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          <lb />ae<lb /><lb />oThe only gift is a portion of thyself...the poet brings his<lb />poem; the shepherd his lamb...the girl, a handkerchief of<lb /><lb />her own sewing.? Ralph Waldo Emerson<lb /><lb />As editor, I would like to thank my staff for the gifts they<lb />gave to me:<lb /><lb />Steve Randolph, who gave spirit and humor to keep<lb /><lb />me safe,<lb /><lb />Darlene Pelliccio, who gave artistic and literary gentleness;<lb />blue and cool and honest,<lb /><lb />Chandra Speight, who gave intelligence, youth, and beauty<lb />to refresh and impress,<lb /><lb />Suzy, who gave technical knowledge,<lb /><lb />Jill, whose proof reading skills are legendary and<lb /><lb />Lisa, who helped open our new ChildrenTs Literature<lb />Category. Without you all, this publication would not be.<lb /><lb />Others watched over me:<lb /><lb />Craig Malmrose, Lucy Watson, Evelyn and Joe Boyette,<lb />Yvonne Moye, Janet Respess, Luke Sanders, Patsy Groover,<lb />Dr. John Richards, Jerry Jackson, Henry Stindt, Julie Fay,<lb />Dr. Pat Campbell, Dr. Michael Bassman, Hal Miles, Josh<lb />White, Dr. Taggart and Bob Harlow. I thank you all.<lb /><lb />The Rebel also found support in the community:<lb />ChicoTs Restaurant, Marathon Restaurant, CD Alley,<lb /><lb />ECU Student Store, Stindt Photo-graphic, and the University<lb /><lb />Book Exchange. Thank you for your generosity and your<lb />willingness to support the authors and artists of East<lb />Carolina University.<lb /><lb />J.E. Boyette<lb />Editor<lb />Rebel '94<lb /><lb />ON THE COVER<lb />Jeanne Brady<lb />Kindred Spirits<lb /><lb />Textiles<lb /><lb />First Place<lb /><lb />oIt is good to have an end to journey toward; but it is<lb /><lb />the journey that matters, in the end.?<lb /><lb />Ursula K. LeGuin<lb />Dear Josie, Steve, Chandra, Jill, Lisa, Luke, Katherine,<lb />Missy and Suzy:<lb />Thank you for taking this journey with me.<lb /><lb />Craig,<lb /><lb />I respect and thank you for all that you have done.<lb />I dedicate this Rebel to my entire family, especially<lb />Margo, Dad, Nicky, Annette, Alex, Laurie, Joey,<lb /><lb />Chris, and Panda.<lb /><lb />A very special thanks to my mother.<lb /><lb />oA mother is a mother still,<lb /><lb />The holiest thing alive.?<lb /><lb />Samuel Taylor Coleridge<lb /><lb />Darlene Pelliccio<lb />Art Director<lb />Rebel T94<lb /><lb />The Rebel is published for and by the students of<lb />East Carolina University. Offices are located in the<lb />Student Publications Building on the campus of ECU.<lb />This issue is volume 36, and its contents are copy-<lb />righted 9 1994 The Rebel. All rights revert to the orig-<lb />inal authors and artists upon publication. Contents<lb />may not be reproduced by any means without writ-<lb />ten permission of the creators. The Rebel invites all<lb />students to voice opinions in writing.<lb /></p>
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          <lb />EDITOR<lb /><lb />J.E. Boyette<lb /><lb />ASSisiakrw? Beis. &amp;<lb /><lb />Steve Randolph<lb /><lb />PROSE EPRiTor®<lb /><lb />Lisa Yates<lb /><lb />FOSTER Bust RR<lb /><lb />Chandra Speight<lb /><lb />oe Me ee ray A<lb /><lb />Jill Adams<lb /><lb />EIT RRA YY. Bey tSeVas<lb /><lb />Dr. Michael Bassman<lb /><lb />Julie Fay<lb /><lb />Dr. Patricia Campbell<lb /><lb />ART DOrREC TO<lb /><lb />Darlene Pelliccio<lb /><lb />ASS TATAAS se DIRE<lb /><lb />Suzanne Simpson<lb /><lb />DESIGN DIRECTOR<lb /><lb />Craig Malmrose<lb /><lb />PHOTOGRAPHER<lb />Henry Stindt<lb />Stindt Photo-graphic<lb /><lb />PHOTOGRAPH<lb />Brent Whitson<lb /><lb />oe a<lb /><lb />PRINTING<lb />East Carolina University<lb /><lb />Central Printing<lb /><lb />(<lb /><lb />A N<lb /><lb />1°OR<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />PES ERARY JURBGES<lb /><lb />PROSE<lb />Cindy Thompson-Rumple<lb /><lb />Cindy Thompson-Rumple is a fiction writer whose short<lb />stories have appeared in The Seattle Review, South<lb />Dakota Review, and Portland, among others. A graduate<lb />of East Carolina University and Duke University, she has<lb />worked as a reporter for newspapers in North Carolina<lb />and Georgia. At ECU, she served as Feature Editor for<lb />Expressions magazine.