Sunday, January 23, 2011

Mrs. Mercer


Merely being in the same room with him is not enough anymore, talking to herself, answering herself.  No, it seems there is something lacking, something not quite right.  And telling herself that things will eventually turn, that there will be some incredible change in the course of things that will make it all go back to the way it used to be?  Well, this is the most nonsensical thing of all, and only serves to fuel her already depressed state.

Her mind wants to rest, to be set free.  As vulgar as it sounds, she needs him to go.  And how to tell him?  This, of course, is always the question.

Mrs. Mercer? 

The attending appears out of thin air, or perhaps from the recesses of her mind.  Summoning her, now, it seems.  Mrs. Mercer gets up, follows the nice, young nurse, her hospital smock a blue the color of a clear northern sky.

It is November.  Outside, lawns are still green and flecked, here and there, with spots of brown, patterns of fallen leaves, reminders of a changing season - reminders that change is imminent, clouds that have shifted shapes, reminders she does not want.

Inside, white painted walls, sterile corridors filled with bleeps and the humming of machines, framed prints of flowery landscapes and sandy beaches, places the inhabitants of the Hearthstone Manor Rest Haven will likely never see. 
           
Mrs. Mercer is led through a set of double doors marked Employees Only and into another room contiguous with the faculty break room.  It is here where they gather and talk about their families, their troubles, sometimes their patients.  Probably not, however, the patients, what with constantly soiled bed pans and under-garments, crying through the night and begging to be set free of this plight, as if old age or illness or an accident has somehow happened to them, an evil prank. 
           
And one of these patients is a Mr. Franklin Mercer.  Franklin waits for his wife every day, inside of a room that he does not share.  She had requested a private room for him, the very most private of rooms, for they were still incredibly young – too young to imagine this life-changing atrocity - when the accident occurred, of course and, well, a private room was only appropriate at the time.   

            Now, it seems, none of that matters, and she sits down in an over-sized leather chair opposite the wide, freshly polished mahogany desk that is Dr. Bloom’s.  She has not been to his office before today, and wishes never to be here again.  It has an ominous feel to it, dark and desolate, a rainy day turning to an even rainier night. 
           
Dr. Bloom extends an arm, offers her a chair, the attending retreating to a dark corner of the room.  Will she wait there for this meeting to be over?  Will she listen to every private word the two, Doctor and Patient’s Wife, share in this most intimate moment?  Mrs. Mercer hopes not, but then realizes it does not matter in the least.  She plans only on listening.  She can almost predict the words that will escape the good Doctor’s mouth. 
           
Mrs. Mercer.

She waits for him to speak, to continue, stares at the corners of his mouth, how they seem to turn ever so slightly up on one side and down on the other. 
           
All right, then.  Mrs. Mercer, your husband.  I do not give him more than two weeks at most. 

He does not mince word here.  He speaks in a dark and forward tone.

His health is only deteriorating, and he still will not breathe on his own, of course.  It is my professional opinion that you call the family in to say final goodbyes.
           
Mrs. Mercer?
Mrs. Mercer?
           
Dr. Bloom has come out from behind his desk, having been standing the whole conversation, unable to sit down, wringing his large hands inside and out of one another.  He sits now, opposite Mrs. Mercer in a matching leather chair, and takes her hand in his.  It is ice cold, though she does not feel him take it. 
           
Mrs. Mercer?
*****

At home that evening, having completed her wifely duties of visiting her husband, and having decided not to apprise him of the Doctor’s news that afternoon, Mrs. Mercer runs a warm tub, takes the bottle of bubble bath off of the tub’s ledge, and pours a quarter of it into the steaming water.  Dropping her clothes to the floor, she spies herself in the mirror and gasps.

What she sees both surprises and excites her! 

What she sees she cannot believe!

Could it be?

Attractive?
           
She runs a hand over her breast, down the still soft curve of her belly, her hip, her thigh.  It is unbelievable, really, and as she slips into the tub still thinking of her body, her somewhat youthful, still-attractive-to-other-men body, she has just the slightest twinge of happiness, of joyous, guilt-ridden happiness.
           
The days go by.  They are uneventful, really, and Mrs. Mercer does not alter much from her routine.  Coffee in the morning, sometimes a walk to the end of the road and back, two hours at the hospital with Franklin, feeding him a soft lunch of pureed split- pea soup, chocolate pudding and a lukewarm cup of coffee, black, then back home to tidy up and prepare for bed, prepare for the next day.
           
