Exposition

Microcosm

I once stood on a cliff edge, looking down.  I am not one to suffer vertigo, but at the time, I felt a bit of unease seeing so much *space* between my own two feet and the trees, rocks, and bushes far below. I thought to myself then, if this ledge were to shift, I would have a long way to fall before I hit anything.  Then I thought, perhaps that isn’t so bad.  Perhaps the freedom of falling would be worth the sudden stop at the end.

I once sat on a boulder, not too far from that cliff edge. I was on my own share of time; my watch had yet to remind me that I had somewhere else to be.  The sun was bright.  So very bright, and the edges of the sky seemed to be wrapped down around me on that mountain.  I enjoyed the heat of the sun warmed rock underneath me, closed my eyes and listened to the slow melodic tongue of the elder pines speak through the wind. I felt something else, a hand closing on mine, and I didn’t feel so bad.  The wind took things from me. Secrets, pains, fears… and in its place, I heard the songs of the aspen, the spruce, the pine.  They sang their timeless songs and I absorbed what I could, an overused sponge in a shallow pan.

I once stood in a shower, years before I got to that cliff.  I was at camp, and I was crying profusely under the fall of the hot water.  We had water discipline at the camp, the cabins had a lot of kids that needed to bathe, but no counselor banged on my door, so I just let the water run.  I am pretty sure they knew I was crying.  I tried to be quiet, but even quiet sobs can escape the harsh sound of water hitting stone and wood. I turned off the water, dried quickly, and dressed.  As I left the facility, the counselor asked me if everything was alright.  I lied.

I once fell ill at a camp, a year or two or three separated from the shower.  I went to the nurse’s station and she took my temperature, felt my tonsils and prodded me off to a cot in her office.  I feel asleep quickly.  I woke up at five the next morning, and bleary eyed, she shooed my out the door and told me to head back to my bunkhouse.  The sun was coming up then, but the sun had yet to show its face over the distant rise of the mountains.  The morning was cold, the gravel crunched lightly under my small feet, and I felt the world wake up around me. The blue air hung from the ceiling of the world, and in the murky grey dawn, I felt the world snap a step to the left.  I felt a complete sense of peace.

I once took the trash out late one summer night, a span of years since that night of illness.  I was living at home still, a teenager thinking the world was shit, and I felt the need to look up.  The sky was black, but as I looked, the pinpricks of a billion stars opened up before me.  In a moment as brief as a sneeze, I felt the world spinning underneath me, and the slow cosmic turn of the universe above me.  I felt that hand again.  It pushed me down to my knees and held me in place as I experienced a mere fraction of the bitter cold of the vast distances between our tiny little planet and the infinite dark that separates everything.

Not too long after that… I found an old picture of my dad. He was standing on a beach, with a rock under one foot, his face timeless in the beard I think of him always having, his smile so much like my own.  He was smiling for someone holding that camera on the edge of the cold ocean behind him.  Massachusetts, I think.  There is a lighthouse I have never seen.  And that smile, that I only see in the photograph.  The same smile that was in my baby book, of a new dad, playing with his infant son. The son kept trying to grab his glasses, or his nose, or just to stop the raspberries from being blown on his little stomach… who knows?  But those photos, taken thousands of miles and years apart are the only pictures I know of with my dad smiling. I like to think he was smiling on that beach thinking of the boy he was rolling around with on the floor.  In contrast, the tears are without count, and they rolled without notice.  Except for the one that was shedding them.

Let’s flash back here.  Take the time machine to a boy about to hit puberty, living in a very small hole of an apartment.  I was a latch key kid, my mother worked a number of jobs.  I can’t remember how many.  What child ever really knows what their parents do?  It was late, I was by myself, and I stood on a sidewalk that looped around the building, praying.  I was praying that if God could, please make me fast.  Or strong.  Or smart.  God please let me find something to get out of here. I now know he gave me time.

Time spools around me, the threads of a hundred complimentary and sometimes conflicting memories settling around me like chaff. I can reach out and follow them for short distances before they loop back on themselves, or get too knotted for me to trace.  These threads touch each other in strange ways, associating with one another like drunk strangers bumping into each other on a dance floor. They have strange paths that lead other directions, and even I, the holder of these memories, have a hard time seeing where they lead.

But I have a father. He gave me genetic code, and an imprint to pass on to future generations.  But I have another father too.  Someone else that pushes the world a nanometer to one side for me, or pushes me down to make a realization about the nature of the universe.

There is comfort knowing that while one left me, the other was there.  And I know who my father is.  And some quantify it with a book, or a song, or a religion, or a big stick to hit others with.  I quantify it with threads, and tears, and the warm sun, the breath of trees, the spinning of the very earth beneath my feet.

And time.

Short Story

The Sky Burial

Dec 7

Today Matty died.

