ll never know anything again. Never have any idea how it ends. Usually, these thoughts don’t carry much weight. It’s hard to feel them, but sometimes I’ll get this drop in my stomach and a sense that everything is moving away from me impossibly fast, and for that second, I’ll know. 

On a phone call later that summer, my dad told me about the tuck. He’d been taking these long walks through the fields on the outskirts of town. One day he came upon a spot where the tall grass had been tamped down by a deer settling in for a nap, and it being an August afternoon and just about that time, he had decided to follow suit and laid down right there and fallen asleep. Since then, this had become a habit, and he called these places tucks. He said that when he woke up from one of these naps, he felt like he had become a part of the place. Something about the vulnerability of sleep anointing it as his, or rather, him as its. Of course, not all tucks are created equal, and he would sometimes lull himself to sleep in his current tuck by thinking about an even better one. He said the Ur-tuck would be at the base of a Hemlock tree where the branches fan out and sweep the ground like a twirling skirt. You crawl in and curl up with your back against the wide trunk, and after a while you fall asleep. 

When he stopped talking, we were quiet. I think we both understood what he was saying. Years before his cancer, he’d told me about how a sick wolf would leave the pack. Find somewhere quiet to die. I think that’s what he was doing – practicing. We never explicitly discussed his feelings about dying, and after his death my mom remarked that she didn’t think he ever truly believed he would die. But this conversation made me think he did, and that he wasn’t overly frightened, and that he was maybe even looking forward to returning to the earth where he had found so much joy and solace. 

We’d always talked on the phone a lot, sometimes several times a day. When you speak that much there’s no fear of phone calls, of long catchups, compulsory rundowns of how you’ve been. We picked up and hung up with impunity. We came with little observations, a funny person at the dog park, a petty complaint, a song recommendation. We got off as breezily as we got on, gotta go bye and towards the end, gotta go I love you bye and sometimes, alrighty well, I’ll let you go, a little joke where we tacitly blamed the other person for the goodbye.

Our last phone call was a week and a half before his death. After talking for a few minutes, I suggested we watch an episode of Succession. He hardly watched TV his entire life, but in the last three months he’d fallen in love with this show, a family drama filled with cruelty and twisted love. We got off the phone so my mom could get him into the bedroom where the TV was. She’d set everything up so that when I called back all we had to do was put our phones on speaker and count down 3 2 1 Play.

Immediately it was annoying. I could hear his audio just slightly out of sync with mine and I’m sure he was experiencing the same. We had valiantly endured ten minutes of this when he asked, “Can I hang up now?” He was often pretty muddled at this point, and I realized he’d forgotten why we were even doing this dumb thing. He told me that when I’d suggested we watch together, he’d thought I meant together, like I was in the next room instead of on the other side of the country. I’d come in, and we’d cozy up together in that bed that’s like an ark and watch the Roy siblings battle for their father’s empire. We’d laugh at their foibles, secure in the knowledge that it was a question we’d never have to ponder: no company, no siblings, no problem.

I got there three days before he died. My mom had tried to prepare me, but it’s hard to be prepared. He was lying in his hospital bed in their room, his mouth slightly ajar with the corners pulled down. His eyes were open and rolled up. He looked like a saint in a Renaissance painting, like he was being pulled in two directions. I’d last seen him only a month before, but this was the first time he’d looked like a person who was going to die.

Two days went by in a strange haze. Sometimes he was lucid and other times not. He fretted and picked at invisible bugs. My mom said he was hallucinating. He’d asked her why there was a naked man in the backyard but didn’t seem overly troubled by it. His speech, when he was able to talk, was soft and mumbled, mostly unintelligible. We’d passed the point of last words, so I held his hand. I tried to match my breath to his like I’d read about in a book. My mom gave him water from a green sippy cup, and I lay down next to him and slept.

On the third day, my mom lifted his covers to turn him and saw that his legs were mottled and blue. This happens when someone is very close to death, as the heart loses its strength. She said she hadn’t realized how close he was. Our capacity to be surprised by what we know is coming reveals the tenacity of hope, and once again I was so grateful for her. That steely pragmatism, undercut continually by love.

