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Call Me Athena

Page 19

by Colby Cedar Smith


  and straighten my skirt.

  Reach for my glass

  and look Dimitris in the eyes.

  I pour

  an entire glass

  of sour cherry liqueur

  over his head.

  Call me Athena

  I live on Mount Olympus

  and you

  are only a mortal.

  My father cuts a branch

  from the weeping

  willow tree.

  I sit in the snow

  to ease the pain.

  Not a single tear shed.

  It was worth it.

  The next night

  my father stumbles

  though the door.

  He weaves

  through the hallway.

  Calls me

  and my mother

  to his side.

  Belt loose.

  Shirt hanging.

  Hair sticking up.

  We can all smell

  the firewater

  on his breath.

  His slurred words

  ring through the house.

  That man is an outrage!

  No daughter of mine

  will marry that beast.

  Giorgos, what happened?

  My mother

  talks to him

  in calming tones.

  Smooths his hair.

  He insulted me!

  He insulted our family!

  He would be

  LUCKY to have Mary.

  Such a smart girl.

  A loving girl.

  LUCKY to have us.

  He deserves to marry

  a goat!

  I don’t wait

  for him to change his mind.

  I run

  to embrace him.

  Mama

  comes closer.

  Baba teeters

  on his toes,

  puts his arms around us,

  and kisses the top

  of my head.

  You are my only daughter

  It is my job to protect you.

  I need to find a husband for you.

  Don’t I?

  Don’t I?

  We let the question ring in the air,

  a bell tolling.

  A sunrise.

  A prayer.

  An announcement.

  A new day.

  Emboldened

  I tell my mother

  I want to own a business

  someday.

  She laughs in my face

  and tells me

  to change Pierre’s

  dirty diaper.

  Giorgos (Gio)

  Saint-Malo, France

  1918

  On your feet, soldier!

  I look up and see an officer

  standing over my bed.

  I wipe the sleep

  from my eyes.

  You’re shipping out today.

  What are you talking about?

  I can barely walk.

  He looks at me

  with steely reserve.

  Orders.

  Pack your bags.

  Departure at 7:15.

  I look at the clock

  on the wall.

  The hands read

  seven o’clock.

  Fifteen minutes.

  Are you crazy?

  Pack your bags, private!

  Unless you want

  to be court-martialed

  instead.

  I scramble to write Jeanne,

  but there’s no time.

  I’ll send a letter

  from the road.

  I feel the breath of the wolf

  smell

  the foul stench

  from his jaws.

  I hear him

  snarling behind me.

  I must return

  to the front.

  The hair

  on the back of my neck

  rises

  in fear.

  Jeanne

  Saint-Malo, France

  1918

  I sit naked on a chair

  cover my breasts

  with my hands.

  A nun stands above me

  with a knife

  in her hand.

  She begins to saw

  the silver blade

  through my long braid.

  My aunt has given

  all of my father’s money

  to the church

  to ensure my care.

  I have nothing.

  It wasn’t so long ago

  I was playing

  with dolls

  on a balcony

  overlooking the sea.

  Now,

  our house on the hill

  is gone.

  My parents

  are gone.

  I will live in the convent

  where my aunt resides

  and wear the

  white veil

  of a novice nun.

  I return to my cell.

  My body shivering

  on a small cot,

  covered

  in a thin blanket.

  I do not want this life.

  I do not want this life.

  I feel like a silent scream

  I wake.

  I pray.

  I work.

  I pray.

  I eat.

  I pray.

  I sleep.

  I pray.

  And then

  I do it all

  again.

  The aging priest motions

  for me to sit

  on the scarlet sofa

  in his office.

  I stare at the ornate

  gold frame

  holding a photo

  of Pope Benedict XV.

  His wire-framed glasses

  almost hide

  his sad eyes.

  Jesus looms above me,

  blood seeping from the wound

  on his side.

  The priest sits

  behind his heavy black desk.

  His robes

  the color of heaven.

  Are you ready to say your vows,

  my child?

  I look down,

  my hands folded

  in my lap.

  Yes, Monsignor.

  Good.

  We will set a date

  for the spring.

  That night, I dream

  that I am naked.

  Handcuffed and chained

  in the town square.

  Heretic!

  The villagers

  gather in a circle

  around me.

  Nonbeliever!

  They jeer

  and throw objects.

  Witch!

  A man pulls me

  onto a platform.

  He ties me to a wooden pole.

  There is kindling beneath

  my feet.

  He lights a torch

  and holds it close.

  Save me from the fire,

  I whisper.

  The platform slowly

  begins to burn.

  There are quiet moments

  that break through

  the ice

  of grieving.

