Toys
Toys
PT Oliveri
spbuc5@yahoo.com
Words: 6,919
He cracks
the fold out of his newspaper with one solid predatory snap. Cuts an orange in
two directly down the middle, examines both halves for clarity and color,
chooses the one he deems from this inspection to be the most edible and puts it
on a slim blue saucer. He throws the other into the garbage immediately. After
this, the newspaper is neatly arranged on the table, at a readable distance,
and the saucer follows. Once both objects find their symmetry, he puts his long
hands through the sides of his hair, evenly, and sits down.
Cutting
against the grain of a hot morning sun, light slices mercilessly through a
window whose glass rarely opens. Frogs grow quiet; crickets find God. A light
breeze blows east to west, of note to no one but Sam Sullivan, as it massages
the gills of soil and gives character to face of a distant body of water.
Planets of poets pour their ink down the wells of unbroken hearts, and the day
begins. Timed and metered, the twenty-four neither past nor future, mutually of themselves. Sam does not immediately begin reading the newspaper
or eating the orange; he lets both exist momentarily in their own structure,
secure and appropriate. And he soaks in his own moment here, before the day
grows long and the shadows reverse polarity.
When he
does eat, after this moment of silence, he does not peel the skin off the
orange. He’s been told from a young age that the sound of his chewing is alien.
His mother tried her best to change the noise, a distinct guttural chomping
beat that he could not help but make, with very little success. And so after
many playground teasings and moments of childhood anxiety, he began to take
matters into his own hands and exclusively ate foods that could create their
own personal sonic drama. Peanuts still within shell, hamburgers on severely
toasted bread, popcorn kennels by the handful. His mouth became a rock-mixer;
his teeth coarse and flat. But everyone began observing only what he ate, and
not how it was eaten.
This is
what he told himself anyway, and it was also true to fact, but the story, the
lifelong mastication production, wasn’t why he ate oranges with the skin on as
he sat entirely alone in his five bedroom house at seven in the morning. It
only gave the act a false meaningful resonance. Sam ran time in steady streams
of persistent checked consciousness. He owned no clocks (that he was aware of
anyway), but knew the time of day with consistency. Connection at its maximum.
At this
time in day, he searched for a story.
Something within the pages of the newsprint to arouse his suspicion or open
itself for judgment. As he did so, the thick warm morning air moving with
minimal effect around him, he cleared his throat with nothing to say, like a
shallow pool going through a filter cycle. His blue pants fit tightly, owned to
some time spent with an iron, his tie knotted ascot, his cufflinks were small
and precise gold maps of Argentina. Sam wore those particular cufflinks every
Tuesday. Tuesday in the Spanish language is martes. Today was in fact lunes,
and when he thought of this he double checked the corner of his slender
newspaper to be certain.
Yes,
indeed, it was lunes. And she might still be in Argentina, petting small dogs
and wiping away the tears of sailors. He decided to keep the cufflinks on
anyway. Perhaps the exact day wasn’t that important.
On the nape
of his tanned neck he felt the latest heat of cube condensed sunlight. Then he
saw this headline: “Man Killed in Freak Lawn-Mower Accident”. C1, mid-right,
font, thirty-six courier new.
And into
the large empty home he let out a quick laugh. He didn’t read the article, he
didn’t need to: the headline had told the entire story. So with this, he folded
the newspaper six even times until it formed a small cup. He spit five orange
seeds he’d been rolling around in his mouth into the cup (they landed on a
portion of a full color photograph of Vinny Testeverde) and proceeded to take
this cup, itself now a trash can, to the trash can. The seeds had felt like
infant teeth. At the stucco sink, near the trash, Sam took a moment to stare
out his precisely rectangular window and into the green and brown world beyond
it. A grin met with the corners of his mouth, full and sweet, and he was aware
of it fully.
“Freak
accident?” he said aloud, and laughed again. “Freak accident indeed.”
Now he is slicing molecules and moving
dust. Booming down a poorly maintained highway in a very well maintained piece
of chrome material. Making his impact. A full tank of gas, the radio silenced,
seats leather, teeth flossed without blood. Seven lanes in all, of which he
would use three legally and the fourth when it would suit a direct purpose. And
in those rare cases, that lane was a neon path to more road and more speed. Sam
didn’t glance around for cops like a jittery mockingbird, and he didn’t need to;
fearing judgment was for those looking to be judged.
He did,
however, notice the man in the green overalls who waved at traffic each
morning. The man’s curly hair was untouched from both comb and care alike, and
sprung up wildly from atop his head like a poorly conceived metropolis now
abandoned. And every morning, the green color of the overalls looked a shade
darker, and new portions of the folic city went abandoned.