<lb /><lb />POETRY<lb /><lb />Kate Daniels<lb /><lb />Kate Daniels is the author of two books of poetry, The<lb />White Wave and The Niobe Poems. Her literary awards<lb />include the Pushcart Prize, the Crazy Horse Prize and the<lb />Louisiana Literary Prize for Poetry. Mrs. Daniels received<lb />her education at the University of Virginia and at<lb />Columbia University. She is currently the Poet in<lb />Residence at Wake Forest University in North Carolina.<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS LITERATURE<lb /><lb />Dr. Helen Kemp Gay-Stephenson<lb /><lb />Dr. Gay-Stephenson spent twenty-five years in the Wake<lb />County School System where she served as a speech<lb />clinician, a teacher in the LD program and as the<lb />supervisor for Special Education services. Dr.<lb />Gay-Stephenson received her Ph.D. from the University<lb />of North Carolina and her MA and BS degrees from East<lb />Carolina University, where she taught for nine years<lb />before retiring to Raleigh in 1989.<lb /><lb />ART JUDGES<lb /><lb />Leslie Brooks<lb /><lb />Ms. Brooks received her MFA in Ceramics &amp; Drawing<lb />from ECU, and a BFA in Painting &amp; Drawing from Old<lb />Dominion University. She has recently established Ayden<lb />Art, a 3-D studio located approximately ten miles from<lb />Greenville and housed in a turn-of-the-century jail.<lb />Although Ms. Brooks has been regionally involved in<lb />various visiting artist programs in addition to teaching<lb />adjunct faculty at ECU, her main thrust has always been<lb />as a producing artist.<lb /><lb />Catherine Spruill<lb /><lb />Catherine Lawrence Spruill received her BFA in<lb /><lb />Painting from ECU. She is currently employed as an<lb />Artist/Illustrator for the Health Sciences &amp;<lb />Communications Department located in the Brody<lb />Building on ECUTs campus. She teaches mixed media art<lb />and craft classes for the Parks &amp; Recreation program<lb />sponsored by the City of Greenville.<lb /><lb />Leonard Veillette<lb /><lb />Leonard Veillette received his MFA &amp; BFA in<lb />Communication Arts from ECU. He and his wife, Susan<lb />Rinehardt, reside in Rocky Mount, N.C. where he owns<lb />and runs Veillette Advertising and Design. He has won<lb />several PICA and Addy awards for his excellence in<lb />design and printing. Mr. Veillette taught graphic design<lb />at ECU from 1981-1989.<lb /></p>
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          <lb />PROSE<lb /><lb />12<lb />20<lb />20<lb />28<lb />34<lb /><lb />40<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS<lb /><lb />66<lb />69<lb />71<lb /><lb />rR<lb /><lb />79<lb /><lb />R<lb /><lb />oNdaTs Wedding?<lb /><lb />Serpent Angela Bacon Reid<lb /><lb />Angela Bacon Reid<lb />A Man and His Fishes Joseph Elchehabi<lb />John W. Nicklas<lb /><lb />Angela Raper<lb /><lb />Asleep and Dreaming<lb /><lb />Domesticity<lb />The Ladies Who Lunch<lb />Passing Steve Randolph<lb />'<lb /><lb />Children in Southeast Asia James E.Casey<lb />Charmer Kelle Xaviar Lawrence<lb />The Corporeal Aspect of Art<lb />Talking Tomatoes (AlzheimerTs Winter)<lb />Wayne Robbins<lb /><lb />Bedtime Jane C. Sabatini<lb />Untitled Wayne Robbins<lb /><lb />Tonya: On the Power of Counting Red<lb /><lb />J £. Boyette<lb /><lb />Leather Chandra Speight<lb />LITERATURE<lb /><lb />Elizabeth McDavid<lb />Laura McKay<lb /><lb />Encounterings<lb />Rhinoceros Ate the Moon<lb />Winter 1981<lb />For Kitty<lb />1781<lb /><lb />Time For Bed<lb /><lb />David Scott Lemon<lb />Wayne Robbins<lb />Eric Honeycutt<lb />Darlene Pelliccio<lb />JE. Boyette<lb />Elizabeth McDavid<lb />Elizabeth McDavid<lb /><lb />Rabbit Whispers<lb /><lb />Pony Mail<lb /><lb />ART<lb />45<lb />49<lb />50<lb /><lb />~A|<lb />No<lb /><lb />John McManus<lb /><lb />?"