You Must Remember This (8 page)

Read You Must Remember This Online

Authors: Michael Bazzett

There is no need to thrash yourself.

I know a doctor who can pull that

wire clean from your back. We

will roar and get excited soon enough.

The Horse

When it says The Horse up there in letters slightly larger than

these including that beautifully balanced H that could serve as

a solid frame for a barn door and that s curving from the back

of the e in rather uncanny imitation of how a horsetail curves up

from meaty rump before falling downward in a swoop, you might

think of a glossy coat rippling over musculature bred to quickness

rather than the stiff and bloated thing toppled sideways in the ditch

that we saw as we rolled downhill into the warm and humid sea air

letting dusty mountains recede behind us with all that endless agave

that tinged field after field with something much softer than blue.

A family in a small red wagon: the girl eight, the boy almost five,

the beach below us home for a week after nearly nine hours driving

getting slightly lost in Guadalajara and suddenly two legs jutting like

poles across the road and a man with a blue T-shirt wrapped across his

face and sawing through the bone with the rusted buck blade kicking

out a little pink powder with every pull and the smell mingling with

green air and ripened mangos as we swerved momentarily into the

oncoming lane and I looked at the barrel of those ribs swollen tight

wondering about the gush of gas and stink if it were pierced when

the boy asked in a tremulous voice if that was a horse and before

anyone could think what to say the girl answered, Not anymore.

Now Here, Nowhere

The cow unfolds its legs and

rises against the white sky,

flickering among the tree trunks

as we pass. The window

glass is cold against my forehead

and I can feel the pavement

humming below.

A pine has overturned, roots

ripped into the air. A dog

trots along the road, another

lies dead on the shoulder, fur

frozen to the pavement like carpet.

We drive on, not telling

how a dusting of snow

whitens shadows, it is still cold but

water will run, insects will rise,

these dogs will flower

in sweet decay. We pass

another broken tree,

the heartwood split

open in a storm.

The car swings

through rolling curves

beneath the white sky,

the sky that holds clouds and light

and clouds and light and nowhere

does it explain.

In the Pasture Corner

The earth beneath the oak is boar-broken,

torn dark and furrowed, clods unearthed

in a dirt-spray: fine roots stand up like hairs.

There, where hooves churned turf to mud

the gash is greased red with blood: the flung

lamb snagged heavy on the branch a hair

too high for the muscle of what pounded

the earth and pounded the earth beneath it.

How It Survived for a While

It waited until we wandered home, then

limped to the sea where the rasping

mouths of hagfish cleaned its wounds.

For a while it disguised itself

as a hailstorm, but the constant

clattering loosened its teeth and the cold

became too difficult to bear.

It chose instead to become a forest thing,

gifted at disappearing. Yet it was

the trees themselves that gave it away,

frightened that one of them

had somehow learned to walk.

Now it will become our king!
they whispered,

wrapping their roots like rope

tighter and tighter around its thick neck.

The School

The anaconda was useful. The youngest

obeyed more readily and occasionally

did not return from the boiler room.

The older children paid attention

to lessons in toolmaking and chemistry,

forming acids that scald, then used boar-

bristle brushes to outline the boundaries of their lives.

Wolverines were introduced, worrying

carrion out on the playing fields. Then

jackals. We watched them seize viscera

and tug, quivering the whole of the rubbery

carcass, shredding the body into ragged skeins

as the steady rain fell. When the teacher intoned

Nature red in tooth and claw
, we understood.

They were out there, weaving drunkenly

among the puddles, fur flecked with mud, our parents

waiting in the road beyond: a line of black cars, idling.

The Orangutan

They were more than a little embarrassed when it turned out their

orangutan was electric.

They've gotten so good with the musculature, said father, who knew?

Also the soft parts, said mother, who loved to stroke the wrinkled skin

in the hinges of his body. Sometimes his flesh responded in the most

surprising ways. And lord knows, she added, he ate more than his

share of bananas.

But then they found them, mashed in a brown pile, a syrupy mass

stashed behind the furnace in the basement. He had always been a

furtive monkey. Dozens of ants were trapped in the clear fluid

leaking from the pile.