That man
would wave at the oncoming cars everyday anyhow, in some frantic way, as he did
as Sam passed him on this sunlit morning. Today he added a smile to the overall
persona, large and unbridled. Did he begin to recognize cars that passed with
consistency? Maybe he was counting them; taking inventory of something he could
call his own. The thought thrilled and shook Sam simultaneously. He did not
wish to be counted. But the feeling lasted only as long as the tiny instant
that man flashed by his oval vision, just one more frame in today’s cell.
And now, it
was Sam as the measure of consistency, as he strolled towards his office in a
leisurely gait. Brick and handsome, it’s construction a compliment and relic to
a long defunct piece of an industrial downtown. The building stayed cool in the
summer and warm in the winter, as if it were aware of its other aged
limitations and tried to make up for them whenever possible. The birds that
lived around it in a small canopy of tightly clustered oak trees seemed
generational; their noises and clicks meaningful to this particular district
and no other. Sam had spent one summer trying to catalog each species and
individual but lost interest in the idea quickly. The small birds were of a
world to themselves.
He looks up
quickly to take stock of the letterhead of the building made in blocky Gil Sans
Ultra bold print: Sullivan Toys. It looks even, needs to be cleaned, lots of
rain this summer, mold finds a way, but otherwise good. It looks good. He
considered not putting up a sign with the companies name at all, in fact had
this very sign itself removed for a period of about four months, but eventually
grew tired of the general vagueness that created. Stamp objects: file them.
This building was one such thing.
In the
final few steps before the air would become environmentally controlled, he took
note of the wind increasing in velocity and swinging slightly more the south. A
sign of something, surely, something atmospheric and distant, something coming
together without purpose, something the future knew well about but the present
did not. Something.
His office
is roomy, but neither neat nor cluttered. It serves its own purposes and
projects a defined image, one Sam has been careful to define and cultivate over
the years. No pictures, a few minor awards (still left on the ground), the
dominant colors are black, blue and white. His one large window faces due east
and on the wall directly opposite of this is a large oil-based painting of a
jagged coastline, one whose cliffs rise in unison to a crisp green flatland
edge: a strong choir with one master.
And the
flat-lands run far past that sudden vertical dune cliff, stretching for miles to
hazy mountain ranges. The edge of those mountains are virgin and distinct,
cutting clear to snow-caped peaks where, if one looked closely, the individual
hairs of the artist’s brush could be seen quite clear. Placed on each pinnacle
with the care of a gardener during the summer solstice. And connected to those
many sharp pinnacles is air: the in-categorical expanse of Big Sky. The sky
reaches in the color of flat baby blue, to the very top of the canvas, and at
that point, the canvas edge, where that world stops and this one is said to
begin, the painting ends.
“Sam?”
From across
that great land he re-traces his footsteps, picks up every seed left to mark
the way, and returns to the walls.
“Yes,
ma’am. And good morning.”
Dark sharp
eyebrows, Gothic beauty and shoulders that carry the weight of that
responsibility with simple ease, she’s layered, each pixel fitting her canvas.
“Dana wants
to speak with you,” she says.
“In regards
to?”
Now she steps into his office fully, conspiratorially, and shuts the door partially behind herself, hands still on the door knob. She has a large smile; it signed every yearbook in school.
Now she steps into his office fully, conspiratorially, and shuts the door partially behind herself, hands still on the door knob. She has a large smile; it signed every yearbook in school.
“That idea of his.”
He narrows
his eyes, scanning all available frequencies but connecting to nothing of use.
She just keeps staring, holding the gaze, waiting for the wind to move the
clouds.
“Oh, Christ, right,” he smiles slightly.
“Right, right. Well tell him to come in I guess, I dunno.”
But she
doesn’t move quite yet, she’s waiting for all
the clouds to move, for his mind to find the next sentence, the inevitable one.
“OK, fine,”
Sam says. “If you were me, how would you talk to sweet old Dana about that
idea?”
“As in what
production decision I’d make?”
“No, as in,
uh,” Sam quickly glances out his office window at the sun in stasis, “what feeling would you want him to leave my
office with?”
“This sounds like a business school question Sam.”
“This sounds like a business school question Sam.”
“I never
went.”
“I know you
didn’t. You turning down his concept, I take it?”
“No, I am not turning down his concept, the
world around us is and has.”
She pauses
at this, concerned but for various reasons he thinks. Maybe for Dana, maybe for
Sam, probably not for the world, or whatever the hell she must have thought he
meant.
“Make him
feel like he nailed it, Sam. Like he has Park Place and he’s a simple roll from
Boardwalk. And not only that, but he has the money he needs to buy Boardwalk,
and no one else in the game really does if their being honest.”
“They could
mortgage.”
