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Call Me Athena

Page 15

by Colby Cedar Smith


  Feel the bandages

  covering my eyes.

  All of my fear

  swims

  under my eyelids

  trapped

  a blanket

  of darkness.

  I can’t breathe.

  Doctor.

  Doctor.

  Doctor.

  I pray

  for color, light.

  Please, God,

  don’t take my sight.

  Jeanne

  Saint-Malo, France

  1918

  I walk the ramparts

  on my way to work.

  The ball of the sun

  at the edge of the water.

  An egg yolk

  breaking

  over the white plate

  of the sky.

  The hospital

  is unusually quiet.

  Vera and I exchange

  une bise sur la joue,

  a kiss on each cheek

  in greeting.

  She tells me

  about her dinner.

  The first time eating

  loup de mer—sea bass—

  au beurre blanc.

  I could bathe in that sauce!

  she squeals.

  I try to keep a straight face

  as Vera acts

  like a fat man

  stuffing her face

  with fish,

  wiping greasy sauce

  from her chin

  with her apron.

  Madame Leroux

  glares at us

  and hands me clipboards

  with charts

  to update.

  Vera whispers,

  Out of all the fish in the sea,

  the loup

  is clearly the best!

  Then gives me

  a knowing wink

  and blows me a kiss.

  From across the room

  I hear mon loup

  crying out for help.

  I run to grab the surgeon.

  Several of the trained nurses

  come as well.

  They close

  the circle of curtains

  around him.

  When they finally

  pull the drapes,

  his bandages are off.

  I’ve wondered

  many times

  about the shape

  of his face.

  The color of his hair.

  I can’t bring myself to look.

  For hours,

  I visit each bed

  except his.

  What am I afraid of?

  Mary

  Detroit, Michigan

  1933

  Letter #16

  November 10, 1918

  How can we risk love—when it can be lost?

  It is the most fragile task.

  Hold this bubble in your hand. Look at the rainbow globe and how it swirls.

  Imagine a perfect world inside.

  Then ask yourself, how long will it last?

  Yours,

  Petit Oiseau

  Before my first breath

  before my mother held me

  and called me

  by my name.

  Before my body unfurled

  like a fern growing

  into the light.

  Before I spoke

  my first word.

  Before this, I knew

  I was not alone.

  There was another body.

  Another heart beating

  next to mine.

  My sister is in a wooden box

  I speak to her in a whisper.

  There were once

  two sisters

  who loved each other

  so much

  they built a sailboat

  out of their

  aprons

  and used

  their mother’s broom

  to paddle through

  the air.

  They traveled

  way up

  into the heavens

  so they could live

  in the clouds

  and eat cake

  and chocolate pudding.

  Sometimes,

  they hurt each other,

  but they forgave

  everything

  because they were sisters.

  Always together

  in the golden light

  of the sun.

  Elena holds my hand

  for an hour.

  She tries to comfort me.

  She feels the pain too.

  I can’t talk.

  I sit and stare.

  The light leaves the room.

  The guests return home.

  Until it is only me.

  On the sofa,

  staring at the window

  wondering

  how things

  could have possibly

  gone so wrong.

  I hear my mother weeping in the kitchen

  Other than giving birth,

  I have never heard my mother cry.

  She’s sitting over a wash bin

  filled

  with the soiled clothing

  of her children.

  She’s using her treasured

  silver

  serving spoons

  to do the laundry

  so her hands

  won’t touch

  the poisonous,

  flesh-eating lye.

  Chemicals

  to get the sick

  out of the house.

  I sit in a chair

  and wrap my arms around her.

  I know she wishes

  she could raise her children

  in a beautiful house on the ocean

  with clean white linens

  and crystal vases filled

  with lavender.

  But all she has left

  is a cold house

  and a husband without a job.

  Her daughter has died.

  And the years

  of hard work, poverty, and illness

  have eroded

  the polished silver life

  of her youth

  into the red, cracked hands

  of grief.

  My mother is a beautiful person

  She is beautiful

  when she helps people

  in the neighborhood.

  She is beautiful

  when she makes her children laugh.

  She is beautiful

  when she stands at the sink

  and the light shines

  on her hair and she is lost

  in her thoughts.

  My mother

  is also a beautiful writer.

  And so she decides

  to write to

  Eleanor Roosevelt.

  She tells her how she loves

  this country

  even though there are no jobs

  and Christmas is coming.

  She tells her

  she cannot feed her children

  and she is watching

  their cheeks hollow.

  She tells her

  she has already lost one child

  and she cannot

  and will not

  lose another.

  My teacher pulls me aside

  afte
r school.

  Mary, I can’t even imagine

  how much you must miss

  your sister.

  I want

  to say to her,

  I feel like I live

  in a glass case.

