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Still Life with Two Dead Peacocks and a Girl

Page 2

by Diane Seuss


  on the page, the thin hair of your brush and your own hair

  waving gold down your back, hair I see as you see the hare.

  In the hare’s eye you see me there, my swaying black hair.

  Still Life with Turkey

  The turkey’s strung up by one pronged foot,

  the cord binding it just below the stiff trinity

  of toes, each with its cold bent claw. My eyes

  are in love with it as they are in love with all

  dead things that cannot escape being looked at.

  It is there to be seen if I want to see it, as my

  father was there in his black casket and could not

  elude our gaze. I was a child so they asked

  if I wanted to see him. “Do you want to see him?”

  someone asked. Was it my mother? Grandmother?

  Some poor woman was stuck with the job.

  “He doesn’t look like himself,” whoever-it-was

  added. “They did something strange with his mouth.”

  As I write this, a large moth flutters against

  the window. It presses its fat thorax to the glass.

  “No,” I said, “I don’t want to see him.” I don’t recall

  if I secretly wanted them to open the box for me

  but thought that “no” was the correct response,

  or if I believed I should want to see him but was

  too afraid of what they’d done with his mouth.

  I think I assumed that my seeing him would

  make things worse for my mother, and she was all

  I had. Now I can’t get enough of seeing, as if I’m paying

  a sort of penance for not seeing then, and so

  this turkey, hanged, its small, raw-looking head,

  which reminds me of the first fully naked man

  I ever saw, when I was a candy striper

  at a sort of nursing home, he was a war veteran,

  young, burbling crazily, his face and body red

  as something scalded. I didn’t want to see,

  and yet I saw. But the turkey, I am in love with it,

  its saggy neck folds, the rippling, variegated

  feathers, the crook of its unbound foot,

  and the glorious wings, archangelic, spread

  as if it could take flight, but down,

  downward, into the earth.

  Eden: An Outline

  I. The question has been can I accommodate this Eden

  A. Without apples or Adam

  B. The only thing slithering, the black sky wriggling free of the stars

  C. The smoke tree

  1. hazy poofs of rusty fuzz

  2. like a circle of unshaved redheads in mid-striptease

  D. Not hyacinths, not hydrangeas

  1. but six-foot-tall stalks covered in unlanguaged vulgarities

  2. put my ear close and hear something like Fwahhh

  a. Fwahhh darling

  3. the lipsticked center

  4. stamen the color of cream beaten toward butter

  E. Smoke tree sitting back and blowing smoke rings

  II. The erotic as Eden

  A. In grade school a kid said the clitoris is a pip or a pearl

  B. He said fuck had to do with a finger

  1. and a Dixie cup

  C. Then I learned that women were flowers

  1. and fucking had to do with pollination

  2. and bee stings

  3. sometimes the stinger gets stuck inside

  a. that’ll kill a bitch

  III. What if Eden is a storage container for withheld wisdom

  A. Withheld withheld withheld

  B. My grandmother at 92 letting tears rim her little fox eyes about how her husband, after all those ducks and geese and heaving the mess of bluegills on the porch for her to clean, decided to give up hunting

  1. his glass eye finally won the argument about killing it had been having with the good eye

  2. after all those pinfeathers, she said

  a. and let out a long withheld sigh

  IV. The white-tailed bird comes close until it decides to be afraid

  A. I see the mechanism of fear

  1. not a gear in the brain but an old decision that digs a grave that erodes into a canyon until nearly everything

  a. falls in

  B. Fear, with its largesse, its spangled silver gown, its icy bracelets

  C. Worry, the little sister in dress-up clothes, believing if she’s only alert enough she can detoxify the snake

  V. I want no Eden without my mother and sister in it

  A. If my mother and sister live outside the fence

  1. I live outside the fence

  B. My mother climbing the ladder and pulling rotten leaves out of the eaves

  C. My sister using her index finger like a hook to pull the blood clots out of the mouths of the dead

  1. or the impacted turds from the asses of the demented and insane

  D. If I can welcome them in

  1. I will find a way to welcome them in

  VI. Like a dog in winter, those inside the gates want out, those outside the gates want in

  A. Did I tell you about my niece who moved to Orlando to get away from the soybean fields

  1. she got a job taking tickets at Disney World

  2. her husband, a pipefitter at SeaWorld

  a. “these days,” he said, “it’s all about serving the dolphins, the dolphins don’t serve you”

  3. in the dead of winter they packed up and moved back home

  a. jerked the girl out of school, she was finally understanding fractions

  b. unpacked the truck

  i. trampoline

  ii. saltwater aquarium

  iii. the dog, Girly, etc.

  c. and started planning a trip to Disney World

  VII. The problem with Eden is that it is eternal

  A. It’s like that Twilight Zone episode

  1. no, not that one, the other one

  2. the one with the train on a circular track

  VIII. The problem with Eden is letting yourself have it

  A. Even after you’ve wrecked it

  1. it comes crawling toward you with its purple mouths

  a. like an army of beaten children

  2. like a ruined dog

  a. it puts its head in your lap and gives you its stillness

  3. it comes buzzing back

  a. like a purple-throated bird with a hypodermic beak

  i. obsessed with your sweetness

  Self-Portrait: My Legs

  If these legs could talk they’d tell you about Munich.