“But they
won’t. And Dana knows it. He’s that far ahead in the game. That many times
around the board; many chests from the community. He’s going to win the game,
and at the same time know the games origins, a full master and commander. Make
him feel like he’s not only the smartest guy in the room, but he’s smarter then
the guy that designed the room.”
“E.W. Woodridge.”
“E.W. Woodridge.”
“Smarter
than him.”
“I think I
can do that. Dana is pretty smart too, you know, it wouldn’t be a complete
fabrication. More of a gentle intelligence though.”
“How about
this,” she glances up and stairs briefly at the ceiling collecting her Easter
eggs, and then regains eye focus. “Just be nice
to him.”
Sam has his
head cradled in his hands and he’s leaning forward, trying to be as
expressionless as he can, but looking, he assumes, more like a sea-drunk sailor
just waiting for the orders from the currents below. The light of the now
fierce sun cuts through the blinds and forms slats of neon glow. A few small
black ants crawl around in general disorder on his desk, processing thousands
of tiny pieces of vital information in a way that is both silent and
incalculable. Foot soldiers in the digital confetti of consciousness.
“So I’ll
send him in than, you’ll be nice and you’ll do it for me.”
“And for
Dana?”
“Especially for Dana.”
“Especially for Dana.”
Out the
door she goes, searching for Dana in the bullpen of Modern Capitalist
Americana, a scientist sifting through samples. As Sam waits, he stares at that
these ants, distantly, and as he does so this short film writes itself, and
then plays in his head:
INTERIOR: large kitchen, many appliances, all beige. Coffee dripping slowly, wall colors a deep mocha
INTERIOR: large kitchen, many appliances, all beige. Coffee dripping slowly, wall colors a deep mocha
(DANA and SHEILA
sit across from each other. Directly. Closely. Leaning forward to get even
closer. Uncomfortably close. DANA is tapping his left leg rapidly, twisting his
coffee mug in his small pale hands.)
SHEILA:
Sweetheart, he’s going to be love it. I married a little genius. You know that.
Just be confident.
(CUT TO:
full shot of the refrigerator with many happy photos. Hold this shot for a beat
longer than needed.)
DANA (CROP
IN CLOSE): But what if he doesn’t?
(SHEILA reaches her hand across the table and takes DANA’s into it.)
(SHEILA reaches her hand across the table and takes DANA’s into it.)
SHEILA: He
always has. Right?
DANA: He has.
DANA: He has.
SHEILA: So?
DANA: So?
SHEILA: So,
what are you worried about? Sam loves your ideas, you are a mainstay in the
company. A cornerstone. You’ve told me that yourself.
(DANA leans
backs and sighs)
DANA: Times
have changed. A good idea isn’t good enough a bad one sticks around longer.
SHEILA: Do
you know why I love you?
DANA: It’s
not my cooking.
(DANA and
SHIELA laugh simultaneously)
SHELIA: No
sweetheart. It’s your heart. And that makes great toys. Toys from the heart.
(DANA
smiles, reaches his other hand across the table and pats the top of SHEILA’s
hand.)
DANA: And
this heart will always be yours.
(CUT)
Sam
Sullivan looks right, up from the ants, and once again at the glowing beams of
light hitting his white wall from the distant sun. He looks at the single minimalist
clock on the wall and swears to himself those beams should be higher by now….
“Mr.
Sullivan, Dana Forte to see you.”
Dana steps
in, shuffles in really, almost bumping into Jasmine as she disappears back into
the office ether, vibrating lines of economic fear out of whatever soul he must
have. Sam thinks he can almost feel them, vibrating the air, making his shirt
jump as if he were sitting on a large speaker at a small club. Dana is dressed
neatly, of course, a full head of black hair, every garment cleaned and ironed
the night before. He works the sidelines. Dana’s something of a stock
character, a vivid one, but something Sam thinks would exist against his own
will if it ever came to that: he’s something this office grew around, and Sam likes him for that
reason alone. His wife’s name is Sheila, they send a glossy photo-card of their
family sitting in front of a staged barn every Christmas. And Sam has every
single one, sorted and numbered, in a red binder he keeps, with other things,
in a flameproof safe.
“Dana, sit
my friend.”
“Hey Mr.
Sullivan,” he says and adjusts his tie, blinking rapidly. “Drive in this
morning go fine enough?”
“Avoided all the lizards.”
Blank stare, it could almost be called wide-eyed. He won’t let him hang out on the branch. Be Nice.
“Avoided all the lizards.”
Blank stare, it could almost be called wide-eyed. He won’t let him hang out on the branch. Be Nice.
“No
problems, Dana. Just sautéing the conversation a bit. And Sam for christsakes, I’ve been telling you to cut that Mr. Sullivan
shit out for, what, twelve years?”
“Fourteen.
Awe hell, you know these pitches make me nervous.”
