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The Sky Between You and Me

Page 13

by Catherine Alene


  Revealing what my baggy clothes

  Usually hide

  Panic

  Rises like helium

  Makes my throat go tight

  Because there’s no way

  I can wear this

  Not tonight

  But underneath

  There is adoration

  For the bones

  I can see

  The muscles

  I can feel

  Leaner

  Lighter

  Faster

  Minus five

  I’m closer

  Than I knew

  Quick Change

  “Are you ready?” Dad calls up the stairs.

  Almost. I just…

  “What?”

  I broke my zipper.

  A spontaneous excuse

  Knowing I can’t wear this dress

  Tonight

  Dad’s boots echo on the stairs

  Because there isn’t a zipper

  The multiplier on his belt

  Can’t fix

  I yank the dress over my head

  Shove my legs into my jeans

  Arms back into my hoodie

  My hands do it

  Before my mind thinks

  Yank the zipper

  Hard and fast

  Leaving the fabric

  Frayed where it used to run

  A courtesy knock

  And my bedroom door swings open

  Dad steps in

  Sees me standing

  With Blue at my feet

  My dress in my hands

  “Let me see this thing,” Dad says.

  Exhaling a low whistle

  As he runs his thumb along the zipper

  I know he can’t fix

  “Do you have a plan B?”

  No. This was the only dress I had that would have worked.

  “Pants?”

  Dad knows the answer

  By the look on my face

  “Pretend I didn’t ask.”

  It’s stupid

  Because now I’m crying

  Really crying

  Over this dress I didn’t even love

  Leaving Dad to shift his weight

  From one foot to the other

  Hating problems like this

  Ones he knows he can’t fix

  “Maybe your mom…” he begins

  Pausing as he

  Hears how present tense

  These words sound

  “In her closet. There might be something that would work.”

  Dad chews his bottom lip

  Wondering if this was the right thing

  To have said

  I wonder if he knows

  How I used to crawl into her closet

  Closing the doors behind me

  To sit on the floor

  In the dark

  With the smell of her

  I’m not small like that

  Not anymore

  So I haven’t looked lately

  Which doesn’t mean I don’t remember

  The color of every skirt

  Every dress

  Hanging there

  My breath does a stutter stop in my throat

  As I inhale and nod my head

  Wondering if anything

  That belongs (belonged)

  To my mom

  Will fit

  Me

  Perfect

  I chose

  The dark blue one

  Because it hangs a little longer

  Looks a little funkier

  Than something I’d normally

  Wear

  “You look beautiful,” Dad says.

  His voice catching

  On the memory

  Of Mom

  In this dress

  He opened the door for me

  Helped me into the truck

  Shooing Blue off when he tried to climb into the cab

  Still letting him come

  He just had to put his muddy paws

  In the back

  Where he prefers to ride

  Anyway

  Cody says it too

  “Beautiful!”

  Giving a low whistle

  As he wraps his arm around my waist

  Walks me to our table

  Wearing this dress

  That fits me

  Just right

  Mother-to-be

  Calving makes the young ones nervous

  Switching and straining

  To catch a glimpse

  Figure out

  What

  Who

  Is making their bellies roll

  kicking back the light and the air with hooves spongy and soft

  from inside their aqueous utopia

  purgatory

  But not Angel

  Cut out and pulled into the sun after her mama sighed bubbles of blood

  Crumpled dead outside the squeeze chute with her neck bent wrong

  Leaving behind a bummer calf

  Now come old enough to be a mama herself nine times over

  “Gives us real nice calves,” Dad says.

  She’s a sweet old thing, I add.

  When folks ask

  Eyebrows raised

  Why you hold on to that old cow anyway?

