Lena St. Clair
tle, my motold me my great-grandfatenced a beggar to die in t possible later t-grandfat, or er.
I used to play out t moments over and ain in my iorip off t and lead o t;traitor," read tioner, "is senteo die ts." But before o er, my great-grandfatily put back toget;As tting me do; said t, "I t t I I is on t; And t-grandfato s .
I once asked my mot;In bed, very quickly, after being sick for only t;
"No, no, I mean t? Did to cs?"
"Anns in your mind?" cried my mot;t may years. does it matter ;
I al it mattered, to kno possible t o you, to knoo not be draerrors t surrounded our cil s dark er of ill tcil s.
As I remember it, t in our old ried to from me. S ypes of key locks. And it became so mysterious t I spent all my energies unraveling til to pry it open o immediately fall o t er I stopped screaming—I ell me about t and ed five babies in me and ten us all in a six-course meal, tossing our bones on ty floor.
And after t I began to see terrible t of me I got from my mot ligo strike dotle cle ly squasricycle. And sc. Monkey rings t i could splas of laughing friends.
I didnt tell anyone about t even my mot people didnt kno. Clair. sa I looked like my fate at time. But if t ts. Instead of s, mine ra my c looked too pale, like somet was once darker and he sun.
And my eyes, my motern cuts of a s knife. I used to puso make til I could see te parts. But her asked me why I looked so scared.
I o of my moture aken ion Station. Sayed til termine , or tizen. My fat izen. Some in a sea of immigration categories.
My motalked about my faterrible life tragedy s speak about. My fation papers: Betty St. Clair, crossing out doead of 1914. So, ead of a tiger.
In ture you see eal tts at top sernized suit jacket, ayliss padded stons. t from my fatfit so someplace. do in he black horizon of her head.
And even t, aring up past the camera, wide open.
"; I asked my father.
And my fat ruggling to keep il t off, ten seds later.
My moten looked ting for someto er s truggle to keep her eyes open.
"Dont look at ; said my motoing on t a building. S time, slept for many years. And and ips ted.
" did so ; I her.
"S a bad man," said my mot;S ."
And I krue. I kneo o onese listle bit of Englised my motures, looks and silences, and sometimes a bination of Englisuated by ations and Cration: "S;—ords ot e out. So my fat words in h.
"I trying to say sired," her became moody.
"I t darn family in try!" meal.
But possibly imagine. I could uand tly, but not t led to anot e.
"You must not ion but to sc; o walk by myself.
"; I asked.
"You t uand t; she said.
"?"
"Because I put it in your mi."
"?"
"Aii-ya! Sus! Because it is too terrible to sider. A man grab you off treets, sell you to someone else, make you be done? Youll go to jail, die t;
I krue ans I also made up lies to prevent bad ture. I often lied ranslate for rus, notices from scelep;S;— meaning?—s a grocery store yelled at o smell told C alloo s a notice a polio vaation, I told ime and place, and added t all students o use metal lunchey had discovered old paper bags carry polio germs.
"ere moving up in t; my fation to sales supervisor of a cloturer. "Your mot;
And o San Francisd up a o an Italian neigeep I o lean into t to get en and I he old fears behind in Oakland.
tment building ories ments per floor. It ed fa鏰de, a ret layer of ucco topped ed roal fire-escape ladders. But i door s narroo a musty lobby t smelled of everybodys life mixed toget t door o ttle buzzers: Anderson, Giordino, . Clair. e lived on tuck bet floated up a sounds t drifted doreet, and at nigruggling to climb teep, fog-s;Are t; A beagle scrambling to to start er by fire truck sirens and an angry ability, I would soon fall asleep.
My mot ment, but I did at first. tiled, arranging ture, unpag disures on t took o, op, s a man whrew her off balance.
. ood up straig ing, "I found you! Suzie ong, girl of my dreams! ; And arted rusoo do anyt moment as s go, I started to scream, seeing till screaming after top it, for C poor little girl and ;
t of t of stores, srembled. Scig . And once ake out of ter, I started to slip ao look at t I k instant s protected me better.
As soon as o put tables a quite rigc so t door to a he sofa.
" are you doing?" I asked.
S "t being balanced," and I t s . And tarted to move tables, a ese scroll of goldfish.
"s going on ; asked my father when he came home from work.
"S look better," I said.
And t day, some terrible danger lay ahead.
"; I asked rue answer.
But sead: " your nature, you are not in bala too steep, and a bad op blt a;
And tarted pointing to tment. "See rangled. And tcoilet room, so all your ;
"But mean? s going to s not balanced?" I asked my mother.
My fat to me later. "Your mot practig ing instincts," ;All mot it. Youll see w;
I wondered whing more?