True to the Good Doctor’s word, Franklin Mercer’s health does deteriorate.  He can no longer speak, does not seem to recognize his wife upon her entry into the hospital room.  She brings him his favorite books and reads short passages from them every afternoon following lunch, but her stays grow shorter and shorter, until finally, on the day after Thanksgiving, she does not go at all.  She shops that day, as many do, those who want to get a good deal on early Christmas presents.  It is an annual tradition, one that Franklin had always accompanied her on, except that this year, of course, is different.

Mrs. Mercer goes alone, amongst the hundreds of other shoppers - mostly women, she notices - and shops only for herself, buying dresses and shoes and skirts she never would even have dared look at had Franklin been by her side.  Too short, he would have told her, too risqué.  She finds herself marveling at how, at turns, she feels good to be by herself, and how equally guilty she feels for having this thought enter her mind in the first place.

*****

December comes with the usual gusts of wind and falling temperatures, snow eventually descending right around Christmas Eve and Mrs. Mercer, all alone in the big house, has decided to accept any and all invitations to celebrate the holiday.  Very lonely without Frank, she says to sympathetic friends, just doesn’t feel right, and I do feel that I owe it to myself, after all I’ve been through, she says.  It will do me some good to get out, maybe get used to being alone again.  And they all understand, all pat her on the shoulder, give her warm hugs, and gently tell her that everything will be all right.  And she knows it will, of course.  It has to be. 

The evening, then, is highly eventful for Mrs. Mercer. Her very good friends, most of them divorced through one turn of events or another, make sure to invite the most eligible bachelors to one of the best holiday parties ever. They know, of course, that their friend needs to begin looking into starting fresh, and companionship is just what Mrs. Mercer needs.  And Mrs. Mercer, for her part, finds herself intoxicated by all of the lavish attention aimed at her by single male suitors; she finds herself eager to forget about Franklin (Oh, but shouldn’t there be guilty feelings? Horrible, guilt-stricken feelings?), eager to move on with her new life.  She is incredibly, blissfully, guiltily, enjoying herself. 
           
To be free!

To be able to buy whatever she fancies, go wherever she desires, be with whomever she chooses!

Ah, life! 

Indeed!

*****

Christmas comes and goes under a big tree trimmed with blinking lights, popcorn strings, and late night, romantic phone calls   She thinks about seeing Franklin somewhere around the holiday, but resorts, instead, to simply calling the Home, explaining to the nurse that it is just too painful to see him in his present condition, and with it being the Christmas Season and all, her first one without Mr. Mercer, why, she simply isn’t up to the task.  It is much too difficult for her to bear.

She listens to the nurse on the other end of the line, listens and waits to hear something about how truly sad it all is, and how much more he has deteriorated.  The nurse sighs (it couldn’t possibly be relief she hears) as she tells Mrs. Mercer that Franklin has asked about her today.  With it being Christmas and all. 

Mrs. Mercer, it’s a Christmas Miracle! 

Mr. Mercer is well!

Dr. Bloom assures us that he could be home by the New Year! 

Isn’t it simply grand?

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

The Thin Places

We don’t touch as we pass each other by.  Even in tight places – a hallway, the laundry room – we are careful to make sure that not a shoulder should rub, or a hip bump up against one another.  It is dangerous, yes, and not easy work.  But it is necessary, and we both realize it is what must be done.  Our lives have come to this, we realize, and we are content, it seems, to live quietly alongside one another.  The kids are too young to realize anything, and it does not seem that divorce is the way to go – too expensive, too much work – so we agree, silently that is, to just go about our daily lives and try to make the best of things.  As they are. 

And how are things really?  How can things really be when your life takes a momentous change after so many years. 

Change, this thing that usually I relish and welcome…. I do not know if I recognize change in this form. 

I look out the window, across the street.  A newlywed couple, a baby in a stroller kicking her feet and throwing her bottle over and over onto the driveway.  The couple laugh, continue to pick up the bottle, arms around one another. 

A garage sale next door to where we lived, old junk strewn out and down the length of the drive, to the curb where, had this been a neighborhood like the one I had grown up in, stuff would have disappeared every time you turned your back.