I slept in their room that night. We lowered his hospital bed to the same height as ours, the mattresses forming one continuous field. We drifted to sleep.

I woke in the dark. Something had changed. At almost the same moment, the dog raised his head. So did my mom. She got up and went to my dad, putting her arms around him. He took three ragged breaths and died. 

I looked at the clock. It was 11:18 p.m. It was March 8, 2023. We turned on the light and quietly removed his catheter and oxygen line. We arranged his body, touched his still face. After a while, we went back to sleep. 

In the weeks after his death, I saw my dad everywhere. Not literally, but I’d be stopped in the street by the odd twinkling of Christmas lights strung up across a second story balcony. Old men on bicycles in Costco jeans.

I told my therapist I was embarrassed that as an ostensible atheist I’d suddenly become consumed by wondering where he was. Roger said not to worry too much about what made sense. That it wasn’t necessary to have a totally cohesive world view right now. Maybe not ever. This is how grief rearranges us. Someone is reincarnated – the person who lives.

I had physical symptoms. My body ached and I felt hot and cold but when I took my temperature, I didn’t have a fever. My left leg buzzed, and I slept three hours at a time. I sometimes felt a sense of hyperreality and a strange energy. 

They don’t tell you about euphoric grief, which is the buoyant feeling of becoming suddenly aware that you’re alive. It’s the other side of vertiginous grief, which is the dizzying experience of realizing your mom will die, and everyone you love, and you, and not necessarily in that order.

Sometimes the grief creeps up, surfacing when you least expect it. Like when I was signing for a prescription at the pharmacy and the little screen asked, “Are you the patient or the caregiver?” Or when I was walking down the sidewalk and found a crescent moon charm with an engraving that read, “I love you to the moon and back.” The tears came so fast. Even though he’d never said it. Never would have said something so schmaltzy. Never will say it. 

Other times I went looking for it. I listened to our songs. Our taste was bittersweet oldies. John Prine. That part in “Lake Marie” where he asks, “You know what blood looks like in a black and white video?” My dad would always finish the line, yelling, “Shadows!”

It was on the playlist I made for his memorial. The title was YCNYLN. It was an acronym from a long-ago joke that had started on the drive to a friend’s twelfth birthday party. We had been laughing about how they’d put both the party’s start and end times on the invitation: you come now, you leave now. We were indignant, like, who are they to tell us when the party’s over? But it turns out that’s exactly what happens.

About the author:

Ramona is a writer and nurse in Philadelphia. She is currently working toward her PhD at the University of Pennsylvania where she studies drug use and addiction. Her work has been published in Allure, Buzzfeed, Wired and The San Francisco Appeal. You can find her at ramonaemerson.substack.com

Categories
short creative nonfiction

Space / Time by Siobhan Ring

Space / Time | Siobhan Ring

In the heat of the first pandemic summer, I set off alone on an ill-advised, improvised, road trip toward my mother.

More than a year before COVID plowed into our collective lives, my brother and I had moved her from her home of 35 years to memory care. On moving day, she walked out of her house with her head up, although she had only reluctantly conceded to this plan. “I can adapt to anything.” she had told me, years earlier, as she resisted any serious discussion of this eventuality.  She proved herself correct.

Every few months I flew 2,841 miles from Seattle to upstate New York for a long weekend visit.  Although I told her I was coming, my arrival was always a delightful surprise. When I was there I felt loved and mothered, even as I zipped up her coat and reminded her who I was. 

In the selfies I captured on my phone from my visit in late January 2020, our heads tilt toward one another, we are smiling, and my arms are wrapped around her shoulders. She is bundled in the ankle-length puffy blue coat I bought her to guard against the cold winters. On the day I flew back to Seattle from that trip, the first person in the United States was diagnosed with Coronavirus. Soon the promise of safety we had bargained for her freedom evaporated into the contagion-filled air. 

As the COVID-19 lockdown stretched on, the staff at the memory care began orchestrating video calls. One day, in a sweet moment on FaceTime my mother smiled at my image on the tablet and said, “It’s so good to be together.”

And then her face clouded. “Is that what we are?” she asked.

“Yes,” I tried to assure her, “we are together.” 