And ter, I found out t my fat all along. I came o my bedroom, and sa. My mot against a danger omaco have a baby.
"See," said my fat t;ing instincts. . And ; see er sao bump into to table edges as if s omaed a baby, as if srouble instead. S speak of talked about a t of balanot in t baby, t it uachis crib in my room.
it ttime life of my imagination cead of street sounds, I began to me door. t-door buzzer said a family called there.
t first niging. A tened my ear against ting back. And nour onto our street, and I could ions fading in and out:o say!… out and stay out!…rathen!
ts and ts, a m to slice a braid, toe, a t of of il t, no sounds.
I lay back against my pillo nessed ion. A girl been killed. I been able to stop myself from listening. I able to stop w all.
But t nigo life ing, tinued, niger nig my elli possible t could error of not knoop.
Sometimes I separated our tment doors. tment airs going up to tairs going doo the lobby.
"You break ys sliding do banister, Im gonna break your neck," a omping on tairs. "And dont fet to pick up Pops suits!"
I kneerrible life so intimately t I artled by t time. I door s a fe a ted doairs and I quickly gato reet.
S seem like a girl races of blood-stained clote blouse, a blue cardigan ser, and a blue-greeed skirt. In fact, as I ce ily in ro I urned reet and of my sight.
Every time I sa, I end to look dotons on my ser, guilty t I kne her.
My parents friends Auntie Su and Uncle ing picked me up at se to tal to see my mot spoken ance.
"It is no; said Uncle ing, looking at ch.
"time," said Auntie Su.
ed my motal, sossing bad f at the ceiling.
"My fault, my fault. I kne ; s;I did noto prevent it."
"Betty darling, Betty darling," said my fatically. But my mot sing tions to me, in a strange way, as if she were begging me for her life, as if I could pardon her. She was mumbling in ese.
"Lena, o put in my moth.
And for once, I struck me t t possible t ened.
"o be born," s;I could already tle fingers, to stay inside. But tor, to pus, make , t and able, steaming h life.
" a stop looking at it. t oo! I could see all to o be, and tor sed! ay eggshell!
"And to fill air and rise up from table. turo one side, to t looked rig to killing my ot to ;
I could not tell my fat sy crib in ell him she was crazy?
So t I translated for ;S all t ;
After t, not all at once, but piece by piece, like plates falling off a s ing.
Sometimes sart to make dinner, but op er running full steam in tables, silent, tears floimes ing and op and put our forks do;—It doesnt matter. My fat sit trying to figure out didnt matter table, kno ime.
My fato fall apart in a different o make tter. But it g.
"S tired," o me t tatue on aring at e as if it ead of spagti.
At everyty eyes. My fatting my ;; but al me, to in my in my stomac I could feel it. I could feel every little movement in our silent nigs oo deat edge lying ay neck, I used to ter feeling sorry for myself, it forted me someo t t door had a more unhappy life.
But one niger dinner our doorbell rang. tairs first.
"Lena, could you see ; called my fatc;resting" and it was as if s.
I opeiously, t door. I stared at . S me, and s of bed hes on.
"?" called my father.
"Its door!" I sed to my fat;Its…"
"teresa," she offered quickly.
"Its teresa!" I yelled bay father.
"Invite ; my fat almost t t teresa squeezed past me and into our apartment. it being invited, sarted o door and follo he back of a horse.
S over to my o open it. " are you doing?" I cried. S on t o. And t me and started to giggle. I sat dog for o stop, feeling the dark opening.
"s so funny?" I finally said. It occurred to me t per me, at my life. Maybe seagnant silence of our unhappy house.
"; I demanded.
"My mot," salked o be proud of t. And ttle and said, "e and s t. So no outside til Im sorry enougo apologize. But Im not going to."
"t are you going to do?" I asked breatain t ime.
"Im going to use your fire escape to climb bato my bedroom," s;And so . And be t; She giggled again.
"ont s;
"Na be glad Im not dead or sometend to be mad, sort of. e do tuff all time." And through my window and soundlessly made her way bae.
I stared at time, serrible s op?
I lay doing to s. And late at nigill aupida girl. You almost gave me a attack. And teresa fell and broke my neck. And ting h love.
I unned. I could almost see them, because I had been wrong.
And in my memory I still feel t beat i nigo ter day, niger niger year. I co on t I k possible top. I still sa noo cill eresa errible fig I sahing else.
I sa t being seen a sold ;t die ts. It is to save you."
ted ted, cried out in terror and pain. But when she opened her eyes, she saw no blood, no shredded flesh.
t;Do you see no;
t;Noanding. I . After t possible t;
And ter said, "No e back, to t;
And the wall.
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