“It’s just
an idea. People only remember the good ones. We don’t have space for in our
tanks to store the mediocre,” Sam says. “And hey, you’ve got a couple of the
toys around here with your signature on them.”
He kicks
his feet up on the desk and leans back a bit. A relaxed posture being the most
overrated aspect of appearance and underrated of social cues. And this minimal
act does seem to set poor Dana at ease, a bit. He looks slowly around at the
large desk and all the shelving in the office that contains a nearly
pornographic amount of action figures, model cars, plastic pirate ships,
ray-guns and assorted toys that decorate it like thick mullet in a shallow
river.
There’s a basketball
sized glow-in-the-dark moon that sits above Sam’s right shoulder. It would open
to reveal a group of Moon Martians (Dana had dubbed them Celestriels, in the
initial design phase) hard at work on some sort of interplanetary laser-beam.
Evil laser-beam, perhaps, but it was your call. The whole contraption played
Frank Sinatra tunes recorded only from 1958 to 1961 out of a speaker in its
base. They didn’t sell worth a damn, and Sam still thought of it as a divine
concept.
“Hit me.”
“Fake
beehive,” Dana blurts.
“Fake
beehive?”
“Well,” Dana looks like he wants to go back in time and devour those two words like soft linguini. “Not a great phrase I guess, but here’s the concept.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Looks like a beehive, has fake little bees, highly detailed of course, is as intricate as an actual beehive. Have you ever seen the movie Antz?”
“Well,” Dana looks like he wants to go back in time and devour those two words like soft linguini. “Not a great phrase I guess, but here’s the concept.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Looks like a beehive, has fake little bees, highly detailed of course, is as intricate as an actual beehive. Have you ever seen the movie Antz?”
“No, I have
not Dana.”
“Underrated,
Woody Allen as an ant. Funny. Right? Of course it is. Anyway, kids love movies
about bugs. Kids love bugs. Kids love the feeling of control too, especially
things smaller than them, that’s most of the reality of toys. And so kids get
to control this hive, you see, and in that way kids get to control bugs.”
“Does said
fake hive produce honey, Dana?”
“Your god damn right it does. My prototype has a little side compartment that you can load up towards the top, it filters down as honey. Could use actual honey, but that’s sticky”- he’s getting going - “probably expensive for the parents too. But you could also use some sort of substitute, perhaps even a candy. Something edible. I’ve been talking to a few of our freelance chemists who think they could produce something that transforms as it spends time in the hive. Plug the hive in at night, it glows a soft yellow, maybe makes a buzzing noise, some white noise, works as a nightlight too. But as it’s plugged in it makes that honey, or whatever, the little fake bees working for the kids into the night. Following orders. I don’t know Sam, I love the idea; it just came to me one night. I woke Sheila up. Explained the whole damn thing.”
“Your god damn right it does. My prototype has a little side compartment that you can load up towards the top, it filters down as honey. Could use actual honey, but that’s sticky”- he’s getting going - “probably expensive for the parents too. But you could also use some sort of substitute, perhaps even a candy. Something edible. I’ve been talking to a few of our freelance chemists who think they could produce something that transforms as it spends time in the hive. Plug the hive in at night, it glows a soft yellow, maybe makes a buzzing noise, some white noise, works as a nightlight too. But as it’s plugged in it makes that honey, or whatever, the little fake bees working for the kids into the night. Following orders. I don’t know Sam, I love the idea; it just came to me one night. I woke Sheila up. Explained the whole damn thing.”
He’s a
little out of breath now, but no longer nervous, enveloped in his creation like
an astronaut in distant orbit.
“What do
you think, Sam?”
Sam is still leaning back in his chair, gazing east. Wasps of conditioned thinking sting his soft tissue, he swats them away.
Sam is still leaning back in his chair, gazing east. Wasps of conditioned thinking sting his soft tissue, he swats them away.
Dana’s idea
is a distant hum, although not altogether an unpleasant one, but the sun
concerns him immediately: It has not
moved. Not since he walked into the office this morning. He’s sure of this,
suddenly, terrifyingly.
“Does the
sun seem normal to you Dana,” he whispers.
Dana
glances at his wrist, and the small olive colored watch his sweet-faced wife
attaches to it every morning. She feels the palm of his hand as does so and
smiles. Sam has seen her do it.
“Looks
fine, I reckon, you feeling all right buddy?”
Sam is
barely breathing, he’s transfixed, in-mortis, lost in the mountains of
Argentina and staring at the sun. Has it moved? No. It absolutely has not. Sam
reaches out and grabs his desk, hoping it too does not begin to tremor along
with his very being. Has he died? If so, when? And if when, why? And into
terror his mind dips further. The sun does not simply stop moving mid-sky, and
if it has, he doesn’t have the mental strength to stand up to it again.
