How you loved your epileptic child
The first time I heard someone say seizure
was when the sheriff came to make us leave,
but didn’t care that you took the padlock
from its place on the outside of the door
where you kept me as your little monster.
You said it’s a pet name.
When you and I use the same word, like purple,
do you think we mean the same thing, small one?
As you said this, you stroked the old purple,
gone to green, of the last place you’d kissed me.
We meant the same thing when we said you loved
me. You’d loved mom hard, too.
The devil, that sly old trickster, slipped in
like he might be a useful friend to have,
maybe he would kiss me, but he’d never
tuck me in at night.
I think that’s why you hated him, because
he let me forget, for a while, your love.
The next time I heard someone say seizure
was when the devil came to me at lunch,
we were so hungry, camping in the car
on the way to a place you called safety
and goddamn privacy.
The waitress hovered over me, nosy.
With you gone, I sat waiting and hoping
this seizure, the sheriff would take the lock.
Lifetimes later, you returned, took me then
in the car, pushed the devil back into
yours. (Mine, I sometimes lied.)
It’s too risky, for you to be like this.
Just a whisper, like the other absence.
We went to the swollen stream, to become
pure. Free.
You pushed me under like John the Baptist.
Surprised: I’d never hoped to be Jesus.
Hush. It’s time for us to have peace. Sleep now.
This time, tired of kisses, I loved you back.
You slipped away, the water taking you
to what you deserved. I passed on that gift.
There’s been a seizure, but it will be fine.
I threw the lock in after you.
My friend the devil still visits sometimes.
He leaves tender kisses to remind me,
and before he goes I ask him to please
love you, and tuck you in at night.
Excerpt
Esther kissed me once for free, when we were both just girls. We were sitting watching the Rangers play baseball—not the Olympics, because it was the summer of 1980 and Carter was choosing to hide in a boycott rather than fight the communists who were running it—and Gunnar went to the fridge to get a fresh bottle of beer.
“Daddy,” Esther called, “can we have some sandwiches?”
He grunted back, and we heard his breathing punctuated by the clatter of the silverware drawer and the rattle of the jam jar.
Esther swayed back and forth, making fun of how Gunnar had staggered as he walked to the kitchen.
“Usually I get his beers, or mom does, but you’re company.” She winked at me.
I wasn’t allowed at Esther’s house often, even though we should have been best friends all along. We were both 14, we lived across the street from each other, and we would go to high school together the next year, just like we’d always gone to school together. But her family wasn’t our kind of people.
On the day Esther kissed me, though, momma’d had a vision of her and Esther’s mom going shopping together.
When momma had a vision, you didn’t stand in the way, and so she had dropped me off and taken Esther’s mom in the big car to go shopping.
Gunnar came back with a paper plate of peanut butter and strawberry jam sandwiches for us, and a pair of beers for himself. He eased back down into his lounger with the creak of springs and scritch of leather on denim, and opened a beer. He let it dangle from his fingers, and it wasn’t long before he was snoring.
Esther crept up on him and eased the bottle from him.
She held it out, for me to drink. This was one of the reasons they weren’t our kind of people, and I shook my head no at her.
“I’ll scream,” she whispered, and held it out again. “It’s gross. He’s already drank off it.”
Esther pushed her finger into the neck of the bottle and wiped it, just a little pop of sound when her finger came out, then wiped the outside of the top. She made me take the bottle.
I drank some, of course I did. Not much, just a swallow, so she wouldn’t scream, and then I gave it back to her.
She finished the bottle, and then laid it down beneath Gunnar’s fingertips. There hadn’t been much left anyway, I told myself.
We sat on the floor in the Texas summer heat and leaned our backs against the new couch. The plastic on the seats got sticky and uncomfortable when the sun shone on it, but the unglazed terra cotta floor was cool, and her hand was warm when she put it in mine.
She was swaying again, and when she swayed my way, her head rested on my shoulder and stayed there.
“Esther,” I told her. She looked up.
“We’re best friends now.” She nodded.
Good. It was good to have a friend. Even if next year she didn’t join me in softball and running and volleyball and all the other sports I’d been denied in junior high because there were only intramurals, I’d still have a friend. Frank didn’t let me play with him anymore, because he was older and it wasn’t “cool” to have your little sister around, especially if she was better at baseball than you. He could get the bat on the ball sometimes, smash it high in the air with the powerful arms that he’d once used to hoist me on his wide shoulders, but he lacked control. Just about every hit was a foul or a pop fly. Even when he hit it well, he was never ready to run.
I’ve always been ready to run.
Esther didn’t care about baseball, even if she’d watch it on the tv with me. At school, I’d used to watch her when she double- dutched with the other girls, who called me boy like it was a curse word and stopped their ropes when I came around.
“I have a secret,” she said, without lifting her head. “I want to tell it to you.”
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