?~\<lb />Ww<lb /><lb />55<lb /><lb />50<lb /><lb />-"-"<lb /><lb />58<lb /><lb />59<lb /><lb />00<lb /><lb />61<lb /><lb />62<lb /><lb />04<lb /><lb />GALLERY<lb /><lb />Untitled John Bateman<lb />John Bateman<lb />Ray Kaylor<lb /><lb />Jamie Kirkpatrick<lb /><lb />Untitled<lb />Basket Form #6<lb />Interference Pattern #4<lb /><lb />3 Stages of a Traveling Foot Washing<lb /><lb />Jerry Jackson<lb /><lb />Lidded Vessel #5 Ray Kaylor<lb />David Grahbek<lb /><lb />Jeannette Stevenson<lb /><lb />Untitled<lb />Unity<lb />93<lb /><lb />Self Identity Cubes Production Class<lb /><lb />22Go Darlene Pelliccio<lb />New Age Gaelic Darlene Pelliccio<lb />Swan Song Brian Woodlief<lb />The Rite of Spring Keith Hobgood<lb />Untitled #2 Sean Livingstone<lb />Goat Suspicious Sophia Allison<lb />Untitled #1 Sean Livingstone<lb />Stormy Averitte<lb />Sheri Maffiore<lb /><lb />Caroline Rust<lb /><lb />Box of Unity<lb />Window Series<lb />Boston Brownstone<lb />Don Jrene Bailey<lb />My Only Occupation Dietrich Maune<lb />Beth with a Hat john Bateman<lb /><lb />Keith Hobgood<lb /><lb />Fabrizio Bianchi<lb /><lb />Untitled<lb />Still Life<lb />Self Portrait<lb />Matthew Reynolds<lb /><lb />Melia Elliott<lb /><lb />Cliff Coffey<lb />Melia Elliott<lb />Fred Webb Grain Elevators<lb />Holy Rollers<lb /><lb />Twisting Souls<lb /><lb />Rebecca Putze<lb /><lb />Untitled<lb /><lb />Ground Zero<lb /><lb />Facets &amp; Fathoms<lb /><lb />The Turning<lb /><lb />Carrie Plank<lb /><lb />Marcia Sanders<lb />Todd Robert<lb /><lb />Higawari Piece of Many Colors Ray Kaylor<lb /><lb />Kinetic from the Twin Series<lb /><lb />DTjean Jawkunner<lb /><lb />J. K. Dowdee<lb /><lb />Alice Swart<lb /><lb />Restore<lb />Spider Happi<lb />Whirlwind! Alice Swart<lb /><lb />Lady Savage Tamara Fedder<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />4<lb /><lb />PROSE<lb /><lb />The Ser<lb /><lb />BY ANGELA BACON REID<lb /><lb />ITTS BEEN YEARS SINCE 3:7 ROUGHT<lb />of Lucie even though so many times I have sat at this<lb />window, looked out on what used to be hers, the land<lb />my grandfatherTs grandfather gave her. Why should this<lb />view have meant oLucie? to me? This was my mother,<lb />this bay window with its delicate draperies, the good<lb />light for sewing, the sweet scent of magnolias near.<lb />This was the room that she shared with my Papa, the<lb />love of my life. The room where she brought me into<lb />this world, left me alone.<lb /><lb />It was June, 65, when I last saw Lucie; I had just<lb />turned 11 years old. The big waxen blossoms had burst<lb />on the trees, and I on my swing drifted backwards and<lb />forwards, backwards and forwards, among them<lb />through the scents and the sounds of the summer. The<lb />day washes over me like the breakers of the incoming<lb />tide. I can feel the coarse fabric of the hand-me-down<lb />pinafore worn by my grandmother before me. The<lb />white linen brushed at my ankles, but I had found<lb />twine to belt it gracelessly high, let the breeze and the<lb />sun kiss my skin. I was enveloped in the musk of the<lb />Nezpique Bayou, a living scent as sweet and familiar as<lb />my PapaTs stale sweat.<lb /><lb />From the top arc of the swing I could have seen Lucie<lb />where she sat on her porch in her rocker, a splash of<lb />dark skin swathed in red, but I was bewitched by my<lb />own reflection in our windows, seduced into believing<lb />beautiful what my mirror told me was merely strange.<lb />Lucie did not enter my mind until my thoughts were<lb />disturbed by the cough of my PapaTs old truck starting<lb />up in her yard.<lb /><lb />Papa. The sound of him brought gladness, and the<lb />allure of my image was instantly lost in the promise of<lb />being with him. I jumped from my swing, cushioned<lb />my fall with bent knees, sprang into motion across the<lb />shaded grass of our yard. I wanted to know what he<lb />was doing at LucieTs house when he was meant to be<lb />out on the pirogue with Joe"I had myself seen him<lb />off that morning while Grandmama slept, brushing his<lb />silver-brown hair while he ate, preparing his lunch<lb />while he dressed in his worn fishing clothes.