Missing Dead Girl

It was just one second. 
That’s all
It took. 
One second,
And I
Could not think
Or breathe
Or even fucking
Look
Outside to see what it was
Exactly
That I had hit.
The car,
It swerved off
To the side of the road
And stopped
And I don’t,
Actually,
I don’t really remember
How I got it
There.
But it stayed.
Somehow.
And I stayed right there
Right there on the seat and thought,
For perhaps the first time
That the seats
The seats in my car were
Leather.
Not cloth.
And not comfortable or
Handsome.
They were ugly, and leather, and
Seats.
I was thinking about seats because outside
Outside I knew there
Was
Something dead and so the
Thought
Of seats
Was such a more
Pleasant thought and I wonder
How life comes
To this -
Killing. 
Had it really come to
Pass?
Me?
Of all people, one who loves
Children
And
Crayons,
And
Squealing
And
Laughter.

I got out then.
I got out then and walked
To the back
And then
Vomited
A bright,
Burning,
Bloody
Spray of vomit
All over the trunk of
My car and I was so fucking mad that
A kid,
For it was true,
Had
Run out in front of the car out
Of nowhere;
What I mean to say
Is
We are
In the middle
Of nowhere
Here
And here is a girl.
Alone.
And now it is me.  I am the one
Alone.

No bike.
She had nothing, not even
A bike.
She had been, it
Appeared,
Walking and there
Was
A forest.
She had come out
Of the forest.
I looked all around then,
Right and left and
To the edge of that
Forest I
Walked.
She had been
Alone.

The body was
Light considering
All of the that stuff you hear
About
Dead weight
I pulled the latch and opened the
Trunk.
This is where I put her,
This girl of
Maybe eight
Or nine.
I didn’t know
How old she could
Possibly
Have been only that she
Was
A daughter
Someone’s daughter
Or
Sister
Or
Grandbaby
And now she was in my
Trunk.
Dead
Dead
Dead.

No cars had passed for
Perhaps a half hour while I was outside
Deciding
What to do and I wished
Oh god, did I wish
That someone
Had passed.
How easy things would have been
Then.
And now they were not;
They simply had changed and she was
In my trunk
And me, driving.
With her.
And my trunk seemed to be,
Though it was only
Imagination,
To be sure,
A million times heavier
And I thought
Perhaps a thousand times
As I drove through a town
Quiet
With grief
To the apartment
Complex where
I lived
I heard
Something,
Something like a knock
Or
Maybe a muffled cry
And it
Was coming
From
The
Trunk.
Hoping for a scrap
Waiting for the team to take the field, Chicago, IL
Street Corner Musician, Chicago, IL

Monday, January 17, 2011

Street ball, as seen from the bleachers at Wrigley Field, Chicago
In the courtyard, Milwaukee Art Museum
Church along the roadside

Untitled

    My mother drives me to school one day.  I am going to St. Edward Catholic High School and at the time, I think I am a sophomore.  I hate this school.  I hate this school and I hate these kids and I hate dressing up and wearing these goddamn cloth neckties every day.  I don't look right in these clothes and I don't say too much about it to my parents, but I hate it more than anything else I can think of.  And the kids make fun of me.  But there is something I hate more than the clothes.  These fuckers.  I hate these fuckers. 
She pulls up and it is just me because my brother is still at the junior high school.  She sits there for a minute and I go to grab the handle and get out, and she says my name. 
She never says my name when I get out of the car. 
She just lets me go. 
She always just lets me go. 
I look at her and she asks me how I would feel if she were to leave her husband, my step-father.  She tells me she has been thinking about it for some time now, that she is not happy, and that Lisa, my step-sister, is old enough now to understand divorce.  I just look at her.  I've been through this before, although I was pretty young and don't remember all of the details of my mom and dad divorcing.  It was a good number of years ago.  I look at her still, not really believing that she is saying this to me, that Lisa is old enough to understand divorce. 
Understand divorce? 
Really? 
What's there to understand? 
That you're not willing to try anymore?  That you're actually willing to take that risk to allow your children with only one parent, when all of the research tells you that two is better, when you know for a fact, without a shadow of a doubt, that one and one is two?  But maybe, I tell myself, maybe I am wrong.  Maybe I am wrong to want my parents to stay together if they just don't love each other anymore.  Of course!  For fuck's sake! Of course!

