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Call Me Athena

Page 8

by Colby Cedar Smith


  I don’t see why not.

  I look at my mother.

  She smiles and pats

  my trembling hand.

  Mary

  Detroit, Michigan

  1933

  Letter #8

  October 25, 1918

  Let us start a life together.

  Build something new.

  Find joy.

  A place of peace in this war-torn world.

  Yours always,

  Petit Oiseau

  Billy circles around me

  both hands

  above

  the handlebars.

  I can’t help

  but tease him.

  You look like

  a circus performer!

  He slows the bicycle,

  balances on his left foot,

  swings his right leg

  over the bar,

  and trots alongside.

  An acrobat

  hopping

  on and off

  a trained

  white horse.

  You should try it.

  I bet you think I won’t.

  Oh, I know you won’t.

  You’re chicken.

  He flashes

  a daring smile.

  The hairs

  on back of my neck

  stand straight.

  Hold this for me, sister.

  I shove

  my stack of books

  into Marguerite’s

  arms.

  Mary, no!

  Marguerite,

  do we really

  have to be good

  all the time?

  I mount the metal beast

  My skirt is in the way.

  I tie the extra fabric

  in a knot

  exposing my legs.

  Marguerite gasps.

  I place both feet

  on the pedals.

  As awkward

  as a bear on a bicycle.

  In a moment

  of quick defeat

  I tumble

  to one side.

  You gotta move

  before you start pedaling.

  Let me help you.

  Billy puts one hand

  on the handlebars

  and one hand on the seat.

  His entire body

  touches mine.

  Electricity

  runs up my spine.

  He begins to push me.

  Pedal, Mary, pedal!

  I force my legs up and down.

  Push and pump.

  Billy runs beside me.

  A tuft of wind

  escape his lips

  as he gives the bicycle

  a mighty shove

  I am

  wheeling and turning

  spinning.

  Under the big top,

  on my own.

  I feel elated

  all the way home.

  Marguerite,

  you can’t imagine

  how it feels!

  Like you’re flying!

  She smiles a half-smile,

  but I know

  she’s concerned.

  Have I embarrassed her?

  Is she ashamed of me?

  What?

  My sister

  won’t look at me.

  She takes a big breath

  and finally says,

  I saw John

  in the square.

  He’s going to tell

  father.

  My father slaps me

  My head whips sideways.

  The imprint of his hand

  blooms

  on my cheek.

  Why?

  I brush the hair

  out of my eyes.

  Stare him down

  hard

  with my green eyes

  so that he cannot

  hold

  my gaze.

  It was only a ride

  on a bicycle.

  I am your father.

  I need to protect you!

  From others and yourself!

  I know what can happen.

  I have seen . . .

  He stops,

  unable to complete

  his sentence.

  It is my duty

  to make sure you are safe.

  I can see us both from above.

  A father

  who is afraid

  for his child.

  A daughter

  who is beyond saving.

  Call me Athena

  The girl

  who should have been born

  a boy.

  I wake, and it’s warm

  and sticky beneath me.

  I think

  I’ve wet the bed,

  then I realize

  I’m bleeding.

  The emotions

  of the night before

  grip my insides,

  wring them

  like a sheet.

  Everything

  in my life

  seems harder

  than usual.

  Even the wild things

  that cannot

  be controlled.

  I roll Marguerite

  to the other side

  of the bed

  and peel the covering.

  I wish I could

  hide the soiled cloth,

  my shame.

  There’s no hiding

  in our tiny

  apartment.

  My mother’s face

  at the door.

  My mother heats three kettles

  Pours the boiling liquid

  into the porcelain bath.

  Mixes

  water from the tap

  until it is steaming

  and warm.

  I enter slowly.

  Settle down

  into the deep.

  The water turns pink.

  I shed a month

  of pain.

  My mother leans

  my head back

  pours water

  over my unruly hair

  and says,

  Someday, you will love your body

  and the way it works.

  It is miraculous.

  It can grow a child.

  She lathers soap

  and pours another pitcher

  over my head.

  I close my eyes

  and imagine her saying,

  Then you will understand suffering.

  I know I was wrong

  I shouldn’t

  have ridden a bicycle.

  My mother clears

  her throat.

  And?

  I shouldn’t

  have ridden a boy’s

  bicycle

  because it sends

  the wrong message.

  And?

  And I won’t do it again.

  But it makes me

  so angry

  that John told Father!

  My mother

  looks at me.

  She kisses my forehead.

  It wasn’t John.

  How could she?

  My sister.

  My twin.

  Weren’t we

  once

  radios

  tuned to the same
/>
  frequency?

  Now, I feel

  my dial

  spinning.

  I cannot find her.

  Giorgos (Gio)

  Komnina, Central Greece

  1917

  Everything is breath, everything is heartbeat

  I run as fast as I can.