  They’d say “Paris. No one says ‘Paris’ anymore.”

  They’d take you on a slow voyage across the channel

  from Hoek van Holland to Harwich, drinking all night

  with a red-faced East German man who couldn’t hear

  nor speak. And the British soldier, his narrow

  bed and the smell of the pomade in his hair

  that marked me for days.

  If these legs could talk. All those late-night walks

  from E. 7th St. to Sammy Wo’s for a whole

  steamed fish split between the two of us,

  and its eyes, and its lips, and our lips,

  and back even further to the summer

  I worked as a cocktail waitress on the island.

  I was eighteen. Sometimes I’d take the midnight ferry

  to the mainland because I could.

  I’d sleep in my sleeping bag near the big lake, on the ground.

  And the night, as I made the crossing,

  it was just me and the hotel magician below deck,

  and he offered to hypnotize me for free.

  The floor of the ferry was covered in dead luna moths.

  That trance he put me in lasted for hours, days.

  Maybe he never brought me back, maybe I never woke up

  and all of the years since have
been an illusion,

  as when my right leg shattered like a mirror

  and they had to put it back together with titanium

  rods and screws. You’ll always be in pain,

  the doctor said, and yes, my legs would tell you

  if they could talk, it’s true.

  Self-Portrait with the Ashes of My Baby Blanket

  Ashes, because she set fire to it in the burn barrel.

  Leave her alone, with your newfangledness.

  I was a clingy, fearful thumb-sucker, and she knew I needed reinventing.

  She tore it away and I screamed and she burned it.

  Begone, soft, pale yellow. She knew if I kept it I’d stumble over it

  the rest of my life, how far I would travel without it,

  and how many strange birds I would trap

  in the story of its burning.

  Self-Portrait with My Dead Looming behind Me

  Mikel, my dad, and Kev, who I nicknamed Bunny

  though he buried his softness so deep within

  and came across as dangerous, an addict with his knife

  and gun and syringe, who once knocked me

  across the room for paying back the money he borrowed

  from the family with the fat baby who lived on the ground

  floor. I’ve forgiven him. My father, he was perfect

  and beautiful, his head tilted like Christ’s on the deathbed

  pillow, there is nothing to forgive. And Mikel, perfect too,

  and so gentle and soft there would have been no irony

  in calling him Bunny, so why bother with a nickname?

  They fan behind me like the tail of a strange bird,

  or like a deck of cards in the hands of a fly-by-night

  magician: Pick a card, he says. Any card.

  Self-Portrait with Double Helix

  Memory returns to me our last encirclement, bones of Mikel’s back

  beneath my hands. Did I scream all the way to the airport, Alan Martinez,

  as you drove with virtuosic madness, and the top down, the old Fiat,

  corkscrewed roads leading to the ludicrous interstate and the blue-edged

  runway where machines roar as they’re forced to defy, again and again,

  gravity? In my hands, the book Mikel gave me, my inheritance he said,

  Kenneth Patchen. He’d read me a few lines before handing it over:

  we shall not be there when death reaches out his sparkling hands

  there are so many little dyings that it doesn’t matter which of them is death.

  The book was used, some of the pages worn through like moth wings

  when they’ve been handled. It’s in their DNA to elude handling,

  and in our DNA to handle them anyway. You’ll forget my voice,

  Mikel said, but it coils through me still, like that year we worked

  in the bedspring factory, our hands constellated with puncture wounds

  from the sharp ends of the copper wire as we fastened spiral after spiral

  to cold metal bedframes where someday mattresses would be flung

  for cheap deathbeds. After Mikel died, his face lesioned royal purple,

  I dreamed a spiral staircase made of the white-blue stuff of stars,

  the whole thing spinning at an even pace as if automated, not so much

  a staircase as a coiled ladder, and on each rung a soul, miniscule, giving off

  a dull glow like a lit cigarette far down the street during a power outage.

  Self-Portrait with Levitation

  Embodiment has never been my strong suit.