I look at her still and I know she is waiting for an answer.  Her face is wrinkled, deep lines like a crumpled piece of paper run over her cheeks, make creases at the corners of her eyes. 
Crow's Feet. 
They call them Crow's Feet. 
She looks old to me and I do not answer her, only shake my head and leave her there at the curb, watching me go and I remember that this is not the first time I left her waiting.  Back in freshman year, waiting at the front door and leaning forward to grab a kiss goodbye.  Only I couldn't.  The carpool had just pulled up and Becky and Joey D. were in there with Becky's mom and I could just hear the shit I would get if they knew I still kissed my mother goodbye.  Is this where it started?  Is this the point, the crucial point where she began to pull away from me?  Would she really think it was me pulling away? 
Shouldn't she know that this is only teenage stuff? 
That what she really needs to do at this point is hang on and never let go?
Force me to talk to her?
Force my brother and I to get along no matter how much we told her we hated each other? 
Force this goddamned family back together again? 
Couldn't she make that happen? 
Couldn't she?

Think

When I think about it, I get emotional.
I try not to,
Try not to think too often,
But that is not always the way it ends up.
I'm sure you can imagine.
I really would like for things to be different,
Although that would require for others to make different choices.
Choices I cannot force them to make.

Things happen for a reason, they say.
I am not sure of the reasons in this case,
Not sure why it happened,
And I can feel the pressure of the eyes upon me all day long,
Thinking that they know what happened,
Know why I had to do it.

They have no idea.

No Work Please

Not looking forward to work tomorrow.
Snow turning to sleet.
Please....
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Child and Mastiff

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Today

Walking outside. It is a blizzard.
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Test

Testing from my email inbox.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Dear Jonathan, Pt. I

     I hope you know why I’m here tonight.  If you come to find out, then you will know what I know, and I should hope that you would want to come screaming back to me, screaming out of the pure embarrassment of having been found out.  And you probably will figure out that I was here, as I had to make just a little tear in the screen door off of the kitchen.  Your front door was really locked up good and tight.  You wouldn’t have changed the locks, right?  And to think I would have married you if you’d asked.  You will find your ring in the trash can of the first floor washroom.  Your high school ring.  What was that, like some kind of promise or something?  I found it sitting on your dresser all ready for me; why didn’t you just give it to me yourself, instead of waiting for me to find it like I’m some kind of kid on an Easter morning?
I was tempted to throw it in the toilet and watch it swirl away, but you know me, I could not bear the thought of it clogging up the toilet and you having to call the plumber and telling him that your crazy ex-girlfriend tried to flush it in a fit of childish temper tantrum.  And there, I guess I said it.  I guess this makes things official.  I am officially your ex.
            Not that this is the first time I think you two have been together.  Oh, no.  I’m not that stupid.  About the only thing I don’t know is what she looks like.  And it’s not like I want to know, because that kind of thing just about drives me nutty.  Dear Jonathan, it’s not about the looks.  You can’t tell me it’s about the looks.  If it is, she better be pretty freaking hot.  Is it the sex?  Is that what it is, Jonathan?  Because if that’s it, I think you do need to see someone else.  Like a shrink. 
            I don’t even know what I’m doing here, in your condo, watching your television set, feeding your cat and looking around to see if there is anything I should take with me. You know, kind of as a repayment for what you’ve done to us.  And look at that, Jonathan, you idiot, I’m not even saying me, look what you’ve done to me
Because I don’t care, Jonathan. 

I’m not the type of woman who is going to sit around and sulk and think about killing myself because of you.  You should feel pretty lucky right now.  If you never see me again, you should feel pretty lucky.  And I’ll tell you why.

Winter Walk

It is a nice night for a walk, and we do so with vigor and an almost vivacious sense of otherworldliness.  The recent snowfall has muted our little section of earth, and left a usually bland street quite spectacular in its magnificent showing of snow and ice and mystical winter wonderment.  I had hoped that the walk would clear my head, and don’t say more than a few words along the path.  It does not help, however, and although I normally adore the company and a lovely winter evening, I found myself in an even more dreary state of mind than before we set out.  

Saturday, Not Sunday

It is Saturday, no, Sunday only it feels like a Saturday because there is no school tomorrow which puts everyone in a better mood.  The boy wants to have a sleepover and so I say why not and they run down the street, giddy with excitement like they have never had one before, and return after a while with the other one’s bag and a pillow and a blanket and some other things that I can’t make out as they come barreling through the front door.  They plan to build a fort in his room they tell me, and off they are, then, the dog chasing right behind wanting to be a part of it all, and I won’t see them till dinner.  

From the Start...

Pieces of stories I will share here, those things I start and never finish.  Or maybe they already are....