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Family Page 7

by Micol Ostow


  there is so much Henry that He can handpick a handmaiden, can select one sister with whom to fuse from time to time.

  one person to be the closest to Him of us all.

  often, it is leila or shelly who are called to wrap themselves within Henry’s cocoon. they are the sisters who have been with Him the longest, who have proven themselves worthy of His trust and glory.

  often, it is leila or shelly.

  but tonight, i am called.

  tonight, i am chosen.

  special.

  i am Henry’s. i alone.

  i am

  loved.

  i am Henry’s tonight, alone. and so, tonight, my broken edges are oh-so-slightly sanded down.

  tonight, i am Henry’s, and i am slightly more whole.

  this is what it means to be

  chosen.

  He approaches me just after dinner.

  i am rising to head toward the oversize basins and faucets housed in the barn—to rinse dishes, to render things clean once again—when Henry appears behind me.

  though i cannot see Him from where He stands, His presence is immediately felt. something happens to the air, the atmosphere, when Henry approaches; all of the tiny cells and particles that bind together to create my being stand on point when He arrives. i shudder and contract, shiver as He lays a warm palm against the nape of my neck.

  “will you come back with me tonight?”

  i nod, weak. unable to form words.

  of course.

  of course i will go back with Henry to His private space, His sanctum. it is an honor, a gift, to be chosen.

  tonight, for a time, i am

  special.

  unique.

  almost whole.

  i quickly finish rinsing my dinner plate and return it to its shelf with the rest of our family’s dishware. i rub my hands against the front of my drawstring skirt and head toward the entrance to the barn.

  my body, my bones hum with anticipation, with fever.

  i burn.

  i am on my way to His room.

  i have been chosen.

  the other sisters know, can tell what it means when Henry appears from behind that way, a look of devout reverence etched across His features. like me, they quiver, despite being the ones who, for tonight, at least, have been overlooked. like me, they crackle with energy and fire.

  we are a chain of paper dolls, after all, and all connected. we are conjoined, one unit, despite my being chosen for the night.

  shelly grabs at me as i pass her by, pinches the soft flesh above my hip. i look back at her and she grins at me.

  her expression shows no trace of jealousy or anger. no betrayal. my sister, my paper-doll partner, she knows as well as any of them, understands that Henry’s love is overflowing. that there is more than enough for each of us.

  time enough for us all, each of us,

  to be chosen.

  hideaway

  Henry’s room is a hideaway.

  it is a comforting cave, a nest.

  His quarters are set apart from our own bunks, our rows of unrolled sleeping bags laid out; a chaotic quilt across the dusty floor of one of the outbuildings of the barn. Henry stays in the general store, up closer to the front entrance to the ranch, closer to where emmett lives.

  closer to the boundary between our haven and the real world.

  He is our window, after all.

  Henry’s room is a sanctuary, a haven, but reveals no details about His before, His true core. being invited into His private spaces does not grant access to His innermost mind.

  even here, nestled against Him, veiled by the fragile gauze of His lazily draped bedsheets, awash in the heady scent of Him—even here, now, He is a mystery.

  “what do you think?” He asks.

  i think: no man has ever asked for my opinion before. has ever cared. but then, Henry knows that. Henry knows. everything.

  i smile slowly. take it all in: the splintering grooves that run deep into the wooden plank walls, the vibrant tapestries He’s hung. even something as ordinary as the worn rubber sole of His overturned sandal peeking out from underneath a corner of the bed frame, even that small detail seems holy in the now.

  everything about Henry is holy. everything He touches.

  and so.

  i tilt, turn my body toward His, searching. i beg Him, with widened eyes, to put His hands on me. to touch me.

  to make me

  holy.

  and whole.

  choir

  Henry is our window, and our rudder. He is the one of us with access, with any window to the outside world.

  but He shares. with us. He does.

  and tonight, He shares with me.

  after we have fused, connected, healed each other—after He has put His hands on me and made me holy—He tells me stories. fanciful tales, legends

 

  from a collective before,

  a moment when music was power.

  i rest my head against His bare chest, tracing the grooves, the valleys and fault lines of His skin. take hold of the smoky wand of magic cloud that He extends between two graceful fingers. i inhale, adrift. searching for consciousness.

  awaiting.

  Henry’s stories, the tales He shares, are about bodies, mostly. bodies breaking apart and coming back together. bodies that connect and then shatter. gentle, fragmented bodies, ready for a message. His message.

  and music. Henry’s favorite stories are about music, and the messages that it carries.

  one day He—

  we—

  our family—

  will have a story of our own. to sing out.

  to share.

  His skin pressed against my own, Henry begins one of His most-loved tales, one He’s shared with me before, though never quite like this, never just the two of us. the story, though familiar, feels different with His heart pulsing against me. His body beats out its own metered rhythm, lulling me.

