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ruby-harrison
Home to rinse my knuckles, wipe at the oil spots on the counter, warm up canned beans and hot sauce. Powdered milk in my coffee navy through the window. Everywhere scraps of life restricted – slime mold on the litter under the porch, the earwig who still can’t find her way out of the sink.
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Jul 26, 2010
Jul 26, 2010 at 1:13 PM UTC
Dusk
A swallow of weak coffee went down the wrong way today – I spat. Found the pink lemonade sun rising, a watery smile over the street and its limp newspaper, the morning mosquitoes. A dog barked at a choking sprinkler, a crow screamed. Shook out his shoulders. Sleepy men paddled past my trash cans in a slow truck. Mildew crept up the house walls, into my nostrils. I had a cold belly in spite of the steam and funk of 6 a.m. and when I came back inside my dog licked my toes, every one. I said to the kitchen, I am king, king of the world.
0
Jul 18, 2010
Jul 18, 2010 at 11:54 AM UTC
Mid-July
Each cold wave was starting to slap me in the face and the grayness of morning wasn’t lifting as the sun rose. Goosebumps had made my legs slim sharks, heavy and rough, so I swam to shore spitting out icy water. I was thinking about coffee, maybe crawling into my sleeping bag and listening to loons’ far-off howls until breakfast, and I reached the splintery dock when I choked – tried to struggle backward, without any splash which might wash her in with me. Dock spiders swim. Did you know? They fasten long ropes of silk and dive for their prey, something big since no horsefly sustains a spider the size of a mouse. This one was monstrous, motionless, spiky black legs jointed white at her knees, face-level to my wet bobbing head. She gripped an egg sac, papery and white, marble-sized. It held hundreds of tiny hers. It looked heavy. I had come to her panting but now the water or inertia maybe pushed my face close to that enormous silent mother so I fought harder to stay away, though if the lake had been still I might have treaded at a distance, stared hard, dared her to scuttle and disappear in the cracks in the plywood-patched dock with its rotting ladder and a dozen more spiders, probably, white sacs strapped firmly to their bellies. I flopped like I’d hooked a lip, gasping, desperate for rough open water where depth would deter any diving hairy creature. Somehow I struggled to remoter shoreline where I slid over boulders’ upholstery of algae, shivering, legs frog-splayed, stringent and numb. I never felt it when I scratched my legs crashing through buckthorn, the way to the cabin, though I saw the lines later when I put on soft clothing in a warm inside corner where spiders are smaller and at least have the kindness to keep out of sight.
0
Jan 12, 2010
Jan 12, 2010 at 6:44 AM UTC
The Lake Spider
Each cold wave was starting to slap me in the face and the grayness of morning wasn’t lifting as the sun rose. Goosebumps had made my legs slim sharks, heavy and rough, so I swam to shore spitting out icy water. I was thinking about coffee, maybe crawling into my sleeping bag and listening to loons’ far-off howls until breakfast, and I reached the splintery dock when I choked – tried to struggle backward, without any splash which might wash her in with me. Dock spiders swim. Did you know? They fasten long ropes of silk and dive for their prey, something big since no horsefly sustains a spider the size of a mouse. This one was monstrous, motionless, spiky black legs jointed white at her knees, face-level to my wet bobbing head. She gripped an egg sac, papery and white, marble-sized. It held hundreds of tiny hers. It looked heavy. I had come to her panting but now the water or inertia maybe pushed my face close to that enormous silent mother so I fought harder to stay away, though if the lake had been still I might have treaded at a distance, stared hard, dared her to scuttle and disappear in the cracks in the plywood-patched dock with its rotting ladder and a dozen more spiders, probably, white sacs strapped firmly to their bellies. I flopped like I’d hooked a lip, gasping, desperate for rough open water where depth would deter any diving hairy creature. Somehow I struggled to remoter shoreline where I slid over boulders’ upholstery of algae, shivering, legs frog-splayed, stringent and numb. I never felt it when I scratched my legs crashing through buckthorn, the way to the cabin, though I saw the lines later when I put on soft clothing in a warm inside corner where spiders are smaller and at least have the kindness to keep out of sight.
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42
Since fifty-eight the jaycees come rounding up rattlers in Sweetwater, folk from all over for a weekend in March when snakes leave the hibernaculum and slide back up into west Texas and the wind. Mr. Herrera knew his Luis and I rode the seven-thirty bus, had cokes and potato chip sandwiches with Mitchell and Thomas after Sunday school, shot jackrabbits that ate alfalfa in the dairy pastures. Dad said he reckoned, so I took Mr. Herrera’s apron and offer and brought my knife that Luis sharpened to a razor and shaved his forearm hairs with. Frank tried that once, sliced himself like a tomato when he slipped. Snake shop’s a butchery, down the main street past the dairy mart and primary school, in the yellow open scrub. If buzzards had noses like dogs they’d flock, smell that snake blood from Mexico. Rattlesnake skinning is all stringy guts, soft skin, pulled teeth and poison squeezed out of gum sockets like milk from an old cow’s teat. Fancy skins with eyeholes and lips cost ten, specialty of Mr. Herrera. Headless strip plus rattle just two dollars the foot. Cut the belly lengthwise and rip, easy near the backbone where it catches. Out-of-towners buy anything. Wallets, boots, belts with snakeskin sewed or tacked on, lucky rattles, picture frames for proof of their longest catch. God-fearing jaycees doing good for our communities will eat deep-fried snake meat, like tough old chicken, but good with black-eyed peas and sweet tea on the side. The women even come once the round-up is done, the church women, the Jesus women with belief and pistachio pudding with marshmallows, like Mrs. Howard who shrieked “Boyd!” and lectured about hygiene when she saw me in my apron and ****** to my elbows, menacing the street. The biggest round-up days we worked late, past midnight. Past the dairy mart hours, so once the skins were all peeled and stretched and the sticky linoleum hosed down some, Luis and I walked back through town, deserted, dark except lights from Roscoe and Roby and even big Abilene miles away, shining across the flat nothing, coyotes yip yip yipping somewhere near the lake farther north. Luis showed me how to eat peanuts shells and all and let me try on his brother’s high school letter jacket. Late night in Sweetwater is a nothing. The wind never stops blowing, and there’s nobody else on the ******* planet.