  All right, I flew when I was five. Levitated, I guess.

  Woke to a sensation of everlastingness, my face

  maybe two inches from the ceiling. Floated

  there as if in a warm sea. It happened often

  until I was ten, when I had the thought

  that human beings can’t fly and was dropped,

  as if from the beak of a large owl, onto the floor.

  I was banged up. Cuts and bruises.

  From then on, inhabiting my body felt shameful,

  like I’d been ejected from the Garden and was

  sentenced to a life of peeing and wiping,

  hoisting and plugging and unplugging. I’m

  thinking that idle travel is a lot like flying,

  an enchanting escape from being where you

  belong. Some hotel in some city, a bed

  swankier than your bed at home, no dead

  person’s socks flattened at the bottom

  of the hamper. As my mother would say

  when asked where she went when she took

  a ride alone: “I drifted.” To belong to the land

  and the people that made you is itchy

  as hand-knitted wool. Even the word “wool”

  made my old friend KK want to pull her eyes

  out of their sockets. She told me that

  when we were nine or ten. All I had to do

  to slay her was to say it: “wool.” These things

  I know of her: I know she wet her pants

  far into her teens. I know that under her clothes

  she had eczema. I know her mother dyed

  her hair black and wore sweat shields in her

  blouses. I know she was Italian, that they ate

  spaghetti and meatballs several times a week,

  but I was never invited to sit at the table. I know

  KK’s dad had a vise on a workbench in the garage,

  a good tool for opening hickory nuts and squeezing

  the heads of Barbies. I know Barbie and Ken

  were eunuchs. I know my uncle smoked

  while he was on oxygen and that there were fetal

  chickens in baby food jars on the windowsill

  of his house. I know Freddie cornered my mother

  in the garage, Dick made obscene phone calls

  to her after she was widowed young, that Bob

  Buck peeked in our windows, that some of the boys

  in the neighborhood lived alone and raised themselves,

  most in grounded travel trailers. Chuck. Leonard.

  Rick. Dorian. I know that Bob’s Country Club

  was really not a country club. It was a bar on a dirt road

  with good cheeseburgers and fried mushrooms.

  I know the White House was also a bar, on Pucker St.

  That my great grandmother farted all the way across

  the cemetery as she walked to the outhouse. I know

  she read the newspaper upside down. I know her husband

  hit a guy over the head with a frozen fish, killing him

  instantly, that he went on the lam for years,

  sending cash home in envelopes with no return

  address, only to discover later on a clandestine trip

  home for Christmas that his victim hadn’t died at all,

  had only been knocked unconscious for a few minutes

  and actually woke up an improved version of himself.

  I could go on, but you catch my drift. Even when I woke

  from sodium pentothal my mother was there waiting for me,

  and when I opened my eyes I cried like a premature

  baby. There isn’t a Holiday Inn Express that can

  save me. Not a flight to St. Louis, which my granddad

  called Sink Louis, not even a flight to Los Angeles,

  where my dad was born and lived next door

  to Disney before he was rich and famous, and watched

  Walt invent and revise the Mouse in their shared

  garage converted into a drawing studio. Where

  my dad dropped out of high school and joined

  the navy. Boarded the ship that would eventually

  kill him. To confess to embodiment is to become

  a tender of graves, like my mother, for whom

  grave-tending is the only religion. Wash the headstone


  like the face of a dirty child, firm but gentle. Deadhead

  the bleeding hearts. Everything else is the gilded ballroom

  of a grand hotel, live improvisational jazz playing

  in the background, birds-of-paradise in tall red vases

  on every table, checkout time drawing near.

  Still Life with Two Dead Peacocks and a Girl

  She comes out of the dark seeking pie, but instead finds two dead peacocks.

  One is strung up by its feet. The other lies on its side in a pool

  of its own blood. The girl is burdened with curly bangs. A too-small cap.

  She wanted pie, not these beautiful birds. Not a small, dusky apple

  from a basket of dusky apples. Reach in. Choose a dusky apple.

  She sleepwalked to this window, her body led by its hunger for pie.

  Instead, this dead beauty, gratuitous. Scalloped green feathers. Gold breast.

  Iridescent-eyed plumage, supine on the table. Two gaudy crowns.

  She rests her elbows on the stone windowsill. Why not pluck a feather?

  Why lean against the gold house of the rich and stare at the bird’s dead eye?

  The girl must pull the heavy bird into the night and run off with it.

  Build a fire on the riverbank. Tear away the beautiful feathers.

  Suck scorched, tough, dark meat off of hollow bones. Look at her, ready to reach.

  She’d hoped for pie. Meringue beaded gold. Art, useless as tits on a boar.

 

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