Ray was eighteen and determined to begin
his descent into self-destruction. He came home that winter with a tattoo of
the devil on his shoulder, fire shooting from the face and running down the
length of Ray’s arm. Mom cried; Dad asked if it was real and then simply shook
his head and went back to the newspaper when Ray answered yes. I asked if it
hurt, for lack of knowing what else to say.
“Not enough,” Ray had said.
Lola ran her hand across it like she
was touching something beautiful and delicate. She kissed the devil on his fire
breathing mouth. Ray looked at her, his face hard and jaw clenched, but for one
moment something pained and yet relieved flickered in his eyes. Later, Lola
sketched a replica of the tattoo and hung it in her room.
By the time Lola attended the same
college Ray had gone too, his arms were covered and his eyes were empty. He dropped
out before he finished, got arrested a number of times and spent more nights in
jail that he had spent days in class.
He came to visit Lola at school a few
times. She had insisted on going as they had a great art program. It was
difficult for her to get through the first two years of basic classes and she
didn’t get terrific grade, but just like high school before that, she muddled
through. She takes a lot of notes and pays perfect attention so that she can
recall as much as possible. I think level of focus and detail is part of what
makes her such a wonderful painter. She see everything. Nothing escapes her
notice. When she calls it back up, it may be a bit skewed but that just lends
itself to her unique perspective.
When Ray would visit her, she would
call me, two states over where I was in school. I wanted to see Ray, but I used
the distance as an excuse not to. I was afraid to see what he had become.
I remember one of the first times Ray
stormed out of the house leaving the rest of us to wonder if he’d be back. I remember Dad sitting on the floor outside Ray’s room. I was watching Dad through
a compact mirror held out around the corner. I could see him in the little
circle of silver, he was whispering. He made the sign of the cross. We hadn’t
been in church in years. I looked at my Hello Kitty clock. It was three in the
morning. I heard Ray’s car in the driveway and Dad jumped to his feet. Now there
were just legs in the mirror, they started back down the hall to my parent’s
room, and then they returned.
The car
door shut. The front door opened. I saw legs turn in a circle of indecision. I
tilted the mirror up, and could see hands ball into a fist, then relax. I heard
the whispering again and tilted the mirror back to his legs so that I wouldn’t see
his hands cross over his chest in desperation and prayer again because it
scared me.
I heard
Ray walking down the hall. His footsteps were loud and heavy like he could
break the house down one step at a time. I saw his legs stop beside Dad’s and I
tilted the mirror up, up, trying to find their faces. Dad reached out to Ray,
tried to put his hand on Ray’s arm. Ray jerked away.
“You’re
drunk,” Dad had said.
“I’m
back,” Ray had said, spitting the words out. “So don’t give me a hard time.”
“Give me
the keys,” Dad said, making his voice as angry as his fear would let him.
“They’re
on the kitchen table,” Ray said and his hand reached for the doorknob.
“Apologize
to your mother in the morning,” Dad said.
“Why,” Ray
asked, “she doesn’t even know I was gone.”
Ray opened
the door and disappeared. I tilted the mirror up again and could see the side
of Dad’s face. There was no sound but his lips were moving, then he slid out of
view. I moved the mirror around looking for him. Down, to the left, down and
over. He was sitting on the floor beside the door to Ray’s room with his hands
over his face, his shoulders shaking.
2 comments:
Oh what a great story! I want more!
Connie
A to Z-ing to the end
Peanut Butter and Whine
The mirror usage is brilliant! A way for the narrator to be detached to an emotional situation!
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