  Sleeping Beauty.

  When I see the animals

  pressing their faces

  to the glass,

  I just lie there.

  Do nothing.

  Say nothing.

  While the world

  moves around me.

  I dream

  of children

  bobbing up and down

  on pink and white

  painted ponies.

  The carousel spins.

  A monkey

  in a scarlet vest

  dances

  as a man

  turns the handle

  on an ornate music box.

  The sound distorted.

  Speeding up

  and slowing down.

  A needle

  being adjusted

  on the surface of a record.

  I see my sister spinning

  on the wheel.

  No beginning and no end.

  She reaches

  to capture

  a golden ring

  from a lion’s mouth.

  The scene turns dark gray.

  My sister

  becomes a shadow.

  I see Billy

  standing at the gate.

  His cheeks shine

  pink,

  ruby lips,

  eyes the color

  of robin eggs.

  He’s smiling at me,

  holding out his hand.

  A beacon of color

  in a black-and-white world.

  Giorgos (Gio)

  U.S. Army, Northwestern France

  1918

  Without my bandages

  I can see everything.

  Boys crying,

  asking for help.

  Wrapped severed limb

  leaking blood

  onto the mattress.

  A soldier wanders

  between the beds,

  speaking to his sister

  who’s not

  in the room.

  I close my eyes.

  Cover my ears

  with a pillow.

  Where is the woman

  who smells like flowers

  and forest?

  Jeanne

  Saint-Malo, France

  1918

  I tell myself

  to go to him.

  His eyes are closed,

  but I sit next to him

  and hold his hand

  just like usual.

  He opens his eyes

  and they are black

  as storm clouds.

  His face looks damaged

  and beautiful

  a tree struck by lightning.

  It’s you,

  he says softly and looks at me

  with a fearful expression.

  Are you well? What do you need?

  I feel his head

  to make sure

  there is no fever.

  I didn’t know

  you were so beautiful,

  he says.

  I blush as red as a cardinal

  He speaks English slowly

  with an accent

  just like I do.

  I wonder where he’s from,

  but instead I ask,

  Do you have a name?

  He closes his eyes

  and for a moment

  I think he has fallen asleep.

  Then he takes

  a deep breath

  and says,

  My name is Giorgos,

  but my friends call me

  Gio.

  Gio’s face is weary

  He needs sunshine.

  I wrap a wool blanket

  around his legs

  and wheel him

  through the grounds

  of the hospital.

  We rest

  beside a small pond

  which provides

  some comfort.

  He tells me about

  his sister and mother.

  I miss the smell of the dry hills.

  The warmth of the sun.

  I imagine his home.

  His land.

  The view

  of a completely different sea.

  He stops talking

  when a fleet

  of fighter-bombers

  buzzes overhead

  so low

  it feels like they

  are coming for us.

  Gio jerks and shields

  his head with his arms

  and shrieks

  with the pain of someone

  who has been hit.

  The fear

  of the Western Front

  still alive

  in his muscles.

  I think about the plane

  my father took me to see

  so long ago.

  The beautiful,

  fragile

  invention

  built to give

  mortal men

  the power of the gods

  has now become

  a machine of war.

  He shudders

  with cold and fear.

  Reaches

  for the blanket

  but can’t manage

  to grab the corner.

  I fold it over his shoulders

  and tuck it

  into the corners

  of the wheelchair.

  I want to make him warm

  and calm.

  I’ve always wanted

  to have an adventure.

  To leave

  these granite walls.

  I’m envious

  of what you’ve seen.

  He looks at the pond.

  Eyes black, round stones.

  He does not look at me

  when he says,

  I’m glad

  that you have not seen

  what I have seen.

  He tells me

  he will begin a new life

  after the war.

  In the United States

  of America.

  A country

  with so much land

  they give it away.

  A country

  filled with large cities,

  factories,

  and smokestacks

  and jobs

  for strong, willing

  men.

  Mary

  Detroit, Michigan

  1933

  Letter #17

  November 6, 1918

  My dearest love,

  When I think I cannot endure another moment of this awful war, I think about our future children.

  Well-fed and strong.

  As many as possible.

  I think they will be our greatest joy when we need it most.

  Always and forever yours,

  Loup

  My boots

  are made of concrete.

  My lungs can’t hold breath.

  I’m scared

  I’m not going

  to reach her in time.

  I knock

  loud and hard

  so
she can hear me.

  The midwife answers the door

  with disheveled hair

  and sleep in her eyes.

  The baby is coming!

  We run through the alleyway

  and climb the stairs

  to our apartment.

  My mother is lying in her bed

  screaming.

  My brothers and father

  are gathered

  at the door

  with scared looks

  on their faces.

  I pray to every god

 

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