He feels
the urge to swallow his hands, then
his skinny hairless arms, straight through to his broad shoulders until his
entire being is covered in the warm comfort of his gums. His breathing is swift
and quick.
Dana is
looking at him with concern, but for a variety of reasons.
“I love
it,” Sam exhales, heavily. Touching
ground for a moment. Inhale, at normal levels. Maintain grip on desk. “I really
do. It’s a phenomenal concept Dana. But…”
He’s
licking his lips to be certain they are there, and to fully ascertain their
purpose. Sam looks out at the sun again, and then at his minimalist wall-clock:
it reads 11:00 AM. And yet he is doubtless, the sun has remained transfixed at
the position that could be no later then 8:00 AM, at minimum. He puts his hand
up from the point of the general horizon to the sun: four fingers. It has
barely risen; it is not rising. The sun has stopped.
“But?” Dana
says from some distant landing pad.
“Seriously, Dana? The sun looks fine?” his voice is cracking slightly now, his chest heaving in a way that must be visible: “At nearly noon the sun is usually directly above us, you can’t even see it directly,” and then he points at the sun out his bay window, “But right now we can see it. It’s right there!”
“Seriously, Dana? The sun looks fine?” his voice is cracking slightly now, his chest heaving in a way that must be visible: “At nearly noon the sun is usually directly above us, you can’t even see it directly,” and then he points at the sun out his bay window, “But right now we can see it. It’s right there!”
“Sam, the sun
looks normal to me,” Dana holds his palms upward as if accused of some serious
crime for which execution is certainly imminent. “Honest to God.”
Sam blinks
fourteen times; he visions the color spectrum, with his tongue he feels his
left canine, then his right canine, then he starts to worry about swallowing
his own tongue. How could he not?
Two hands
through the hair: even, metered, substantial. The chance of precipitation this
week, in order, in Jefferson County: 10, 20, 10, 0, 0, 60, 10. Sam cracks his
neck slightly and tries to not look back out the large window in his office.
Dana is looking back at him with those wide frantic eyes again, like his memory
has been frozen or extracted, like he needs to be reprogrammed, like his
general is leading him into an un-winnable battle with frogs whose tongues and
toes are longer and stronger. Frogs who have prepared for battle, and can not wait for it to begin.
He feels his
hands shaking so hard he feels like his wrists may dislocate.
“Love it
Dana.”
“What?”
Concern visible on his sweet face.
“The idea, love it.”
“The idea, love it.”
“Oh, right,
the idea. Great. Fantastic! You sure
you’re feeling all right though?”
“Yup. Love
it. Here’s the thing though.”
“Yeah...”
“Lawyers.”
“Lawyers?” Dana squeaks.
“Lawyers?” Dana squeaks.
“A kid gets
a fake beehive, loves it, I love it,
makes honey. Jars of it. He wants
more honey though, for him, or her, although I must say bug related toyphelia
tends to more strictly fall into our male demographic, for whatever reason, but
either way, Dana, they want more. The
toy has been great, has nurtured their curiosity, has made them mountains of
Sullivan Brand Honey-“
“I was thinking Zeewax-“
“I was thinking Zeewax-“
“And they
want more. But Dana, it’s only one
beehive, only one toy. It can only make so much honey. With that big backyard,
what do those kids end up doing next?”
Dana shrugs, eyes still wide, tie somehow now finally disheveled, as if the mania looming in the room is consuming one piece of him at a time like a coal engine.
Dana shrugs, eyes still wide, tie somehow now finally disheveled, as if the mania looming in the room is consuming one piece of him at a time like a coal engine.
“They find
a real beehive, and when they do, do you
think they will show it the respect it deserves? And then what happens when
they don’t?”
And Sam still has not taken a full breath in. He’s talking on borrowed oxygen. He is mission control: Moses to Dana’s brain stew, delivering verdict and transfixing generations.
And Sam still has not taken a full breath in. He’s talking on borrowed oxygen. He is mission control: Moses to Dana’s brain stew, delivering verdict and transfixing generations.
“Lawyers,”
Dana mutters.
Sam nods
matter-of-factly.
“The toy
won’t work. Breaks my heart to tell you so, but it’s a brave new world out
there. We have to check every angle. We cannot trust our hearts.”
He looks
right for just an instant, not out of need, merely habit, and no doubt, the sun
is stationary. Sam Sullivan’s sun has ceased its celestial path.
Pure
horror.
Dana
dejectedly rubs his hand across his broad forehead, he says something under his
breath, as he stands, no longer looking at all at Sam in all his panic, and
begins to head out the door. Back to the drawing board.
“Dana,” Sam
hears himself say. Or someone say.