We couldn't have come up with a better trap if we'd tried, shouted

father, picking at the delicate carcasses.

Their daughter remained quiet through it all, which they attributed to

shock. When the baby was born some months later, its face was eerily

reminiscent of a calculator.

I don't know what to say, the girl announced, pressing the function key

on her new son. Every time I run the numbers, I get a different answer.

Manhood

Sherman tried to show the extent of his manhood

by insisting his wife wear the pants in the family.

This allowed his manhood to extend

well below his knees, wrinkled as the head of a vulture,

and then coil damply beneath him

as he settled onto the porch steps to read the paper.

I'd be more inclined to apologize for that image

were it not for the fact that the buzzard head

was at one time attached to the body of a snake

replete with a simile evoking crinkled hosiery

and thus this is the mild version and contains

significantly fewer genital-animal parallels

which editors do not typically recommend

for inclusion in general-interest publications.

Why there was only one sturdy pair of pants

between the two of them remains a mystery.

And that those pants were stitched of leather

with supple creases worked into their knees

and embroidered detailing on the pockets

is perhaps as close as we will get to the reason

for their existence in the first place. At this point

it would probably be wiser to return to Sherman

reading on the porch, nude from the waist down.

Yet nude would be an overstatement

given the pair of tire-tread sandals he is wearing

which of course have the effect of making him

even nuder—which is not a word—but was

nonetheless included for purposes of double entendre,

just as the sandals were conjured to amplify his nudity.

And look, there is his unnamed wife doing some

gritty task, mussing the knees of those disturbing pants

as she vigorously trowels the root-base of her rosebush.

I'm sweating like a pig in these trousers, she mutters,

not to him exactly, though there is no one else there.

He is so long in responding it seems the moment

might pass when the newspaper rustles and he says,

Fine . . . give them here . . . I'll wear the damn things,

sighing like a beleaguered king who must wear pants

he does not like, rank with the sweat of his wife,

shoveling his soft flesh into that leather that pinches

like church shoes on a child's feet in August.

Foretold

he shot the bird through the eye

then plucked the pouch

of the belly clean and cut it

open with scissors

so the gut breathed

steam in the chill air

Could you read these for me? he asked

pulling gray-pink strings from inside

Boy or girl? and will the labor be easy?

It seems an odd way

of finding such a thing out, I said

but I think you can wager

on a cesarean

and the child will not go

hungry

Binary

He wore a slightly rumpled shirt,

its buttoned placket off by one

so a triangle of cloth flapped loose

over his belt buckle. It struck me

this was possibly a studied move

meant to indicate joie de vivre.

He set his coffee down with a clack,

sat in the chair opposite and said,

“How would you like to be a zero

in a world of ones,” and he paused

like that after the zero, for effect

yet did not wait to see what effect

this tidbit of drama would generate

before plunging forward in what was

either intellectual vigor or arrogance:

“As a zero in the Arabic numeral system

you could increase by tenfold the value

of any
one
you chose to stand beside.

And as a zero in a binary world of ones

you would quite literally contain

within the orb of your nothingness

half of all the instrumental information

needed to reduce the world's chaos

into straightforward propositions.”

He smiled broadly and settled back

in his chair to await the response,

and that is when I slowly raised

my revolver level with his chest

to help him understand the world

is not in love with certainty.

Recollection

Sometimes, after waking,

I take a moment to collect myself.

My mind wanders to the cabinet

where I keep one leg neatly folded,

held snug by a canvas strap.

The other is toppled like

firewood beside the bed.

The embroidered box on the bedside table

that once housed a blown-glass ornament

now holds my tongue,

that dark knot of sleeping muscle.

My pale twinned arms

lie nestled together in a battered cello case

fingers tangled like amorous starfish.

The cradle of my pelvis sits on a wooden saddle

designed specifically for that purpose

and the hairy coil of my privates

rests on the dresser, next to a pile of coins.

How I'm writing this is anyone's guess.

I've always been somewhat

scattered in dismembered places,

maybe you can remember

                                
and mis-

take me, yes,

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