Sleeping with Ghosts (Luke)
Sept 1, 2012 16:46:53 GMT -5
Post by kneedles on Sept 1, 2012 16:46:53 GMT -5
keeps swirling around in his brain, because while he can figure out the numbers, add what they owe, subtract what he’s borrowed and divide the debt he can’t solve the problems lurking in the curve of a zero. And there are a lot of zeros.
“You washed down the huts?” There’s a light swinging from the ceiling like a hanged man, casting a shaky synthetic glow over the evenings dimness and it’s the kind of day where even the walls seem sticky with sweat. Moisture pools in the skin behind his mother’s jutting clavicle, shimmering like a fine bead on his father’s philtrum while moths throw themselves at the light with such force and desperation like grieving widows tossing themselves onto funeral pyres that Scutcher can almost hear them screaming. He’s thinking- and it looks like it hurts, hunched over the remnants of a jerky and egg dinner, shifting the grey cooked globules off his meal around on the plate with his fork. Over salted, dry and too chewy for gums begging for nutrition- beginning to bleed around the edges- they are getting tired of jerky, but Tallow won a lot of it in the pageant and the sickly hens keep laying their watery misshapen eggs. It’s better than starving. They’ll know that soon enough. One hundred and ninety four dollars…where does anyone get one hundred and ninety four dollars?
“You washed down the huts?”Loomis growls again, eyes narrowed because he never likes to repeat himself, but Scutcher isn’t paying attention; not to the curl of his father’s lip, or the clench and unclench of his fist, sweat seeping into the material of his vest below the pits. There’s a fly buzzing close to his ear and at least the feeling of wings against his skin is slightly cooling in all of this stagnant heat. One hundred and ninety four dollars...I could sell a pig? But we have so few now ; we need each of the living ones more than ever.
A dull ache follows the initial sharp sting, shards of china all around him, on his shoulder, falling at his fingernails while egg and jerky cleaves to his hair and to his shirt. Scutcher is jolted out of his thoughts of debt and money and starving and maybe he should be grateful that all he has to worry about right now is the dim throbbing and the high probability that he’s about to get a thrashing. Dizzy and punch-drunk, he thinks sometimes it dulls the other pain as good as homemade gin in a mason jar slipping down someone’s throat. “Loomis,” says momma, her voice barely more than a whisper, a creak of the old house- some days the tin can shack and his mother were virtually identical. Slowly, as the days shifted her bones had become corrugated and metallic, her veins piping, her eyes the shattered windows that stared out onto a world that might have once been wide but felt increasingly narrow. Some days, even the most careful eye wouldn’t see the seams where the house ended and where his momma began; they were simply one and the same, slow and heavy with the rising scent of the misty tobacco smoke. So Loomis Tansy ignores her, she can’t call him off, what can a house do really?
“You. Washed. Down. The. Pig. Huts? Huh, retard?” Loomis gets in real close so Scutcher can smell the alcohol on him- more like strong lighter fluid than anything else- so he can see the broken veins and red rimed sclera of his eyes. A brief glance though, because he goes back to looking firmly at the table, at his hand while the nail digs into the wood. “Yes, sir.” “And you took care of that burnt out pile of shit out front?” “Yes, sir.” [/i]A sniff from his father, as he pushes on the back of Scutcher’s head roughly, “Aint it good, maw? Like a well trained fuckin’ monkey,” Loomis backs away to slump in his chair like he does most nights, the stump of his amputated leg resting on the seat, the other on the foot stool as he lounges, a drink clasped in his hand. “I guess there ain’t nothin’ left to do now but wait til we’re out on the street fuckin’ starvin’ to death.” And he almost seems pleased by it. Scutcher digs his nails deeper into the table, a voice in his ear telling him to take it easy, telling him not to crash. But his father is right, probably. Winter is coming, bringing the frost and the hard bite of the cold with it. There will be newborns that freeze in their cribs and elderly people will pass unnoticed until the thaw in spring brings with it the smell of decay- that’s how it’s always been in ten. Steering a family of four through winter is hard enough during better, more prosperous times let alone when ravaged by disease the way that they are now.
Scutcher’s momma scratches at a mosquito bite forming on her arm and pushes the forth, un-shattered and untouched plate in his direction. “Would you go and see if your sister wants any dinner, please Scutcher?” she asks with a look that screams, I’m sorry, god, I’m sorry I don’t know what to do. Not that he’s good at reading people, but it’s one that he’s worn more than a few times too- the similarity between mother and son is often striking. Tallow looks more like their father, but she’s nothing like him at all. Nothing.
Especially not now, the way she’s curled up under the blankets in the dark when he brings in her dinner on a plate. The Tansys are all tall, Tallow’s taller than most girls her age, and quite a few older (she would have towered over Noreen) taller than a lot of boys her age too- as is the way with girls who seem to mature faster, privy to the secrets of the universe, with knowing smirks so much earlier than boys can ever hope to be, but as he pushes open the door it’s striking just how small she seems. Pale and small and sick and it makes his heart ache for her. In district ten, they spend all the money for doctors on veterinarians so he can’t say for sure why Tallow is sickening all of a sudden, but he’d be willing to put money on it being the same disease that has killed- at this point- two thirds of the herd. It affects humans in rare cases- it’s not lethal, thank god, but it can be debilitating, and now she’s consigned to bed.