Dana looks
at the ground, mournfully, he looks, to Sam anyway, to be shaking slightly
himself, but he brings enough of a compose to turn back around with one hand on
the door.
“It’s a great idea.”
The door is
left half open as Dana slumps out of it, and when he does, Sam is directly at
the window, staring, not fully connecting with what he sees, hoping it’s an
illusion, a hallucination at worst, but it is not. Hallucinations show the mind
at work, show the dimensions in spaces; he’s blank, gazing at this static orb,
under a beam. Some explanation is needed though, something to logically define
this stasis of orbit. The sun no longer moving in the sky is not possible. This thought is so immediate to Sam, so true, so definable. Physical reality: a concept
that must hold up under questioning.
Three fire alarms, one extinguisher (yellow),
sixty-seven pencils in his desk, fourteen sharpened, fifty-three not, fourteen
millimeters of lip balm-
“Are you
all right?”
When he
turns around to look at her he moves with a spastic childlike reflex that
causes the collapse of a navy blue lamp nearby. Numb arms moving like waterlogged
harbor ropes in a receding tide.
“Has the
sun moved Jasmine?” He asks in another whisper.
She stands
motionless, if she were in on it, if she were playing a part in some
manipulation, some scientific experiment, a stress-test, she was hiding it
quite well. Quite well indeed.
“Has it moved?”
Sam nods.
He thinks he does anyway, he hopes he has, at least. She’s not answering, not
yet, and then time reverts, internally, his personal film once again rolling.
Click, click, click, click, click.
Don
Sullivan died of a stroke on a very cold southern day. Cold by any definition,
no matter the latitude, and it warmed little by the day he was buried. And even
in the bitter cold the whole town attended; soldiers summoned by society and
emotion to the mortality clarion song.
They held
it in a small church surrounded by an old-growth forest. Deep long limbs
creaking and cranking without leaves, without cover, swaying in the distance,
shimmering for warmth, bounding off of each other occasionally, the slowest of
ninjas, as mourners filled the building. The trees, this forest, surrounded the
place of worship, gathering it in its thin arms, protecting it from the noise
of the outside world. This was part of the concept in forests: protection from
some initial level of reality.
Don’s wife
Laura Sullivan had asked that everyone sign the guestbook: a guestbook she
would cradle in her arms as the crowd later filtered out of the musty church. And
everyone did oblige. She made a secondary request, on that cold morning, and
Sam was sitting right by her as she said it, sternly, straightforwardly, to the pastor,
as if he must have some ordinance in the guestbook arena. She asked him to
announce that anyone who signed the guestbook, in-lieu of the usual stock
consolation, name their favorite Sullivan Brand toy.
And
everyone did. Some left descriptions; memories of when their lives were
effected by something small and plastic that Don Sullivan hand stamped with his
name, and in most cases, in those early days of the company, had created by
hand himself. Some, indeed, brought the toys with them to the wake, and as they
walked past the large black open-casket, with pictures of Don in happy times
scattered around it, stories from the ether lain forth, and with Sam in a small
itchy ill fitting green suit watching quietly in the front row, they dropped
those very toys into Don Sullivan’s new wooden home. The collection of toys
mounted over the course of the afternoon; people coming up in small groups,
sometimes alone, often even with multiple toys (it was as if they were dropping
something off at the Goodwill of distant eternity) and they found space until
eventually Don himself was partially buried in the plastic, wood, paint and lead
of his own creation.
Sam, his mother,
and one other close relative were the last there to watch the casket close down
on this diorama. The funeral director had asked that they leave before the top
was shut, as was protocol for the time and the place, but his mother refused
for reasons she never really explained.
She also
refused a ride home from the legions of good-hearted men who offered, who begged, to drive her and her small son
home that day. A lady in distress aught not drive herself home from such a
thing, not in the South, and not anywhere. But she was steadfast, and she held
her chin aloft as she marched over to her large beige Mercury, guestbook firmly
in had, her only son trying his best to carry a small nursery of flowers in her
wake, and she drove both of them home.
It was cloudy,
as well as cold, Sam could still remember this. Clouds that did not move.
His mother made
little eye-contact on the drive back. None actually, to be more exact. She held
her gloved hands at the proper point on the wheel, in a classically Victorian
way, not that she was in any such fashion, but it fit the mood. She showed no
emotion as Sam sniffled and wiped tears on the various pieces of cloth in the
car he could find around him. The reached the driveway with zero incident, the
air a sullen jelly of tension around them, and he moved to get of the car, back
to the cold air, inside their house and then somewhere even more distant.
He felt her arm grab him in his process of pushing that massive door open, firmly, but with no menace, and Sam finally did dare to look over to her and found her eyes distant and twitchy: outlined in a color that tried to be red but was something more, something worse.