<lb /><lb />The cypress trees lining the creek blocked my view of<lb />him as I scrambled down the bank to the bridge my<lb />grandfather had built for my pregnant grandmother<lb />four years before leaving to die in the first World War.<lb />I didnTt take time to balance my way over the handrail<lb />as I usually did"if I fell I'd have a mud bath and miss<lb />Papa, miss my chance to ride in the truck with him<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />FIRST<lb /><lb />pent<lb /><lb />when he left LucieTs house over the dirt road the<lb />hundred feet to our home. I strained to hear over the<lb />buzzing cicadas what he and Lucie were saying,<lb />tempted to call to him but wanting my presence to<lb />be a surprise.<lb /><lb />It wasnTt Papa surprised. I stopped dead on the other<lb />side, astonished that it wasnTt Papa with Lucie. Lucie<lb />never had company, only on Sunday when the priest<lb />forced a trickle of her abashed people to pay their<lb />respects on the elderly would someone appear, on a<lb />bicycle, no black in Ducote owned a car, much less a<lb />truck like the one I had thought was our own. It was<lb />brand new and shining, and the plaque half-visible on<lb />the path from the creek read Crowley Bureau of Hu".<lb /><lb />Disappointed but curious still, | moved forward slowly<lb />to the shadow of the old wooden wagon that had been<lb />my playpen when I was a child. There was a woman<lb />on LucieTs porch, well-dressed in a white linen skirt,<lb />pillbox hat. I had never seen light skin at LucieTs house<lb />save for my grandmotherTs, or PapaTs and my<lb />cream-colored complexions. I thought the woman<lb />must also be Creole, but when I heard her speak |<lb />knew her to be that strange distant animal"a north-<lb />erner"more exotic to me than Lucie by far in spite of<lb />our common light skin.<lb /><lb />oWe'll be back in an hour, Miss Ricaneau,? the white<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATIONS DAVID ROSE<lb /></p>
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          <lb />woman said. oITm so glad we'll be able to help you.<lb /><lb />Everything will be much nicer now.?<lb /><lb />Lucie was rocking dispiritedly, her palms draped<lb />upright on the knobbed ends of the chair, her gaze on<lb />a cypress tree with its thick Spanish moss, only once in<lb />a while glancing like sunlight off the ladyTs blonde hair.<lb />Her scarlet apron was flecked with decades of cooking<lb />grease, mud"clean, but irreversibly stained. Under<lb />this she wore only a ribbed undershirt and petticoat, a<lb />pair of my PapaTs old boots. Nearly a hundred and<lb />nearly bald, she had covered her lumpy gray head with<lb />the white madras turban she had been given by my<lb />great grandfather when she was born. She looked alto-<lb />gether unprepossessing, her mouth bitter with the<lb />self-contained sullenness she wore when Grandmama<lb />used to come over to get me, mad that my Papa had<lb /><lb />left me with Lucie at all.<lb /><lb />A big black that was not one of ours came on the porch<lb />of LucieTs house, her old spinning wheel in his hands.<lb />Lucie sharpened and focused on that; I saw her spine<lb />stiffen. but her voice sounded shapeless and soft, lost<lb />in the husk of the bayou. oMind you be careful,? she<lb />said, othat been my MamanTs when she be a girl.?<lb /><lb />The lady put a white-gloved hand on LucieTs back,<lb />pursed her perfectly painted lips, oThere, Miss<lb />Ricaneau. James will be careful, don't fear.?<lb /><lb />The man put the wheel on the back of the pick-up,<lb />next to LucieTs table, her old spindle bed. Everything<lb />Lucie owned was where that truck idled impatiently,<lb />kicking the dirt into clouds.