I held his hands.  Is that weird?  Is it weird that two straight guys held hands?  My wife was there, a hand on by back. His ex-wife was there, off to the side, huddled into a chair, sobbing quietly into a napkin or something.  I wanted to punch the whore. Perhaps that was why I was holding his hands.  To make sure that his death wasn’t tainted somehow.  Matty didn’t have any kids of his own, not after Charlie the whore stepped out of his life in the most destructive fashion a person can.  But I am not writing in this journal about Charlie.  This is about Matty.

I already miss him horribly.  There is a hole in my heart where he was.  I felt it when he died.  My spirit was torn asunder.  Pulled from its bonds within my chest, and laid down on a field of glass, salt, and darkness.

He held my hand, looking me in the eyes.  They were so blue.  So very blue.  I think I was crying. I can’t remember.  He couldn’t talk, the respirator was forcing air down into his burnt lungs, his ravaged heart had a hard time just keeping up with his ragged breathing.  I could feel it through his paper skin, the thin sheath over bone and death. He glowed with it.  The death mask hovered over his bed, the presence of something else sat in that room calling him home.  Calling his spirit outwards.

He looked me in the eyes, squeezed my hands gently, the barest ghost of a smile crinkling the edges of his own. Then he was gone.  The eyes paled, his lids lowered, and I could feel the wild flapping of a hundred raven wings lift off around me. My wife didn’t feel it, Charlie snivelling in the corner didn’t feel it.  But I felt it. Thousands of black feathers pushing the air around me to the corners of the room, his hands going soft, his paper skin fluttering still, the heart giving a few last attempts at a beat… and in all of it, I didn’t see his last breath.  I didn’t need to.

Charlie heard the monitor go.  It was toned down to almost nothing, but she heard the flatline.  She screamed like a little girl getting her ears pierced and ran from the room. My wife squeezed my shoulder as I lowered my head to his hands.

I know I cried then. I cried until my wife forced me up and told me they had to take him away.

I ended up here, at home, staring at this journal.

Shit.

*********

Dec 9

Today was a little better. I expected Matty to come by the office and ask about the weekend game. Then I remembered he was dead. I had to go to the bathroom to cry again.

Charlie called me.  I ignored the cunt.

*********

Dec 10

Charlie finally got a hold of my wife.  My wife called me.  Matty had a will.  Who the fuck has a will at 35?  Matty did. Probably did it as soon as he found out about the cancer.  Probably when the rest of us just thought he had a cold. Probably when he found out that Charlie was going to leave him.

You clever bastard, Matty.

Because it turns out that he had himself declared quarter Native American a few years ago.  I can’t remember what tribe accepted his claim… but he had the bloodline proven.  And in his will he asked for a burial that I had never heard of.  And he asked me to do it.

Fitting I guess.  I was there when he died, I will be there when I commit his body to the unknown.

********

Dec 15

It took a week for the coroner to release his body to us.  It is amazing the silly shit someone has to go through to get their hands on human remains.  The forms, the phone calls, the threats and law disclaimers.  Thank God Matty had the will and the declaration.  It saved me a lot of red tape.  Now his body is on ice down at the mortuary that was willing to help me out.

Tomorrow I am taking Matty’s body up to my family’s farm.  My mom was very supportive of Matty’s request, and we have the signatures, just like a body farm.

My wife is going with me.  I told Charlie to go fuck herself.

*******

Dec 16

I knew the tree when I saw it.  It was a huge spruce smack dab in a grove of aspen.  It was perfect. Matty would have loved it.  I made a platform with the ascending gear from the Moab trip last year, just a simple injury rig.  Matty probably only weighed 90lbs.  There was nothing the cancer left behind.  Just dead meat riddled with genetic instructions gone horribly wrong.

I tied him to the rig, gentle knots around his shrouded form, and pulled it behind me as I ascended.  My wife held the guides, and I tried my best not to shake it too badly.  The spruce was strong.  It felt right.

It felt like hours climbing.  Pulling him up behind me, it felt like days. In reality, it only took me 8 minutes.  Eight minutes.

I pulled him close.  Smelling the scent of a warming dead body in my arms.  Something familiar was under there though.  The smell of a friend in grade school coming over to spend the night, the smell of a buddy in junior high, helping me fight those bullies off, the smell of a teammate as we played football at homecoming… the smell of a best man punching me in the shoulder at my reception calling me the best asshole he had ever known in front of all my friends and family.

I tied him carefully to the highest branch I could.  It wasnt pretty, but it would hold. I climbed up the last couple feet and cleared the branches above, giving his cold face a view of the sky above.  And with that, I kissed his forehead on the way down, trying to not blind myself with grief that wanted to pour freely from my eye sockets.

My wife held me as I got it out of my system.  Above us, hidden within the golden leaves of all the aspen, a flock of ravens burst out to the sky.

A thousand black feathers raising all at once.

See you later, Matty, see you later.