Friday, March 12, 2010

Alive. Alone. Alight.


The boy sat all bold angles and subtle curves in the belly of the cast iron tub. Soap bubbles had collected at the edge of the water ringed in filthy grey and the ripples of that way little boys are never still. His head was lathered in a great frothy white wig of shampoo so that he looked cast in a pageant. The man’s hands moved deftly and quickly through the froth, so that when the time came, he cupped an inverted hand over the boy’s brow and ladled bathwater with the other. When he was finished, the man swept the boy’s bangs out of his eyes and kissed his slippery forehead. The boy wiped at his eyes with fingers that seemed longer every day to the man.

“Do moms sometimes give sons baths?” the little boy asked while the man ruffled him briskly about the shoulders with a towel.

“They do, mostly when they’re little boys.” Said the man. The boy stepped into the underpants the man held sprawled between his hands.

“And then do they brush their teeth together and floss and shave together?”

“Well, Mom’s don’t shave their faces the way dads do, but yeah, then they brush their teeth.”

“And read together before bed?”

“The best moms do, yes.”

“My mom was one of the best, right?”

The man put his hand on the little boy’s chest, flat and broad like he was giving compressions to keep the child alive until help arrived. He looked at the wallpaper and all its little swoops and textures. He felt his heartbeat 7 times round and then spun the boy to face the sink. They brushed their teeth. They flossed their teeth. They spread shaving cream about their faces and wiped it away from their chins and cheeks and upper lips, the boy with a plastic razor, the man with the real deal.

“You want batman or superman tonight?”

“I want to be spiderman.”

“Spiderman’s dirty, pal. Tomorrow night.”

“Okay. Okay, batman.”


The man started to help the boy into his pajamas, but he didn’t need it. The man leaned against the doorframe to the room she had painted with care. It was only barely just dark out on account of the summer and he could see the boundaries of their world together, him and the boy. That afternoon, he’d sat with his thoughts and his iced tea on the steps to the kitchen door and watched a pale warrior make-believe a victory at the edge of the lawn. The sun had made the man tired and the boy wanted him to come and fight at his side. He could have and maybe should have. With the cinematic memory that rested in sepia tones through his thoughts now, he was glad he didn’t.


The boy was dressed for bed and they read a story of turtle’s stacked to the sky that one might reach the moon, like some inversion of the Hindu foundations of the world.

The man awoke on the floor of his bedroom, all those photos spread around him and the glass on its side having been earlier drained. The boy was crying, frantic. When the man stepped to the door of the child’s room, still bright from the moon and being painted white save for the clouds stenciled about the ceiling, he heard the boy but didn’t see him. And then there he was, folded into a pile just inside the door by the wall, his eyes wide with terror and drenched in grief.

“What is it, pal?”

“It was a bad dream… a bad dream.”

“Oh, no… You know you’re okay now, okay?”

“I just – yeah, I know, I just – it was so scary and-- so scary.”

“Do you want to tell me about it, pal?”

“I don’t know. I don’t know.”



The boy trembled with sobs and his breath rippled the room like frothy bath water.

“It was all of us on the bridge, but it wasn’t the bridge,” the boy let tumble out.

“All of us?”

“You and me and mr. mittens and mommy and we were on the bridge but it wasn’t the bridge.”

“How did you know it wasn’t the bridge?”

“Because it was real high. It was so real high up and mommy was out front while we crossed it and and then…” The boy’s voice broke. “ but and then she fell and you couldn’t catch her.”

“You knew it was your mom?”

“Yeah and she fell and you reached and couldn’t catch her and you were holding mr. mittens and we all began to slip. We slipped and we fell too.”

“And then you woke up?”

“I woke up and I was crying and then I tried to find you but I was scared. I was scared.”

“It’s okay to be scared and I’m always going to come find you.”

“But I don’t like it.”

“And that’s okay too. Just look for me, okay?”

“I wish you played with me today. I wanted you to.”

“Sometimes dads have to let their little boys play by themselves. It’s good for us. For both of us.”

“Okay.”

The man held his boy in that empty house and well within the boundaries of their world. The boy was asleep soon and the man soon after. In the morning, they made pancakes and they laughed in the sunlight that found its way onto their faces through trees and windows.

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