  Henry tells me another truth about the power of music to

  reach,

  to preach

  to envelop.

  to entwine.

  a story about

  a message set to

  spoil.

  a story about

  a message gone

  sour.

  “a concert,” He says, waving His free arm languidly.

  “lots of performers.

  it was supposed to be a celebration.

  supposed to be about love and light.

  but it went bad.

  “that would never happen to us.

  to our family.

  “we’re gonna get our music out there,” He says.

  “spread our message.

  one day.

  you’ll see.”

  i believe it, of course.

  of course, i believe it.

  Henry’s word is gospel.

  and my sisters and i,

  His faithful choir.

  i sidle closer still, until we are so tightly pressed together that we might be breathing from the same lungs. i gaze up at Henry with wide-eyed worship. tilt my body toward Him, rest a tentative hand on His knee.

  i open my hollow spaces to Him. it may be that i am not His only grateful supplicant.

 

  so far. infinity. light-years away.

  but. tonight, i am here, alone. i am chosen.

  tonight, His stories are for

  me.

  Henry’s love is full to bursting. overflowing.

  Henry’s love is torrents, tides. raging fevers of always.

  He burns.

  we all burn.

  the whole world is

 

  burning.

  but tonight

  my world

  is

  still.

  chaos

  i want to know.

  burn to know.

  alone, with Henry, in His bed, i need to hear
. to learn. from Henry.

  about a time when a message went sour.

  about a time when the love and light

  transformed

  into something filthy and fetid.

  about a time

  that turned.

  that went

  bad.

  i ask, “what happened?”

  Henry makes a deep, choked sound, something between a laugh and something else; a noise more full, more round, more

 

  supple.

  “people forget,” He says.

  “people don’t want to think about stuff like that.”

 

  He says:

  “it was chaos. total chaos.”

  His eyes glitter. His body shudders.

  there is something about the word: chaos. something fierce.

  chaos.

  the word slithers, undulates, winds its way down Henry’s spine. i can see it growing, gathering speed, strength, silent power. i can see Henry straighten against the backboard of the bed.

  i can see it burrow deep, lodge itself within His fault lines.

 

  chaos is a fierce thing.

  Henry purses His lips. swallows forcefully. brushes a wild thatch of hair from His eyes.

  “too many people, getting riled. and security got out of control.

  the crew—

  the men that were hired to keep the peace—

  they got violent with the crowd.

  lots of folks were injured. some died.”

  some died.

  a bitter taste builds up inside of me, rises to the back of my throat. i look down, away, reach for a glass of water.

  i think: violence.

  i think: bodies.

  crushing, reaching, stretching bodies.

  feverish, electric bodies, roiling and churning.

  bodies pulled by an invisible undertow.

  bodies rushing toward the now, toward the

  half-life.

  toward a collective, unknown,

  afterlife.

  bodies. so many bodies. too many.

  torrents of skin and bone.

  skin and bone, and blood.

  Henry shakes His head, makes the guttural sound again. “that this would happen at a concert. a concert. don’t people know?

  music is the message.

  music is how we spread our word.

  music is how we share our love.”

  music.

  Henry’s music will reach, expand, fill. it will creep toward all the bodies and seep into the empty places.

  Henry’s music, His message—it is always, now, forever.

  it is infinity.

  and it will be heard.

  “music and chaos are two separate things,” Henry continues, more to Himself than to me, now.

  He repeats: “two separate things.” this is an important point. a point worth sharing.

  this is a point that has meaning.

  He is right, of course. He is. right.

  He is always right.

  music is love.

  Henry is love.

  but chaos?

  chaos is a fierce thing.

  chaos burrows deep.

  in the now

  life on the ranch is not very chaotic.

  chaos is outside.

  we are taught: there is no i, no ego, no before.

  we are taught: there is only the now.

  but in the now: there are routines. there are rhythms. there is a steadiness to be found.

  namely, there are chores.

  every day of every week, chores. we divide the tasks amongst ourselves, the family.

  some days i am sent, usually with shelly, to forage for food.

  foraging can be okay because i like to ride in the pickup, like to feel the smooth, sturdy motion of rubber tires beneath me, to watch the horizon race along against my sight line,

  just forever out of reach,

  just forever limitless.

  i like to soak, to simmer, in the air outside the ranch, which is somehow, sometimes, crisper, brighter, cleaner.

  more.

  even when we are knee-deep in day-old produce.

  i like to be with my sister, shelly.

  i like to provide for my

  family.

  still, the truth is:

  shelly is a lot.

  she is. a lot. to take.

  and in the smooth, sturdy safe house of the pickup, there is only me to take her.

  in those moments, we have no buffer between us, she and i.