  With them not having seen Angel

  A knock-kneed calf butting and begging for a bottle

  Growing strong

  Even after coming out so still that the breath had to be blown into her lungs and the warmth rubbed into her limbs by the man who’d cried when he’d cut her out from the mama with her neck bent wrong lying in a heap of blood and mess

  Standing proud and quiet

  Next to a seven-year-old in a ring lined with sawdust and the air smelling like livestock and heat and cinnamon crisp elephant ears—with a blue ribbon pinned to her leather halter

  They don’t know

  So they ask

  I’ve been there for every birth

  Sometimes sitting on a fence

  Others cross-legged in the grass

  Or like tonight

  Sitting in the truck

  Watching

  Waiting

  For the calf to slide out into the world

  Which is why tonight

  I put my dress on a hanger

  Shoved my legs into my jeans

  As soon as we got home

  From the tri-tip dinner

  That earned our club

  More than we ever thought

  A single fund-raiser could make

  And volunteered to sit

  Beneath the stars

  Listening to Salida Spring’s only radio station

  Past midnight

  When the disc jockey goes home and the prerecorded playlist comes on

  Always the same songs

  Same order

  Wildfire chasing down Miss American Pie

  Blue doesn’t mind

  Neither do I

  Sitting in the ranch truck with the heat rattling the chaff and dust in the vents

  Watching Angel in the headlights

  Standing calm

  Waiting

  Not missing the freezing cold that bit the calves’ ears round last year

  Teddy bear ears

  Iced their bellies tight to the ground before they could stand

  Not like this year

  With the ground starting to spring green

  Where Angel will lie down

  Lick her calf dry
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  Nose it bleary-eyed and wobbly to its feet

  Born natural and easy

  Just as it should be

  Wrong

  That isn’t how it goes

  Angel groans

  Strains

  Her tail goes up

  A hoof pokes out

  There should be two

  All I see is one

  I set my mug on the dash

  Grab the calving chain coiled on the floor

  Please let it be two. Two hooves. Two, two, two.

  Out of the truck

  Over to the pen

  Where I see that it’s not

  It’s one hoof

  Where two should be

  My coat is off

  On the ground

  The sleeve of my flannel shirt rolled up so I can reach in to feel

  What my hand shouldn’t be tracing

  The line of the calf’s hips, not the head

  It should be the head

  That number, minus five. Stay up, Angel. Keep standing. Minus five.

  Catch the hooves

  Legs in my hand

  Loop the chain around

  Minus five.

  Angel’s straining and bawling

  I’m pulling

  Pulling on the chain

  Wrapped around the legs of that little baby calf

  Coming out wrong side first

  Minus five, minus five.

  Pulling as hard as I can

  But it isn’t enough

  My shoulder, bracing against Angel’s hindquarters

  She’s going down

  Lying down on the ground, groaning

  That calf has to come out

  For her, for it, this little life, these little lungs running out of oxygen

  That calf has to come out

  The chain thunks against the dirt

  Sprint back to the truck where Blue’s still waiting

  Minus five, minus five.

  The truck turns over once

  Twice

  It starts up

  Pulls forward

  Close enough that I can jump out

  Loop the chain around the bumper

  I’ve only done this once before

  Dad was here then

  Please Angel, don’t die, don’t you dare die, not even for your calf.

  I sprint back to the truck

  I’m next to Blue

  He’s sitting tall in the passenger seat

  Watching Angel too

  Watching me ease the truck back

  So much metal

  So much weight

  Attached to a calf still learning how to breathe

  Pulling back

  Back until the calf slides out

  Hooves, hips, shoulder, and then the head

  The baby calf lying on the ground

  Minus five, minus five. How long is too long? The calf is lying so still, too still.

  Blue’s right behind me this time

  We’re out of the truck, on the ground, next to the calf

  Which turns out to be

  A boy

  Wet and tired from the work of being born

  I slide the chain off his legs

  Angel turns to meet him

  She noses him

  Welcomes him with her tongue, warm and wet

  Cleans off his face, around his eyes, inside his nose and ears

  This one wasn’t easy

  Not the way it should be

  But she did it

  We did it

  Angel and I

  I’m just glad

  That number on the scale

  Minus five

  Helped keep me strong

  As long as I was repeating it

  Macaroni

  Should not be the primary art medium for anyone

  There isn’t anything creative about nonperishable food items

  That’s what they’re using every time I come in though

  Macaroni

  Tuesday

  They pasted it to construction paper

  Today

  They’re stringing it onto ribbon

  Pasta jewelry

  They’ll wear home

  Lacey only used four pieces of elbow macaroni

  No paint

  She pushes the macaroni pieces end to end

  Slides them around and around her wrist

  Which book should we read first? I ask.

  Lacey shrugs

  How about this one?

  I pick up a book from the top of the stack between us

  There’s a picture of a cow on the front

  Painted in honey and brown watercolors

  Do you like cows?

