For quite some time, in addition to assiduously watching Kill Bill everytime it airs and making plans to reenter the world of preparing one’s own food, your ol’ Old Hag has been planning a new feature on the site–one that will not only a) exponentially increase the quality of the writing herein, but will 2) allow us to do no work. Let us introduce you all to the win-win of Teaser, people, wherein we “tease”–aha!–you with snippets of forthcoming novels by, you know, other people. (Take that, Amazon fucking shorts!)
First up is the incomparable Maud Casey. The author of Drastic, a collection of short stories, and The Shape of Things to Come, a New York Times Notable Book of the Year, Casey was also a contributor to the excellent Unholy Ghost: Writers on Depression, which we can inform you from experience is not at all as fun as being on drugs. “Keep Death Daily Before Your Eyes” is a section from her forthcoming novel Genealogy, and here’s where for god’s sake we should have asked the author for a precis of the novel but we forgot so we’ll steal from our fellow Baltimoron and inform you that “Genealogy will use four alternating perspectives to explore the lives of a family affected by mental illness, memory, and the peculiar life of Louise Lateau, a 19th-century Belgian girl who developed a stigmata every day after surviving a cholera epidemic.” That is, “if all goes continues to go according to the plan on her wall.” (We love that wee coda. Our own wall has been fucking with us for months, and if things don’t improve we’re painting it lime green. Try switching chapter 3 to third person indirect then, dude.) In any case, herewith a better wall. Enjoy.
Everyone is gone. Most of all her daughter Marguerite with her fierce pointed nose like a command in the center of her face. On a patch of kitchen linoleum warmed by the sun, Samantha Hennart stands in bare feet gnarled with calluses from walking outside with no shoes. The gnarled feet, the warm linoleum, the blackberry bushes that have grown around the periphery of the former train depot—all once a sign of abundance—now only confuse her. She lays the flyswatter on the kitchen table—the same flyswatter she uses to kill flies and bat her gone husband’s high-pitched frequency of disdain out of the air—in order to open the window and let in the familiar sharp mingled smell of ocean salt and cow manure.
“Let it be said,” Sam says out loud. She doesn’t bother to finish the sentence. She’s forgotten how it ends or if it ever had an ending. There is nothing to be said; there is only the silence of her entire absent family. No more footsteps in rooms above her or on the stairs, footsteps that lately were always on their way to other rooms. No more rush of pee in the toilet, no more muffled coughs or stifled sneezes. No more of her son’s plaintive guitar playing from under his closed door. No more rattling pans in the kitchen as her husband warms milk for himself and Marguerite as he prepares to read aloud to her, when he thought Sam wasn’t listening, from that so called sacred text of his about the ecstatic nineteenth-century Belgian girl who bled for God.
But Sam was always listening to the things Bernard was deaf to. “Do you hear the blood rush and swirl?” Marguerite asked yesterday morning before she disappeared. She said it matter-of-factly, as if she was asking what time it was or wondering about the weather. She pinned Sam’s ear with her wrist. That wrist at the end of the slender branch of her arm, her elbow like a giant knob on that slender branch. “Do you hear the blood rush and swirl? Begging me?”
“What is it begging you?”
“Begging to be let out.”
“Let it be said,” Sam says again now. Still nothing occurs to her, so instead she looks out toward the water. This view could save a life. It is that beautiful. The stony fields, fences, and fields, and fences, and fields leased by local Rhode Island farmers, empty space made cozy by the lowing cows swinging their big dumb heads, and finally, just beyond, that quivering line of ocean on the horizon, the allure of all that mysterious water always within sight. The view is saving her life right now.
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