<lb /><lb />My chest tightened, | couldn't tell if in anger or fear. I<lb />wanted to run back to the house, fetch Grandmama,<lb />who if she did not like her would not allow Aunt Lucie<lb />to be robbed. but I knew they would leave before ITd<lb />get back. My very name pressed me to service, my<lb />obligation to Papa. I had to do something to save her; |<lb /><lb />had to do something myself.<lb /><lb />I stepped from the shadows into the sunlight,<lb />smoothed down the pinafore as much as I could, and<lb />borrowed GrandmamaTs haughtiest tone. oBeg pardon,<lb />Madame. Those things belong to Tante Lucie. Please<lb /><lb />have your boy put them back.?<lb /><lb />The man laughed without trying to hide it; the white<lb />lady smiled at me. oArenTt you a sweet little girl? Miss<lb />Ricaneau, you have a guest. WhatTs your name??<lb /><lb />The humiliation of that laughter, that smile, bound my<lb />tongue. I was acutely conscious of my dirty bare feet,<lb />the willful crimped tendrils of brown escaping my<lb />braid, the rouge I had stolen from my MamanTs memor-<lb />ial to smear inexpertly on my overgenerous lips. The<lb />black man in his store-bought clothes was pitying me.<lb />The lady was waiting politely. All I could do was<lb /><lb />stretch to my full gawky height, hoping the mortified<lb />burn on my face would pass for righteous indignation.<lb /><lb />Finally Aunt Lucie spoke. oShelly Ducote she be,? she<lb />said. oI tend her when she be a baby. I used to look<lb /><lb />after her Papa.?<lb /><lb />The white woman looked surprised. oOh, Etienne<lb />DucoteTs little girl??<lb /><lb />Her recognition I took as my due"the town was my<lb />familyTs: in name if not ownership. I wasn't quite cer-<lb />tain the source of her wonder"my age, for Papa was<lb />old enough to my grandfather, or my demeanor, which<lb />my Grandmama called unrefined.<lb /><lb />The woman smiled again, patted Aunt LucieTs shoulder.<lb /><lb />oDon't worry, little Miss Ducote. We'll take goc xd care of<lb /><lb />Miss Ricaneau.? She started her way down the porch,<lb />stepping fastidiously onto the thick black dirt. I was<lb />astonished to see she wore nylons"in summer, a<lb />weekday. The extravagance more than her quality<lb />clothing spoke to me of big city. Even Grandmama,<lb />who dressed better than anyone else in Ducote, in the<lb />summertime only wore nylons to Mass. oRemember,<lb />Miss Ricaneau, we'll be back in an hour.?<lb /><lb />The black man handed her into the truck with a chival-<lb />ric respect that I envied her, before himself leaping into<lb />the back to ride with Aunt LucieTs things. The driver, a<lb />local boy, tipped his hat to us before he put the truck<lb />in reverse, pulled out into the dirt road that would take<lb /><lb />him from town.<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie was packing her pipe. She looked strange<lb />to me, older than ever, unreal. I resented that I had<lb />been embarrassed for and before her, but she seemed<lb />unaware ITd been humbled. I thought about leaving,<lb />returning to my swing and my fantasy, but Aunt Lucie<lb />speared me with her anomalous eyes. The familiarity<lb />of that brown and blue was comforting, and it<lb />strengthened my trembling legs to take me to the foot<lb />of the porch. I tried to cover my confusion with arro-<lb />gance, demanding what | feared she might otherwise<lb />not supply. oTante Lucie, who were those people?<lb /><lb />WhatTs going on??<lb /><lb />She held the match to the plug in the pipe and drew<lb />long, her face lit as red as her dress. Releasing a thick<lb />smog of her perique tobacco, she looked at me, the<lb />weak, pale eye fluttering, for a moment, and said,<lb /><lb />oBeen a while since you come, Marichelle. I took the<lb /><lb />notion you thought you outgrow me.?