“But how is that?” She asked, looking up from the screen and scanning the room she was actually sitting in with a skeptical face. “I don’t think it’s like that.”

She had a point. It really wasn’t. Even her muddled mind could see something was amiss in the space between us.

In July 2020, with cases dipping, New York State lifted some of the visitor restrictions on congregate care facilities. I ruminated obsessively on the question of how to get to my mother. It was the bewildering pre-vaccine days of the pandemic. Waves of illness overwhelmed hospitals and ravaged assisted living facilities like a capricious deity. I did not want to be the vector that killed my mother. Flying was too risky. A friend had a camper van she would lend me immediately, available for just enough days to drive from Seattle to NY, spend five days there, and drive back. I would travel in my own sanitized spaceship and arrive untainted.

My mother was, as a rule, up for adventure, but even she would have questioned the wisdom of this proposal. Then again, she might have done it in my situation, if she could have grasped my situation. 

I’d driven six hours eastward over the Cascade Mountains, across the Columbia River, past acres of potato fields, and was just hitting the Washington/Idaho border when New York State’s Governor announced that Washington State had just been added to a travel advisory. Residents from WA entering NY would now have to quarantine for 14 days. I got a text notification that my campground reservations at NYS Parks had been canceled based on my home address and a voice mail from the director at my mom’s facility. I pulled over and texted a friend who worked in the WA Governor’s office. “We’re trying to get off the list,” she texted back. I kept driving. 

Somewhere in Montana, my second-rate cell phone service got spotty and the GPS gave out. Never one with a good grasp of geography, and having left without a map, I texted my wife from a truck stop “What are these mountains called and when do they end?” She was not amused. 

I bought a paper map at a truck stop, asked the man at the counter where I was, and texted my wife again. I asked her to look up the meaning of the dashboard indicator light that had just turned red. This is the sort of problem my anxious mother would have envisioned. She always told me to leave time for an emergency on my way to the airport, which I never, ever, do. 

The hours delay for impromptu camper maintenance derailed my hastily planned itinerary. As darkness fell that night, I pulled off at the first highway sign tent symbol. I slept parked in a campground that was just a wide field somewhere in Montana. A ridiculous grouse waddled past my window in the morning. I got up and drove East.

As I crossed into South Dakota, I got another message from the friend in the Governor’s office. “It doesn’t look like we are getting off the list,” she said. “I’m sorry.”

 That night I stayed in a vast campground in Hermosa, SD, on the outskirts of Rapid City, surrounded by RVs festooned with Trump for America flags. Alone in my queerness in the van, I briefly considered trying to cover up the gay bumper stickers. Instead I called the memory care and asked to speak to my mom. I told her a funny story about my son that I had told her before and read her a poem she always asked to hear twice. I hung up, closed the curtains on the van, lay down and marveled at the absurdity of both my effort and its failure.

I was working as a consultant at the time of this endeavor. I kept most of my work meetings on Zoom, pulling off the highway to find a place my hotspot would connect. I met with a client to discuss political coalition dynamics in the parking lot of a gold mine in Idaho, surrounded by real-life oversized Tonka trucks. I interviewed graphic designers for a policy report while parked on the edge of a state highway near the Badlands, a ragged, bewildering landscape. It was 101 degrees and I couldn’t figure out how to run the air conditioning in the camper without draining the battery. I smoothed my unwashed hair into a ponytail and tried to project some not-very-credible professionalism as sweat drained down my chest in rivulets and pooled in the waistband of my sweatpants. 

I didn’t turn around in South Dakota. Having driven 1,140 miles, I decided to go another 617 in the direction that wasn’t home or my mother. A dear friend in southern Minnesota was living with cancer. She’d been living with it for decades, with a quiet sense of refusal. When I pulled into her driveway, she came out and gathered me in a hug. I tried not to let my face show my shock at how worn and delicate her body looked. We had a glorious visit. She died seven months later.

The visit with my friend, my fiercely alive friend, wasn’t about death at all. But, then again, it wasn’t not about death. Would I have continued on if she weren’t sick? Maybe not. The whole venture was provoked by my ardent hope to outpace death’s path to my mother.  On my return trip a woman at an RV park in Wyoming asked where I was headed. “Home,” I said. “I was trying to go see my mother.” I told her of my thwarted effort. “I’d be afraid to do that long trip all alone,” she mused. I was more afraid not to.  