  Lacey lifts her eyes from her bracelet to meet mine. “Yes.”

  Her wax-paper whisper saying what it knows it should

  The plastic cover crinkles and gaps at the spine as I open the book on my lap

  I’m so tired

  Everything is heavy

  I want to curl up on one of the beanbags

  And sleep

  Lacey’s eyes are back on her bracelet

  I hate this cow already

  By Any Other Name

  Page two

  Sticks to page three

  I don’t even want to know why

  More cardboard words I can’t bring myself to read

  We have this cow named Angel and she had a calf a couple of weeks ago. It’s a lot cuter than the cows in this book.

  The words just fall out of my mouth and I feel stupid

  Like I just initiated show and tell

  Lacey stops train-car pushing her macaroni bracelet around her wrist and looks at me

  “What color is it?”

  Her voice sounds strong

  The honey and brown cow book slides off my lap as I sit forward

  He’s all black except for above his top lip. He’s got a little bit of white there, so he looks like he’s got a milk mustache.

  “You could name him that.”

  What. Milk?

  “Yes.”

  Lacey looks at me, waiting for an answer with those eyes

  I want to memorize

  Before they look down to her shoes again

  I love it, that name I mean, Milk.

  “Do you think he will?”

  Who?

  “The baby calf. Will he like the name Milk?”

  Lacey climbs out of the beanbag chair that has nearly swallowed her up

  Sits on her knees facing me

  He’ll love it.

  I may be the owner of the only beef calf in the county

  Maybe in the world

  To be named after a dairy product

  Lacey pulls one of her braids off her shoulder

  Adjusting the ribbon at the end

  I wonder where all this serious comes from as I watch her

  Trying so hard to get the loops in the bow exactly equal

  Lacey pulls

  The ribbon comes undone

  My hands reach through the space between us

  Toward the ribbon I know I can tie just right

  But she jumps back

  Lacey gathers the books into a pile

  Shoves them back onto the shelf

  Lacey faces me

  Looking at her shoes

  Balls up the ribbon in her fist

  Her knuckles go white

  Holding it so tight

  “Thanks for reading to me.”

  Her voice is flat again

  Thanks for naming my calf.
>
  Lacey nods

  Bites her lip to keep away the smile that tries to grow again

  Letting me know that at least that part was right

  Telling her about Angel

  Maybe I can get it right again

  Next week

  Wild Turkey

  Elbow to elbow with Asia

  Inhaling air that tastes like spring

  Legs dangling off the tailgate

  Kicking shadows with our boots

  Watching Cody and Micah

  Arguing with the pipe coming out from the windmill

  They yank their ball caps off

  Kneading the sweat-stained bills back and forth

  Staring into the rusted metal stock tank

  Dry

  As the ground trampled hard around it

  Asia links her arm through mine and pulls me off the tailgate

  “Thought we were going to shoot,” she whines.

  Bored by the chalkboard sky

  Yawning

  Above us

  Guilty with the memory of Cow’s nose

  Pressed into little squares against the screen door

  Scared to be within an acre and a half of a gun

  Cody pulls his long barrel off the gun rack

  A Remington

  Same as the name of his horse

  And I’m popping the truck box open

  Tossing Cokes to Asia and Micah

  Pulling out boxes of ammo

  Stacking them on top of the hood like building blocks

  Micah ducks inside the cab

  Cursing the cold as he punches the glove box open

  Pulling out a revolver

  So chunky it may as well shoot caps as bullets

  Antique handed down from his grandpa

  the kind that’s meant to be used

  not just looked at

  Since nobody wants to waste bullets chasing sagebrush

  We stick

  Plastic spoons

  Handles first

  Into the earth

  Targets

  And take turns

  Laughing at the dust devils

  Until a wild turkey steps out

  With a stiff-legged strut

  From behind a sagebrush

  Let me show you how to do it right.

  I taunt

  Cajoling the gun out of Cody’s hand

  Knowing I could never hit it

  Even if I tried

  Movie star, gunslinging, gangster-style

  I blow imaginary smoke off the end of the barrel

  The last birthday candle

  Extinguished

  And wink at Cody

  Staring up the length of my arm and over the gun

  At that turkey strutting across the pasture

  Running away from the shadow

  Dragging long from his heels in the afternoon sun

 

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