<lb /><lb />It was true, but her saying it blunt made me blush. |<lb />wondered if she was mocking me, mocking the<lb /><lb />lipstick, the flowers in my hair. I climbed up to the<lb />porch, looked in the glassless window to the barren<lb />interior of LucieTs house. It was sO clean"there was no<lb />dust at all on the wooden floor to show where the fur-<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb />5<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />6)<lb /><lb />niture was, only a slight discoloration from the lye she<lb />used for scrubbing. I took that emptiness personally, as<lb />though they were my belongings, my table and chairs,<lb />my pots and pans, turning black in the back of the<lb />truck. oWhat are you doing? Are you moving? Are you<lb />selling your things??<lb /><lb />oCurious little chatte.? Aunt LucieTs voice was full of<lb /><lb />patronizing affection. I looked at her, saw her smile,<lb />show the gums so dark they seemed blue, the sugar-<lb />cane stem of the pipe clenched between strong yellow<lb />teeth. oLet be, puss. I got a story for you. She been<lb />waiting a long time for you to come.?<lb /><lb />Even at that age, even under those circumstances, the<lb />promise of a story could make me feel eager. If only I<lb />could remember the stories she used to tell"<lb />Woodpecker, Grandfather Rattlesnake, Cunning Rabbit.<lb />So many hours I curled on her moss-filled mattress<lb />under the weight of a crimson comforter listening as<lb /><lb />Lucie meandered her way through a tale, piecing a new<lb /><lb />quilt together and smoking her pungent pipe. I would<lb />have written them down if ITd known how their details<lb />would flee me, how I would one day read childrenTs<lb />books to my own little girl with distaste that they had<lb />so littke meaning.<lb /><lb />| shook off the storyTs attraction, feeling too old, too<lb />grasped by the novelty of that empty house. oI donTt<lb />want a story, Tante Lucie,? I told her. oI want to know<lb />whatTs going on.?<lb /><lb />oI want to tell,? she said, obut you never attend.?<lb /><lb />She assuredly meant to bait me, but I was too resolute<lb />to be drawn into an argument I could not hope to win.<lb />I sat down next to her rocker, pulling my knees to my<lb />chest and the pinafore far enough down to cover them.<lb />I couldnTt quite cloak my impatience, even though the<lb />last thing I wanted was to start her moralizing"which<lb />would not only delay the story but guarantee that sheTd<lb />never get around to what I really wanted to know. She<lb />punished my impertinence with a painless pop of a<lb />fingertip on my forehead. oI save this one special for<lb />you to grow up.? She reproached me. oShe be the<lb />scariest story I know.?<lb /><lb />It wasnTt easy for me to sit still. My nails found a scab<lb />on my shin and started exploring it, my toes curled<lb />around the wood grain, but I held my eyes motionless<lb />until Aunt Lucie was satisfied, drew on the pipe and<lb />leaned back in her chair. She rocked to the rhythm of<lb />the cicadas, reaching for her story-telling voice, and I<lb />watched her gathering herself"her brown eye closed,<lb />nearly-blind blue as closed as it would.<lb /><lb />There was a comfort sitting there in the sunshine, feel-<lb />ing the sweat puddle at the back of my knees and<lb />watching the birds do their warrior dance in the<lb />cypress trees. A few women were working the sweet<lb />potato field"they were far out of sight, but I could<lb />hear the occasional screech of their children playing<lb />about. I used to play there myself when I was smaller,<lb />when Grandmama had one of her headaches or Lucie<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />was busy or Papa just wanted me near.<lb /><lb />Just as my impatience began settling out, Aunt Lucie<lb /><lb />started to speak. oThe story, she begin with a négresse<lb />in the bayou,? she said. oThat old woman live in a<lb />shack with the snakes and the gators and marsh<lb />rabbits. She have her two sons near an age. The older<lb />be white-skin, blue eyes like heaven, and him she<lb /><lb />call Ciel. The younger by twenty-two days be a black<lb />boy, eyes like the midnight, and for that reason she<lb />call him Minuit.?