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h-m-groniger
The fingers I rub over the smooth nub of the newel post weren’t always like this. When they were rubbed red and raw, they picked up splinters more easily. The wood I touched was not as smooth and silky as the wood the other maids touched; I was taller then. But now, I find where I touched; clearly I left a mark. I follow the trail I made so long ago, touching it some, but mostly, I know where it is. The floorboards, wide and swaybacked, creak exactly where they used to—hop, sidestep, the laundry cart is not where it once was. The bustle in the hallways has calmed; I can no longer feel the bounce, bounce of the other girls as they jog past where I could just reach out and touch their brawny arms, smell their sweaty hands and foreheads and hear their jangling laughs. The sun still pours through the windows of the upper hall, between the offices and the outside, touching the wood and lighting the incense of pine. It’s gentle and feels like the touch of the kitchen woman Mary, who always guided me through the difficult corridors. But the kitchen no longer holds its warmth, not that it had since I tripped over Mary’s body, where she lay in a slurry of goulash after falling on the stove, and I had to pull myself upright using the tangible smell of cold, scorched flesh and tomatoes and onions and I don’t eat pork anymore. Avoiding the area where she fell so long ago, I navigate the low, old room, feeling along the cluttered remains of a renovation long since abandoned, and I found the narrow maids’ stair. Steep and skinny, it folded back on itself at every floor as it hugged the walls up to the attic where our beds were shoved together so tight, where I could run my fingers over the girls’ heads touching their soft, oily hair, their curls, their braids, and find my way. I knew that I could not make it up the steps now, I could barely make it then, but I could still touch them. The treads worn so deep that they were like wet clay marred by a huge thumb, the chaotic scuffling, constantly chugging over the worn boards. Sometimes the girls slipped on the rounded, clumsy, silken steps. Sometimes the sooty, acrid oil lamps on the walls leaked. The wood felt so familiar under my dried fingers, each neat grain lying in plane with its sisters, every step, a family. Except for the lower three steps, where the lines of wood remained untouched, save for me, because I could never make the respectful leap over them. I kneel now, and stretch my fingers towards the scratchy corner of the riser and tread and find the crudely carved letters that say: Katie died here. I wasn’t here then, but the girls, the older girls, said that the man, the fat man, had come with the soot-hauling boys and taken her to the basement, and they were quiet. The girls weren’t, but they were just the girls, and it was a long time ago, when splinters were fresh in young, sensitive fingertips. Sobering and straightening, as much as I could, I left. They would level this station soon, and I just wanted to touch it again.
0
Apr 28, 2013
Apr 28, 2013 at 10:34 AM UTC
Hotel in the Canadian Train Station
The fingers I rub over the smooth nub of the newel post weren’t always like this. When they were rubbed red and raw, they picked up splinters more easily. The wood I touched was not as smooth and silky as the wood the other maids touched; I was taller then. But now, I find where I touched; clearly I left a mark. I follow the trail I made so long ago, touching it some, but mostly, I know where it is. The floorboards, wide and swaybacked, creak exactly where they used to—hop, sidestep, the laundry cart is not where it once was. The bustle in the hallways has calmed; I can no longer feel the bounce, bounce of the other girls as they jog past where I could just reach out and touch their brawny arms, smell their sweaty hands and foreheads and hear their jangling laughs. The sun still pours through the windows of the upper hall, between the offices and the outside, touching the wood and lighting the incense of pine. It’s gentle and feels like the touch of the kitchen woman Mary, who always guided me through the difficult corridors. But the kitchen no longer holds its warmth, not that it had since I tripped over Mary’s body, where she lay in a slurry of goulash after falling on the stove, and I had to pull myself upright using the tangible smell of cold, scorched flesh and tomatoes and onions and I don’t eat pork anymore. Avoiding the area where she fell so long ago, I navigate the low, old room, feeling along the cluttered remains of a renovation long since abandoned, and I found the narrow maids’ stair. Steep and skinny, it folded back on itself at every floor as it hugged the walls up to the attic where our beds were shoved together so tight, where I could run my fingers over the girls’ heads touching their soft, oily hair, their curls, their braids, and find my way. I knew that I could not make it up the steps now, I could barely make it then, but I could still touch them. The treads worn so deep that they were like wet clay marred by a huge thumb, the chaotic scuffling, constantly chugging over the worn boards. Sometimes the girls slipped on the rounded, clumsy, silken steps. Sometimes the sooty, acrid oil lamps on the walls leaked. The wood felt so familiar under my dried fingers, each neat grain lying in plane with its sisters, every step, a family. Except for the lower three steps, where the lines of wood remained untouched, save for me, because I could never make the respectful leap over them. I kneel now, and stretch my fingers towards the scratchy corner of the riser and tread and find the crudely carved letters that say: Katie died here. I wasn’t here then, but the girls, the older girls, said that the man, the fat man, had come with the soot-hauling boys and taken her to the basement, and they were quiet. The girls weren’t, but they were just the girls, and it was a long time ago, when splinters were fresh in young, sensitive fingertips. Sobering and straightening, as much as I could, I left. They would level this station soon, and I just wanted to touch it again.
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A puddle bloomed on his knee, as he sat beneath the poplar, before the church, waiting. Anytime now, she would **** by on her bike that made noises like a rabid top. The two soggy cones, held in his shaking fists dripped strawberry cream, sticky, pungent, and pink. He had heard that girls like pink. Roadside gravel crunched and spun as she approached. Her brown legs were always moving, the muscles changing—they would have driven Leonardo mad. She passed by blind. He let the pink cones fall to the dirt with the others. Ants gnawed on his legs. He would try again. Climbing on the bridge with hands full, always of strawberry cream, he wavered, nearly fell, and sat down on the stone ledge. Gravel ricocheted. Sleeves, his and hers, touched as she passed. He nearly fell in the water, but she touched his sleeve, touched him. Pink swirls teased fish in the rocky creek. He became a crossing arm with strawberry cream cones. Stones sprayed. Crash. Why didn’t you move, you idiot, she growled, wiping ****** stones off her once-perfect knees. He didn’t speak. I love you. Can you move? My boyfriend is waiting for me, she said, standing on the pedals, her legs still. Numb, he shifted, and she whizzed away. He looked at the gravel lining the bridge and saw blood staining the pebbles red and pink. Sifting, them through his fingers, he knew that on her, he had left his mark, and him, she would not forget.
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Apr 27, 2013
Apr 27, 2013 at 12:29 AM UTC
She Was Chocolate, and He Was Vanilla