I returned home eight days after I left, to exactly where I’d begun.

Two months after my failed voyage to see her, my mother was hospitalized with a non-COVID infection. Desperate and scared, I flew East wearing two masks in a nearly empty plane.

My mother recovered. I spent a day with her at the hospital, gallivanting alongside her through a generally pleasant delusion. She seemed to be sending me off to college, with great excitement for me about what was to come. A sweet fantasy, since when I actually left for college at 17 we couldn’t afford a second plane ticket, so I traveled alone. When a gaggle of medical students passed by the door to her room in a walking lecture she asked “Shouldn’t you join them?” But I said I’d catch up later. The social worker arrived and announced she would be discharged. But memory care wouldn’t take her back. She had to move to the nursing home next door. 

The pandemic rules required that anyone discharged from a hospital to a nursing home had to be isolated for two weeks. My mother had no way to understand the foundations of this policy; not contagion or a calendar. The first option was to stay in one’s own room, a little gate across the door, like one used to deter toddlers. This attempt at containment made her wary and suspicious, and then afraid, angry, and unruly. She walked through the gate and out of her room and raised her voice. The head nurse made a determined face and announced the second option; she’d have to stay in the empty COVID isolation ward.

We wheeled her there across the open grounds. Fall leaves crunched under the chair wheels and she smiled as a cool breeze brushed her face. In the isolation room, a jumble of tables and chairs were shoved to the side to make space for a semicircle of hospital beds. A giant TV loomed on the wall. Piles of dusty puzzles and games spilled out of a corner, detritus of the pre-pandemic times when this space was a day center for people living with dementia. A sole staff member sat in a chair at the edge of the circle of beds. It was not the place I wanted to leave my mother. I hugged her. She hugged me back with strong arms and held my face in her hands. I left her there and flew home to my wife and child. 

Just eight weeks later, I was ringing a doorbell and shivering in the winter darkness at the back entrance of the nursing home. My mother had had a stroke. The head nurse called and told my brother that she was dying. Not today, but soon. We were allowed to come see her, one at a time, although the doors were locked, and no visitors were allowed. There were exceptions for death.

Entering the nursing home every day was traveling through a portal, outside to inside. Through the back door, I entered a narrow hallway.  A pile of plastic wrapped gowns, face shields, and masks cascaded across a gray table that also held a blue binder and a thermometer.  I logged my name, the time, and my temperature in the binder. I took a gown from the pile and put a plastic face shield over my N95 mask. Gowned up, I was allowed to walk across the common space, a big open kitchen with empty tables and a living room with empty couches, into her room. I could stay as long as I wanted, but I could not leave her room until I was leaving the building.

Alone with my mother in her room, my body pulsed with problem-solving adrenaline with no outlet, and ached with anticipated loss. I gently brushed her hair back from her forehead. She couldn’t speak. She couldn’t move most of her body. To transfer her from bed to wheelchair involved two caregivers and a mechanical lift. She was reportedly dying, but she didn’t seem to be. She seemed more suspended in some unknown realm, floating, just like she was when the sling gently lifted her from bed to chair. 

I was asked to keep my PPE from day to day, to save resources. I learned that, even if it was 12 degrees Fahrenheit outside, I should wear a tank top under my clothes and strip down before putting on the gown. The paper-plastic material didn’t breathe and sweat immediately soured whatever clothes I wore underneath. The nurses and nursing assistants were all wearing tank tops under their gowns too. They worked 12 hour, 16 hour shifts. The whole team was trying to avoid hiring agency staff, who work across multiple facilities, and could introduce COVID. I bought them cans of lattes when I made my curbside pickup order from Target. I ordered bottles of wine from the liquor store next door to Target and opened them alone in my hotel room.

When I arrived at the nursing home, they had successfully kept COVID out for the first nine months of the pandemic. But soon the first case settled into a resident’s lungs. Day by day the number grew. The staff wouldn’t talk about it; when I asked questions, they just shook their heads. But it showed on their strained faces, in the whispers between them, and in the flashing red lights that shimmered on the frosted window of my mother’s room as ambulances came and went. It was, we know now, looking backward through time, the first deadly winter surge. 