  I hear men shouting and dogs barking.

  Do you see him? Where did he go?

  I know this land.

  I find the opening of the cave

  where Violetta and I used to explore.

  Don’t breathe. Don’t move.

  I wait.

  Stay hidden. Stay silent.

  Even after

  the sound of the dogs

  and the men are gone

  my heart beats like a battle drum.

  I follow the shadows home

  my steps

  soft and light.

  I hide in the

  bushes

  check to make sure

  no one

  sees me.

  A barn owl calls out

  a warning

  as I enter our yard.

  I see my unfinished

  kaiki.

  The smooth boards

  that I have sanded

  for hours.

  I do not have

  the wood and resin

  I need

  to finish the hull.

  Without it

  I will not be able

  to navigate

  across the water.

  My mother is asleep

  in her bed.

  My heart aches

  at the thought

  of saying goodbye.

  I sneak around the house,

  try not to wake her.

  Find a sack

  and stuff it with figs and tomatoes,

  then fill a sheep’s bladder

  with water.

  Pack matches

  and a warm sweater.

  Roll a thin wool blanket

  and tie it to my sack.

  If I don’t leave now,

  I will go to prison.

  I open the door

  of my childhood home.

  My mother rises.

  From her face,

  I know that the men from the village

  have told her.

  I cannot open my mouth

  to say goodbye.

  She holds my shoulders

  as tears stream down my face.

  Finally, she looks me in my eyes

  with love, sharp as

  an eagle’s talon.

  Go, my child,

  and never come back.

  In a blur

  of hunger and pain,

  I climb onto

  the donkey’s back

  and lean my face

  into its hide.

  The sky is filled with indigo light.

  I fall asleep

  to the rhythm

  of the hooves

  hitting the dirt path.

  With a jolt,

  the donkey stops.

  I lay my blanket down

  in a field.

  The dry grass

  slices into my back.

  My cheeks are burning.

  My mouth dry.

  Over and over,

  I see Costas fall.

  I hear my sister weeping.

  Jeanne

  Saint-Malo, France

  1917

  Madame Leroux

  inspects

  our starched

  white uniforms.

  She leads us

  through

  l’hopital du Rosais,

  instructing us

  with a crisp,

  clear voice.

  I feel confident

  until we reach

  the surgical unit

  where the air is thick

  with blood

  and pus-soaked

  bandages.

  We hesitate at the door

  and see a doctor

  sawing the leg

  of a screaming

  soldier.

  I grab my stomach

  and vomit

  into the closest

  bedpan.

  Leroux points to the pan

  Around the corner

  to the right.

  Bring it back, clean.

  I run down the hall

  and locate

  the metal hatch

  for the incinerator.

  I empty the pan

  quickly

  into the fire

  below.

  The smell catches me.

  I’m going

  to be sick again.

  I wipe my brow

  and bump into a soldier

  on a gurney.

  Help me,

  he whispers.

  He grabs me,

  trembling,

  his hands covered

  in blood.

  Please.

  Please.

  He closes his eyes,

  his breath labored.

  He places his palm

  on his breast pocket.

  Please.

  I find a small

  photograph.

  A woman

  with light eyes

  and yellow curls.

  Eyes full of love.

  I wipe the blood

  onto my apron

  and place the frame

  in his hand.

  Who is she?

  I ask.

  His eyes

  stare straight ahead.

  The picture

  has fallen

  out of his hand.

  My new

  white uniform

  stained red. 14

  What did you learn today?

  my mother asks me

  as our maid, Anne,

  ladles creamy asparagus soup

  into a china bowl.

  She places a shiny silver spoon

  on my napkin

  and lays a plump cut

  of roast beef

  dripping

  with sauce

  onto a plate.

  What should I say to her?

  Can I describe

  the wounds from the mustard gas,

  the bubbled skin,

  the yellow eyes?

  The sound of more

  than one

  wounded soldier

  screaming for help?

  It is only

  a twenty-minute walk

  from my house

  to the hospital.

  The difference

  between them

  makes me feel

  like I have traveled

  many hours.

  Between

  the land of plenty

  and the land

  of the forgotten.

  Mary

  Detroit, Michigan

  1933

  Letter #9

  October 27, 1918

  I wish I could feed every starving child I see.

  I do not have enough to give.

  I pray for a time of peace and sustenance—when families can keep the wheat they grow and children can, once again, grow plump from their mother’s milk.

  I am done with the ways of men and the suffering that comes with
war.

  Yours forever,

  Loup

  I take the trash

  to the alleyway behind the store.

  I hear crying.

  Peeling paint.

  Gray stone.

  The wind is howling,

  an alley cat

  scratching its back

  on the iron rods

  of barred windows

 

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