  how lucky it is, then, that we are sisters. that we are so close we are nearly one person, nearly fit neatly into one set of skin, our thoughts occurring almost in tandem.

  shelly is my inside-out. my mirror-me. my shadowself. she wears her fault lines on the outside, trophies pinned to the heavy cloak of her self.

  whereas everything, every last bit of me, all of my hollow places—they are wrapped up tightly and stuffed down inside.

  shelly is the inner voice that i dare not allow to speak aloud. She is fire, shattered glass, and shards of ice. she is her own orbit, her own atmosphere. her own half-life.

  shelly and mirror-mel

 

  they wear their scar tissue like bright, shiny ribbons. like prizes.

  they embrace their fractures, swallow their chaos whole.

  while i am merely

  broken.

  shelly has opinions about everything. but shelly’s everything is quite specific; usually her opinions, her points of reference—usually they snake their way back to Henry. always Henry.

  and even though i get it, i really do

  <—Henry is always; sometimes just the suggestion of Henry awake, alive in my mind fills me up so i think i could die for Him just from thinking about it—>

  even though i get it, it is a lot.

  today, now, in the cramped cab of the pickup, it is almost too much. the glaze that falls over her eyes and the rote movement of her lips, they unsettle me, make me think of painted dolls, of static.

  of blankness.

  it is… upsetting. shelly is my inside-out, my positive charge.

  but today, shelly has hollow places. so many hollow places.

  and today, she shows them to me.

  today, her

  fault lines

  are beginning

  to

  crack.

  mothers

  i cannot not ask.

  i need to know what it is that has shelly so blank, so fully distracted. she is cracking, crumbling, and there should be no secrets among family, i reason. not our family.

  so. i venture:

  “what is it?”

  shelly’s cheeks flush, pink bloom creeping up toward her temples like a rash, but her gaze doesn’t leave the road. “you can tell?”

  “of course.”

  of course. of course i can. she is me. she is my shadow-self. i know.

  “it’s—” she falters, pressing her lips together until they are little more than a thin white line. her cheekbones set into sharp angles, hollow and haunted.

  i place a hand against her knee, reassuring her. she can say anything to me, i remind her. she is me.

  she nods, almost to herself, winds her arms and runs the steering wheel all the way to the right, driving us off to the side of the road, to a soft shoulder, where we finally settle.

  the engine sputters and the truck falls silent.

  she turns to me, her face a jigsaw puzzle that’s been forced together incorrectly, tabs jutting from too-tight cutouts.

  “i’m going to have a baby.”

  there is a hitch, a hiccup, and a trapdoor opens at the base of my stomach.

  she is pregnant.

  shelly is pregnant.

  i soar downward, into the vortex where the floor has given way beneath me.

  this. is incomprehensible.

  i
am overwhelmed.

  overjoyed.

  shelly is pregnant.

  i am overjoyed.

  shelly is growing a new life inside of her. her body is a safe house,

  a haven.

  our family will have a new baby.

  our sisters will be mothers.

  and Henry will always be our father.

  this baby, the very fact of it—

  it means that the fabric of our family is now that much more firmly woven, that much more inextricable. the surface of our puzzle pieces have been brushed with glue.

  we are bound.

  eternal.

  infinite.

  my eyes shine. i scrabble across the seat, clutch shelly tightly. her body feels rigid against my own.

  i understand: she is afraid.

  she is not the first of our sisters to give birth on the ranch, not hardly, but she is the sister who is my own second skin.

  her fear is natural. but this news, this new life—it is something to celebrate.

  of this, i am certain.

  and so, i tell her so: “you aren’t alone. this baby is all of ours.”

  there is no ego, no i, no before, i remind her. no parents. just us: the family. infinity, and love, and binding. the sins of the fathers have been washed from the slate. we are clean, scrubbed and fresh. we, our family— we can create our own now. a now for the baby.

  shelly’s baby. all of ours.

  it is a miracle.

  i never did believe in heaven, and yet.

  it is.

  a miracle.

  she hears me, allows my thrill to shower her. i can see that she hears me.

  a clarity comes over those storm-cloud eyes.

  she takes a breath, nods. “i’m not worried; that’s not the right word.

  it’s just, i can’t”—

  she bites at her lip—

  “the father could be anyone.

  junior, Henry… or someone else.

  it could be anyone else from the ranch.”

  she looks ashamed, looks the way i sometimes felt after a visit with uncle jack—

  like a nuclear rain shower couldn’t begin

  to undo the stains.

  but why? because the baby could be anyone’s?

  as though that even mattered.

  as though that weren’t the entire point of our life, together, on the ranch.

  our family.

  “but we are all one family,” i insist.

  “we are all Henry’s children, wives, and sisters. everything—everyone —belongs to everybody.”

 

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