0
Jan 12, 2010
Jan 12, 2010 at 6:43 AM UTC
Rattlesnake Skinner
Since fifty-eight the jaycees come rounding up rattlers in Sweetwater, folk from all over for a weekend in March when snakes leave the hibernaculum and slide back up into west Texas and the wind. Mr. Herrera knew his Luis and I rode the seven-thirty bus, had cokes and potato chip sandwiches with Mitchell and Thomas after Sunday school, shot jackrabbits that ate alfalfa in the dairy pastures. Dad said he reckoned, so I took Mr. Herrera’s apron and offer and brought my knife that Luis sharpened to a razor and shaved his forearm hairs with. Frank tried that once, sliced himself like a tomato when he slipped. Snake shop’s a butchery, down the main street past the dairy mart and primary school, in the yellow open scrub. If buzzards had noses like dogs they’d flock, smell that snake blood from Mexico. Rattlesnake skinning is all stringy guts, soft skin, pulled teeth and poison squeezed out of gum sockets like milk from an old cow’s teat. Fancy skins with eyeholes and lips cost ten, specialty of Mr. Herrera. Headless strip plus rattle just two dollars the foot. Cut the belly lengthwise and rip, easy near the backbone where it catches. Out-of-towners buy anything. Wallets, boots, belts with snakeskin sewed or tacked on, lucky rattles, picture frames for proof of their longest catch. God-fearing jaycees doing good for our communities will eat deep-fried snake meat, like tough old chicken, but good with black-eyed peas and sweet tea on the side. The women even come once the round-up is done, the church women, the Jesus women with belief and pistachio pudding with marshmallows, like Mrs. Howard who shrieked “Boyd!” and lectured about hygiene when she saw me in my apron and ****** to my elbows, menacing the street. The biggest round-up days we worked late, past midnight. Past the dairy mart hours, so once the skins were all peeled and stretched and the sticky linoleum hosed down some, Luis and I walked back through town, deserted, dark except lights from Roscoe and Roby and even big Abilene miles away, shining across the flat nothing, coyotes yip yip yipping somewhere near the lake farther north. Luis showed me how to eat peanuts shells and all and let me try on his brother’s high school letter jacket. Late night in Sweetwater is a nothing. The wind never stops blowing, and there’s nobody else on the ******* planet.
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91
In my dream, I was accosted by sugar ants in the sandbox, near the honeysuckle and curled parsley behind the house. I was trying to eat the little ants but was called in for cheese and baloney. When I came in, hopping in worn-out slippers, the glass door slid into the kitchen with plasterboard walls and beige ceramic tile. There was a black spider perched on the ceiling with bright yellow knees. Those years ago I drew with sidewalk chalk, made myself mazes on the sloping driveway too steep for basketball. Cicadas dragged in heat on waves, droning. One landed on me - a yell caught in my throat - but I made myself look at it and be still, shaking. Back then I had an old cape & a homemade bow-and-arrow. I’d sally forth into the backyard, barefoot, jumping over prickly mulch, brushing my shins against clouds of low love-in-a-mist with its threaded leaves & shy blue-white flowers. Sometimes my sister was back there too, tanning, or Mom carving little men out of cherry, but more often I was all alone in that wilderness in moccasins & living off wood sorrel, the brighter clover, lemony. Or in rain I listened to my brother play piano if he was home, maybe Bags and Trane, and I’d dance between shadows, the underworld of the patches of carpet in the light. Later - a little older - I recognized that home is more a time than a place, and understood I would miss it years before it was gone so around nine years old I went through every foot of that high-ceilinged house, that weedy backyard, and made a solemn farewell to everything in advance trying hard to be ready long before the time came to leave.
0
Jan 12, 2010
Jan 12, 2010 at 6:41 AM UTC
Daydream
In my dream, I was accosted by sugar ants in the sandbox, near the honeysuckle and curled parsley behind the house. I was trying to eat the little ants but was called in for cheese and baloney. When I came in, hopping in worn-out slippers, the glass door slid into the kitchen with plasterboard walls and beige ceramic tile. There was a black spider perched on the ceiling with bright yellow knees. Those years ago I drew with sidewalk chalk, made myself mazes on the sloping driveway too steep for basketball. Cicadas dragged in heat on waves, droning. One landed on me - a yell caught in my throat - but I made myself look at it and be still, shaking. Back then I had an old cape & a homemade bow-and-arrow. I’d sally forth into the backyard, barefoot, jumping over prickly mulch, brushing my shins against clouds of low love-in-a-mist with its threaded leaves & shy blue-white flowers. Sometimes my sister was back there too, tanning, or Mom carving little men out of cherry, but more often I was all alone in that wilderness in moccasins & living off wood sorrel, the brighter clover, lemony. Or in rain I listened to my brother play piano if he was home, maybe Bags and Trane, and I’d dance between shadows, the underworld of the patches of carpet in the light. Later - a little older - I recognized that home is more a time than a place, and understood I would miss it years before it was gone so around nine years old I went through every foot of that high-ceilinged house, that weedy backyard, and made a solemn farewell to everything in advance trying hard to be ready long before the time came to leave.
Continue reading...
66