<lb /><lb />It was a story about human beings and already unique<lb />because of it; that engaged me at once. oHow did a<lb />black woman have a white son? Was he muldtre?T<lb /><lb />oNo, Marichelle, he be all white. DonTt worry ~bout how,<lb /><lb />he purely was. But listen now. Those two little boys,<lb />they be good friends as children, but when they grow<lb />up they go different ways and they leave their Maman<lb />alone. Ciel ~come a tiller of soil, make the LoTsiana yam<lb />like you Papa do. He live with the blancs and be like<lb /><lb />them; he be afraid of the dark. Minuit. him live with the<lb /><lb />negres and cannot come out in the light.<lb /><lb />oPeople be hungry. The last year, flood make things<lb /><lb />hard; the parish, she take all the food. People be poor.<lb />In an Oberlin store some folk see a négre boy stealing.<lb />They donTt like négres, because their papas tell them<lb /><lb />the négre make the white poor. So they do not send the<lb /><lb />child to jail, but they drag him to a field and they beat<lb />him until his blood spill out red on the ground.<lb /><lb />oThe négres decide to make even. They cover their faces<lb /><lb />in mud and go to the food store when it be close,<lb />when the blanc be counting his money, and they carry<lb />him to the same field. They beat him so bad until one<lb />of his eyes falls out, so bad they bust his ear. They<lb />leave him for dead, but the blancs come and save him<lb />before he can die.<lb /><lb />oI had seen animal eyes piled in a bucket in the barn,<lb /><lb />blank staring orbs without feeling or thought, but |<lb />couldnTt imagine a human one. Nor could I imagine a<lb />face without one"even LucieTs distant blue was some-<lb />thing. 1 pictured a hole through which brains might<lb /><lb />ooze, a black pirateTs patch holding them back. It was a<lb /><lb />gruesome image, that churned my breakfast in my<lb />stomach quite pleasantly, a sickness not unlike that |<lb />felt on the rides at the fair.<lb /><lb />oMinuit, he maybe be with them. He be angry, and<lb /><lb />he say things he know he should not. He be there<lb />when they bring in the Oberlin boy. The storekeeper,<lb />he say someone call out MinuitTs name. So when<lb /><lb />the blancs come for their vengeance, they come to<lb />take it from him.<lb /><lb />oEarly in the morning he flee them into the bayou. He<lb /><lb />knows what his Maman knows. He knows where the<lb />bayou will hide him, where the blancs will get lost do<lb />them go. He be young, Marichelle, only twice old as<lb />you are, more scareder than you ever be. He cry like a<lb />calf at the slaughter, no shame to him that him do"<lb /></p>
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        <p>sometime a man has to cry so the /oa can hear him and<lb />know that he needs their help.<lb /><lb />oWhat's a loa??<lb /><lb />She smiled. oA /oa be like an angel for the négre. They<lb />used to be gods, but now they be Catholic like we.?<lb /><lb />The only angels I knew of were white men in dresses<lb />with golden hair. My mother had a series of miscarriages<lb />before my birth, and there were so many pictures of<lb />angels around my bed that I considered myself some-<lb />thing of an expert. In light of what had happened to<lb />Maman, I secretly believed the angels should have been<lb />up around hers. I found the idea of black angels, these<lb />loa vaguely blasphemous and very intriguing. oDid the<lb />loa help him??<lb /><lb />oThey yes indeed did, for Papa Sun, he rise to midnoon<lb /><lb />and sink down again, all the while Minuit, he outrun<lb />them, hide now in the oak trees, now in the fishing<lb />shacks, now and again in the clear. Toward midnight he<lb />grow too sure in his craft and lose care, and then he be<lb /><lb />seen by two of the men.