  Moments

  when I feel

  the Spirit moving

  in
the hallway

  as my robes brush

  against

  the stone floors,

  when I close my eyes

  and hear all of the women

  singing

  in unison.

  Moments

  when I climb to the top

  of the bell tower

  and look at the sea.

  Moments

  when I wake

  in the middle of the night

  and feel that my parents

  are very close.

  Moments

  when my only task

  is to sit and read

  and fill my mouth

  with hot barley soup

  and buttered bread.

  Moments

  when I walk in the graveyard

  and the sun is setting

  and I remember

  the way my life

  used to be.

  When I miss Giorgos

  my white veil

  feels like a noose

  around my neck.

  The more

  I struggle,

  the tighter

  it gets.

  Mary

  Detroit, Michigan

  1934

  Letter #21

  November 10, 1918

  Dearest Petit Oiseau,

  When I walk through the villages, I see all the damage that has been done.

  Bombed churches and schools and homes.

  When I think about the repair that will happen—when the war is over—it gives me hope.

  I build towns in my mind.

  Replace glass and repair fences.

  Plant the window boxes with red flowers.

  I imagine men and women working together to rebuild their towns and restore beauty with layers of plaster and paint.

  Your loyal and loving,

  Loup

  Billy takes me to see

  Diego Rivera’s

  commissioned murals

  at the Detroit Institute of Arts.

  The garden courtyard

  opens up

  with arches and columns.

  We gasp and hold hands

  as the light

  floods in

  from the ceiling

  windows.

  Shines

  on the colorful images.

  In each direction,

  a progression.

  The history

  of science and technology.

  We study

  each of the four walls.

  Spin in a circle.

  East, north, west, south.

  Each direction

  describes

  the history of our town

  in images.

  We turn to the east

  where the sun rises,

  a beginning.

  An umbilical cord

  runs from the earth

  to the mother

  to the child,

  held in the bulb

  of a plant.

  The midnight swirl

  of clouds.

  The blood

  of a new generation

  works its way

  into the soil.

  Grows

  like tuliped ears

  of corn

  bursting from its silk.

  The mother holds

  golden blue

  apples

  to her breast.

  The mother braids

  wheat flowers

  into her amber hair.

  There is growth

  beneath

  the surface.

  The fruit is full.

  Harvested

  on the table.

  Plenty for all.

  We turn to the north

  in the direction

  of darkness.

  The interior of things.

  Mining of

  coal and diamonds,

  sand and limestone.

  The motor assembled.

  The blast furnace

  glows orange

  in the background.

  Molten steel

  poured into molds.

  Men wearing gas masks

  isolate substance

  and dream.

  A child in a manger

  receives medicine.

  Engineering.

  Precision.

  Invention.

  We turn to the south

  wall of light,

  exterior of things.

  The assembly

  of the body.

  Maintenance

  of the body.

  The goddess,

  creator and destroyer of life,

  maintains balance

  and demands sacrifice.

  Buildings

  cobbled over

  the extinctions

  of past life.

  Women organize.

  Men calculate.

  Humans watch

  as the story unfolds.

  Ford himself

  stands over

  the toil.

  Push and pull

  of the factory line.

  We turn to the west

  where the sun sets.

  Endings

  and judgment.

  Passenger planes

  and bombers.

  Technology.

  Destruction.

  The hawk and the dove.

  On either side

  of history. 32, 33

  The men and women around us

  whisper

  under their breath,

  shield

  their children’s eyes.

  blasphemous

  pornographic

  foolishly vulgar

  a slander to Detroit workingmen

  coarse in conception

  un-American. 34

  I see none of this.

  I see my town.

  Races working side by side.

  Industry and history.

  Medicine and religion.

  Fertility goddesses,

  giving birth to life.

  Billy buys

  a box of popcorn

  from a vendor.

  It’s a sunny day.

  We sit on a bench

  and eat

  the warm, crisp kernels

  sprinkled with salt.

  After we’re done

  his lips are shining

  with butter.

  He puts

  his hand on the small of my back

  and draws me closer

  to him.

  He kisses me.

  And I feel it

  everywhere.

  After a moment, he pulls apart.

  I saw an advertisement for a job

  that I think

  would be great for you.

  He hands me

  a square

  cut from the newspaper.

  I squeal

  and grab for the scrap.

  I press my lips

  to his

  and won’t let him

  come up for air.

  I let Billy drive

  me home.

  He opens my door

  and I sink

  into the leather seats.

  For months,

  I’ve wondered how

/>   it feels

  to ride in this car.

  Billy steers

  with one arm around me.

 

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