“Get that fucking thing away from me before I puke,” he hears her mumble crossly into her arm the minute he’s inside her room, the curtain drawn over the window, the only light now the thin strip creeping in from the hall. “I aint hungry.”
“You aint seen what it is, yet.”
“I can smell it from here. I’m sick of egg. If I have to eat egg one more time… I’ll kill myself.”
She doesn’t have to worry about that for much longer, Scutcher thinks. Soon they won’t be able to spare the grain, so the chickens will have to be killed and eaten, and once the chickens are dead there won’t be any eggs. Just grain. And sooner or later the grain will run out too. He wants to punch himself in the head now, to force an idea out, to forget about the future- all these visions of Tallow and Momma like it was before, emaciated and huddled, stealing pig scraps from neighbours farms. She’ll get sick like this again, maybe, throwing up her guts into a bowl in the corner that smells sour and strange. If he had more money, then he could go to the chemist and buy medicine for Tallow. But he doesn’t and when he tells her she should eat, she only swears and whimpers that she wants to sleep. Threading a hand through her hair, fingers along the soft skin of her neck, Scutcher presses his lips to her forehead, warm and clammy in the evening’s heat. “You stink of egg too, Noodle.” [/i]But her hand flutters to rest on his arm for a second before she curls up into herself like a cat. He wants to fix it, but he can’t. If someone could wish away the disease that has taken the pigs and now his sister then he would have done it a thousand times over. She’ll be better soon, he reminds himself, up and about in no time- ready to starve along with the rest of them.
So he takes her sick bowl and doesn’t leave the plate. The night is stifling, the hours seem endless. He should have more to do. But when his evenings aren’t broken up with working on the pig farm and spending time with Tallow, what else is there? Go to the garden, a voice whispers as though on the wind though the air is so still tonight that the atmosphere is made of a thick warm soup. He could pretend it’s her but he talks to her all the time…like he’d promised…but she never talks back. She hadn’t promised him anything though, not once. It had always been slightly skewed towards his direction hadn’t it? And if it is her voice- that means that she’s watching him, up there in some heaven that people talk about to make them feel better at dinner time once grandma has died. He thinks about that a lot; sometimes it’s a comfort to think that no matter how bad it gets she’s going to be looking out for him now, wanting him to succeed, hoping things aren’t going to go wrong. Sometimes though, he’s slightly afraid. When Tallow rolls over onto her hands and knees, legs spread out, thrusting slightly against the empty air as she turns her head to look at him, biting her lip, whispering, “Like this. I want it like this,” he gets the flash that if Noreen really could see everything, up there in the infiniteness of heaven- which Scutcher imagines to be somewhere next to the big dipper constellation (he’s never quite grasped the concept in all honesty) she’d be hating him….because…well he’d promised hadn’t he?
His parent don’t raise an eyebrow towards him when he walks back through the living room/kitchen/dining room whatever it needs to be for the family, shoving Tallow’s sick bucket with the rest of the pots and pans for dinner. Dad’s eyes are heavy, narrowed to the smallest of slits while his head lolls dangerously to one side. Something indeterminate in front of him has caught his attention and while he sneers at it so he doesn’t notice Scutcher or particularly care anymore,-though something in Scutcher is sort of hoping for another punch in the head; to scramble up his brain, to keep him punch drunk and burning.
Part of the yard outside is a charred wasteland, scorched earth beneath where the pig corpses had been piled high now nothing but ash. The night is the colour of mud, the stars trapped and faint behind a thick cloud of humidity, bugs and flies pressed up against every surface, his shirt sticking to his back. Walking down, he lights a cigarette and stops at the entrance to one of the pig arcs. Don’t smoke in here t’aint good for the pigs. But it’s empty now. No more snuffling, no more playful grunts that everyone inside is gone, leaving only the lingering smell of straw and dirt and wet noses. And they never even knew what it meant to be diseased, or dead. No concept of fear or death or meanness. They were just good to each other and they liked to eat scraps and that was enough. His friends. Dead on a burning pile in the most pointless way possible.
Everything he loves goes away in the end.
“What do I do?”he whispers to the murky air, up to the skies which he can hardly see behind a thick dirty curtain of humidity. She probably can’t see him either, if she’s even looking, if anyone even can. With one strange strangled gasp from inside of him, Scutcher sends his fist into the corrugated metal of the pig ark. It shudders and a pain flares through his knuckles. He sends it into the ark again, and again, wrapping each blow around a choked, dry sob until something getting twisted up in the corner of his brain starts to feel as though it’s being pushed out and he’s panting, out of breath and out of everything. Scutcher unfurls his fist so that his palm is flat against the metal, slipping down it until his knees are drawn up to his chest. “What do I do, what do I do, what do I do?” [/i][/color] [/blockquote][/blockquote]
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