My mother’s mind was a veil. I played music and didn’t know if it was annoying or pleasant. I talked. She squeezed my hand. She held my gaze. She communicated with her eyes, but the meaning was open to interpretation. In the background there was an endless, mechanical sighing and clicking of the inflating and deflating mattress, specially designed to prevent bedsores on the papery skin of the old when they are bed bound. I took an audio recording, because it was the soundtrack of the last days of my mother’s life next to me.

Before we moved my mom out of her home, we attempted to sort through the accumulations of 35 years. In the crammed drawers of an old wooden desk, I found the yellowed, typewritten pages of a small memoir my grandmother wrote. I sat down amid the piles and read it through, absorbed in a sudden intimacy across generations. She was a good storyteller, the language vibrant with scenes from her life as the youngest of 13 Irish kids in a small town in Connecticut. 

And then another pandemic appeared in the pages–the Spanish Flu. She wrote of an older brother sick in bed. Every day the priest came and prayed. The doctor came and whispered. After the doctor left,  her mother would cry. Her oldest brothers were sent home from military training to sit at his bedside and hold their mother’s hand. My grandmother’s brother, fevered and suffering, called out for his mother, although she was right there beside him. 

After her brother died, as my grandmother told it, her mother gathered her remaining children around her and promised they would never take another family photo, because their family was irrevocably changed. Nothing was the same. Nothing would ever be the same. 

In the midst of my own pandemic, listening to the click and sigh of the mechanical bed holding my mother, I could see, in my mind’s eye, my grandmother a hundred years ago, her little child self, watching, waiting, quietly keeping a record. I sat next to her, with my mother, in that strange room, the thin December light filtering through the window. Watching. Waiting.

I can’t remember the name of the nurse who, on my mother’s last night, came to check on us every hour, squidging little vials of morphine into my mother’s open mouth until the rigid clenching of her hands and shoulders eased and she breathed more quietly, without the ragged edge of pain. She was balancing her care for my mother with the rise of the deadly outbreak around us, but I felt nothing but her gentle focus. 

In the early morning hours of our night vigil my brother and I broke the rules. I crept to the back door and let him in. We stood together, holding hands over my mother, as her breath slowed, telling her how much we loved her, how grateful we were for her.  The night nurse saw that we were both there and said nothing. 

My mother died and we buried her on a cold day. A small portion of the people who loved her scattered six feet apart as light snow fell in impossible beauty over the rolling hills of the cemetery.

A death of COVID and a death during COVID are not the same thing. But neither is the same as a death without COVID. 

My home in Seattle was across the street from a big hospital. I could look out my living room window and see people huddled, families gathered around cars parked on the street or in the parking lot. They lingered there, outside. One day, a man got down on his knees on the sidewalk, face turned upward toward the brick building.

For the first two years after my mom died, I only allowed myself to feel grateful. Grateful I had been able to touch her, talk to her, hold her hand, wait for her last breath. I was grateful. I am grateful. Because I was with her, and because in those strange and frightening months in the first year of the pandemic so many people had to say goodbye on a screen, through a window, or not at all. 

Late at night in the months after she died, I replayed the hours alone in the room with her, trying to remember what I’d said or not said, done or not done, worrying myself into a terror that I’d failed at something essential in those stretching, awkward, lonely days. Then I’d shudder and shake my head, reminding myself I was lucky not to have been on my knees on the concrete. My grief stunted and clenched in my chest.

On the second anniversary of her death, I took myself to the wild, empty Washington coast in winter. I plunged myself into the frigid ocean. I spoke to my mother, sitting on the damp dunes in the cold gray mist. I apologized for all that I couldn’t explain, that I couldn’t fix, that I couldn’t resolve for her or for me. For the way my mind wandered when I sat alone in that room for hours, and how I played solitaire on my phone sometimes. For the way I never was sure what to say and worried about it instead of just lying down next to her, afraid of bruising or bumping her frail body, invading what remained of her personal space. I remembered the way she, in her advancing years, grew into a stunning clarity of knowing what mattered and what didn’t, and that she laughed often and freely. I remembered the way she loved me, the cool smoothness of her hand as she brushed my hair back from my face, how she would leave the room shaking her head slightly, lovingly, when I said or did something she couldn’t make sense of, or disapproved of. 