He felt her arm grab him in his process of pushing that massive door open, firmly, but with no menace, and Sam finally did dare to look over to her and found her eyes distant and twitchy: outlined in a color that tried to be red but was something more, something worse.
She turned
to him and laid that guestbook on his lap, then she took both of his hands and
pressed the small palms of them on the cover. She rubbed her eyes, car still
idling, clouds low and true, birds silent, unwilling to aid the atmosphere
during its arctic assault.
“Everything
written in here is now yours,” she said. “And I’m so sorry.”
She hugged
him deeply, and that evening, as the sun set and clouds began to clear, they
sat together in the car and cried until the neighbors finally came.
Sam had
told two people this story: one was in the foothills of Argentina, and the
other was still standing in front of him, in this current moment, unsure of
simply which way we she needed to tell him the sun was moving.
“Jasmine?”
“Yes?”
“Has the sun moved?”
“Has the sun moved?”
“Today?”
“Yes.”
“Yes.”
“To me?”
“To you.”
A deep
distinct pause, it wrote a novel just by existing, and a breath in.
“Yes.”
“And you
are absolutely sure of this?”
Her eyes
narrow, lips part slightly, he thinks again that, if she were programmed, if
the lines were being written for her, this would be the time she herself would
realize it, and if she did, he was sure, she’d have the courage to tell him so.
But she doesn’t, because she isn’t. She knows that the sun is exactly where it
is supposed to be in the thin sky above them. It’s his courage that is peeling.
“Has it
been happening again?”
Sam’s
pockets are empty laundry sacks magnetically devoid of the metal he now seeks;
she’s right, and the swing is fully on, the cat is in the weeds, orders are
orders and it’s time for action.
“I’m going
home.” He announces and then nods. Announcement made, now nod. Nods follow
announcements.
“Stop at
Dr. Durham’s office first, please
Sam.”
But he’s
moving past by her already, slithering around her slim figure like a vapor
cloud of charged neon, caught in a wind of panic and solar pain.
“Uh, cancel
my appointments please, Jasmine,” he hears himself saying over his shoulder, to
the wilted daisy leaning on his door-frame, and he doesn’t hear it, but he
knows that tears are welling up in her soft blue eyes. Assistants in the office
began to turn heads at the commotion, phones are put down, cubicle meerkats
observe the unfolding tundra with concern.
“And I’ll
be back next sunrise. Have my faxes re-directed through the Canadian
affiliates. Also-“
“Sam, you
all right pal?”
He’s
storming towards the staircase without breaking stride.
“Fine,
Dana. Also, more clocks in this office, please. Make sure they have the proper
time too. Every clock in here is broken.”
Out the
door, down blue stairs and into the sunlight that stings Sams skin like wasps
freshly released from an oven. The feeling makes him weak, he absorbs the issue
at hand in a physical way for the first time. He gets into his car and locks
the doors; the gears ignite and preserve, they seal off the fate unfolding
around him. The sun is hovering in a position unflinchingly from that which it
was when he arrived: it is now officially noon, eastern standard time, and for
a brief moment, just a pixel in the ink of a newspaper, it flashes through his
mind that if this very sun remains transfixed there, at that spot in the sky,
he’ll have seen his final sunset. The longest sunset. And fear grips him
concurrently, flexing his fibers, shaking his skeleton, dragging its empty cup
across the bars of his cage, just making noise; as it is hungry.
***********
Page one,
line thirty-six, penmanship average, Jessica and Philip Granger: “We loved your Action Tommy Rolling
Paratrooper (the one with the removable legs), and our son (James, he’s pale,
with blue eyes) spent years playing with it. Your were an inspiration”.
Page eight,
line fifteen, penmanship remarkable, no toys, Bowie Robertson: “I will miss you, my friend. We will meet
again.”
Page six,
line seven, penmanship average, Daisy and Chuck Cumberland: “The Seven Oceans Drum Set. Steven played
only the Indian and the Pacific. They made the most noise. You will be missed.”
Page fourteen, line
seventy-eight, penmanship precise, Margery Blankenfield: “I still have a set of the 1967 Silver Snails Race Team. You never won.
Love always. xoxoxo”
Page six, line sixteen,
penmanship below-average/childish, David Reynolds: “They always stare at me and I will never give them away and I will love
them forever.”
************
The wood
floor in his home was a solid and cool comfort, once he reached it; the feeling
slowed his particles down and demanded that he blink: letting him organize from
a center and project outward. The
mail hadn’t come all day. Sam was certain it never would, and if it did, he was
prepared to accept that as well.
He hadn’t
cried alone in years. The last time being when he’d clipped a box turtle
driving home from the market one Tuesday. It had died, but not until after many
strange blood soaked hours in his large blue guest bathroom. After the
collision, he’d scooped it up and placed it on his front seat, racing off into
the evening towards the nearest hardware store to buy their most intense glue.
He’d thrown a twenty at the cashier and flew back out.
That evening,
the little light-bulb sized turtle had squirmed and dragged itself around the
edges of his bathtub; it made a noise indefinable as it did so, a primal
high-pitched moan that religions were created to soothe and civilizations had
fallen apart because of. It was a deep and distributing noise: something
between bewilderment and pain, something above both those thoughts that Sam
projected simultaneously on the tiny reptile. And Sam had glued away all night,
trying to solve that olive-green shell puzzle, hoping that he could, knowing
that he would not and he could not. Fences that cannot be redrawn by hand; he
thoroughly investigated all limits of hope.
When the
small animal had had enough, and he’d later think, for its own sake if not his,
it shivered, shuddered slightly, then remained still. And Sam had cried. Alone
with a dead box turtle, the injury caused solely by him in a moment of poor
coordination. His locomotion on this
Earth metering out a pain that could not be retracted, could not be fixed,
could not be healed; his station on the watch tower on the wall of the cosmos
causing a pain he had shut himself off from. There was nothing to calculate and
nothing to sort.
He would
not cry now: not for himself.
The call he
was making was long distance. Across meadows and oceans, pools of life and
vigor, tides heaving and vexing, if they still could; across mountains
breathing smoke, fire piercing the sky, ice cracking, soil shifting and
settling, worms grinding into the core, across massive bands of insect
spiraling up into the atmosphere, clouds of matter, many brains and many eyes.
“And you
didn’t go see you doctor?” the voice said softly on the other end.
“No.”
He was
naked now, hoping to absorb something from his floor, hoping to become part of
it maybe, something primal again. Everything remained still and abstract on the
walls above him, steady as the ribs on a large whale, encapsulating.
“Sammy,
Sammy, Sammy,” she cooed. “I can’t see the sun. I’m inside. We have no windows.”
“Can you go
outside for me? Can you look once there?”
“We live in different hemisphere’s my little hummingbird, my sun cannot be yours. You have your own. You have to take of care it. Maintain it. Pray toward it if you have to.”
“We live in different hemisphere’s my little hummingbird, my sun cannot be yours. You have your own. You have to take of care it. Maintain it. Pray toward it if you have to.”
There was a
thumping deep below the solid wood near the center of his house, vibrating
outward like an emerging butterfly. He could feel it on the soles of his feet,
the energy lapping back and forth like a paintbrush. Growing stronger, gaining
territory, making its presence known. Looking down to his side on the floor,
neck craned, he thought the wood panels were moving a bit, perhaps simply
re-arranging, trying to find a position that felt better, that fed the fog.
“Sammy?”
“Yes, ma’am”
“Yes, ma’am”
They hadn’t
been talking. Silence had held on for some time that was unknowable, especially
now with the ultimate timekeeper stopped still.
“I was
lying.”
“About what
dear,” he was twisting his fingers around the phone cord, slipping through hole
after hole, tumbling idly into one area of reality to another, his finger the
guide, the cord the ladder, looping and spinning, his heart and head distant.
“Our sun
hasn’t moved either,” she said.
He said
nothing.
“Everyone
is panicked, I knew you’d end up calling and you did.”
“Is there a
plan in place? Did your government see this coming? Someone must know something.”
“We know as
little as you do. We wait for the sun to set. It won’t, and it hasn’t. But we
are safe, deep inside the Earth.”
If she was
lying, he was fine with it. She was lying. Maybe it was mercy, maybe it was why
he was calling her anyway; it was certainly why she moved to Argentina and Sam
could only call her and not see her. This felt like the last time
he’d talk to her. Their final sunset. Moonbeams, beehives, and flares dropping
in a distant sea-lined sky; the concluding pieces on a cake made at the last
second.
“Good,” he
said. “I’m glad. I’m glad you’re safe. Make sure everyone is at peace there,
help them understand. Bring light.”
“I will.
You take care, O.K? Don’t worry about what you see. You know what is true and
what his false.”
“It’s just
a freak accident I bet,” Sam said.
“I think
so. A skip in the tape is all.”
“Take
care,” he said.
He pressed
the button to disconnect, and disconnected.
Sam Sullivan
stood alone in his home, his body feeling now serene, distant in the way a
galaxy is but close like a fading heartbeat, and he turned slightly to stare
out his large bay window and into the sun. Deep into that unmoving sun.
Directly into the center of that star. Eyes beginning to tear with pain, then
shimmering with bright colors, many, many colors, until there was one color,
the one he wanted to see, as the sun now finally began to set.
His last
toy. The only one he’d ever made.
1 Comments:
that was great, very moving
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