The clotted river of grief under my rib cage softened and broke open. 

My great-grandmother speaks across 100 years from one pandemic to another. Nothing is the same. Nothing will ever be the same.

Listen as Siobhan reads from her essay…

about the author:

The good life is freedom, safety, love, and community. All of us deserve it, and not enough of us have it. 

Siobhan Ring is a writer, organizer, and progressive movement-builder in the Pacific NW. She writes about parenting, caregiving, health, illness, and survival in a world that seems bound on destruction but overflows with beauty anyway. Her work has been previously published in The Write Launch, Lunch Ticket, and The Forge: Journal of Organizing Strategy and Practice. She lives with her sweet queer family in Seattle.

Categories
micro monday micro nonfiction short creative nonfiction

Inland Ocean by Heidi Bell

Inland Ocean | Heidi Bell

Our parents park the ancient pop-up camper in the sandy driveway. We kids and our friends sleep out here in the summer sometimes, at the bottom of what used to be an inland ocean. We fall asleep to the suck and billow of the heavy canvas sides, as though we’re on a sailing ship or inside the body of the breathing night, the belly of the whale.

I wake to my father’s shadowed face, his incandescent eyes. He and my mother are shaking us all awake. His hands gather me up. “It’s going to rain. Let’s go in.”

Instead, he holds me in his arms in the yard under the boiling purple sky as wind turns the oak leaves inside-out and bends the young poplars almost to the ground.

Nights when my father doesn’t come home, I imagine his permanent disappearance—car-crashed, drowned. He makes promises he doesn’t keep. He makes our mother cry.

“Look,” he says now.

A slender starfish stretches its legs across the sky, and its voice is everywhere, thunder woven through the air. It reaches across the humped backs of the bluffs, and an electric charge rises up from the ground to meet it, up through my father’s body and through mine, and we laugh with delight.

There will be years of strife between us before I accept what he is—elemental, a creature of instinct and chaos—before I understand how I am like him. How none of us asked for this. We all just ended up here somehow, together. Unjustified.

About the Author:

Heidi Bell’s fiction collection Signs of the Imminent Apocalypse and Other Stories was released by Cornerstone Press in October 2024. She works as a writer and editor of books and educational products. 

Categories
micro monday micro nonfiction short creative nonfiction

Boyfriend Jeans by Heidi Bell

Boyfriend Jeans | Heidi Bell

Rose Marie’s younger son chauffeurs her to the cookout; she is too weak now to drive. She comes across the yard, her sagging cheeks bright with blusher, drooping lips painted pink. She is wearing faded straight-legged jeans and a shirt unbuttoned at the bottom and tied up under her bust, revealing several inches of midriff scarred from surgery. She sits down across from me at the peeling picnic table, and, behind her, the sun comes—a girl stepping down the sky—to dip her toes in the shimmering river that flows by at the edge of the lush midsummer yard. Rose’s auburn wig begins to glow.

Rose and I have forged a connection through the years over various mental health crises and then female cancers—like a Ping-Pong game. But we won’t see each other again. What is there to say? I win.

The grilled meat like river sand, ashes in my mouth.

Later, my sister, Rose’s daughter-in-law, says in a bewildered voice, “I don’t know why she was wearing that outfit.”

There are clothes that live at the margin of my closet—sleeveless blouses and miniskirts and fitted T-shirts and turtlenecks that I long, against all reason, to wear again someday. The flowered fabric and cashmere seemed to have slipped through my fingers before I had a chance to appreciate how they felt against my skin, how it felt to be who I was then.

Maybe Rose, ravaged by uterine cancer, has finally reached her target weight. Which of us women past a certain age wouldn’t be tempted to accept that mean little gift—the sharp edges of hip bones, the shadows between the ribs.

About the Author:

Heidi Bell’s short story collection Signs of the Imminent Apocalypse (Cornerstone Press, 2024) was named a 2025 Book of the Year by the Chicago Writers Association. She is at work on a novel and a collection of micro memoirs.