<lb /><lb />oOne more time he try to run. He want to run to his<lb /><lb />MamanTs house, but ~fore him can reach it, he know he<lb />be going to tire. It be close to his brotherTs plantation,<lb />and Minuit, he think he might shelter there. Just as he<lb />step his foot in the yard, they catch him"these bad<lb />men, they knock him down with a hit to his head.?<lb /><lb />I couldnTt imagine proper revenge for bursting an eye"<lb />the very effort gave me a horrified thrill that I was too<lb />young to be shamed by. The empty house, the woman,<lb />meant less to me. I turned towards Aunt Lucie and<lb />leaned my hands on the arm of her chair, stilling her<lb />rocking without half realizing what I did as I curled my<lb />feet under me and slid close. oWhat did they do??<lb /><lb />She looked at me for a time without answering, obvious-<lb />ly pleased that sheTd caught my attention. She took one<lb />of my hands in her leathery one, turned the palm<lb />upwards and traced her discolored nail over the lines.<lb /><lb />oBright the next sunrise, the old woman turn out"?<lb /><lb />oBut what did they do? I snatched my hand away, out-<lb /><lb />raged that the tale had been censored, that she still after<lb />all thought me young. She shook her head with a smile<lb />and continued.<lb /><lb />oBright she turn out. She had dreamed of a swarm of<lb /><lb />bees in a cotton field. She be a wise woman, a mambo,<lb />so she know the dream say somebody going to die.<lb />She spend the morning time casting for signs to learn<lb />who it be to be took from her, and at noontime the<lb />heavens go dark. It be Minuit, he is gone, and Minuit<lb />she must revenge.<lb /><lb />oMidnight she go to the graveyard where be buried her<lb /><lb />Maman and grandmama, where the old master left his<lb />slaves go when like a cockroach he suck from them all<lb />of their lives. She draw a ring of the coffee grounds on<lb />all sides of her, but not even the smell of the chicory can<lb />hide the stench of death. She be too old for the woman's<lb />blood, so she cut her thighs and smear that blood over<lb /><lb />her dugs. She drink from a bottle of whiskey, and, with<lb />the fire in her throat, the mambo, she sing, ~Atibd<lb />Legha, lTouvri bayé pou mwé Papa Legba louvri baye<lb />pou mwé pou mwé pasé<lb /><lb />Lo mT a touné, mT a salié loa-yo<lb /><lb />Vodou Legha. IT ouvri bayé pou mwé<lb /><lb />Lo mT a touné mT a remésyé loa-yo Abobo.T?<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie changed when she spoke the words, her<lb />voice sounded cultured, refined, unlike anything I had<lb />ever heard her say.<lb /><lb />The words were not French"they sounded almost<lb />familiar, but they escaped me, like the sense of a<lb />dream upon waking. oI donTt understand it.?<lb /><lb />oIt means ~Atibo Legba, open the door for me, let me<lb /><lb />come through. When I come back I will honor you.<lb />Voodoo Legba, open the door for me, and when |<lb />return I will thank you.?<lb /><lb />Oh, yes, I had heard about Voodoo. It was a delicious<lb />fear to encounter it in a story from someone who might<lb />actually know something more than could be con-<lb />tained in the whispered conjectures of children. I want-<lb />ed to interrupt again, ask about Legba, but Aunt LucieTs<lb />face was taking on the cast it had when the story was<lb />reaching its peak, and I was afraid to lose it and her,<lb />afraid to display my ignorance in case she decided this<lb />was yet one more thing I was not old enough to know.<lb /><lb />oSoon the mambo felt the /oad come into her, inside<lb /><lb />her very own flesh. The /oa ride men like they be<lb />horses. Many times before the mambo been the cheval<lb />of them gods. Legba drink her whiskey, smoke her<lb />tobacco, and give her permission to speak to the<lb />Baron Samedi.?<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie smiled. oOh, the Baron be a handsome<lb />man. He be the Joa of sorcery and necromancy, the<lb />magic binding the dead. He always be dressed for a<lb />funeral, in a top hat and tails, with white gloves. He<lb />carry a cane.<lb /><lb />oBut he be dangerous, too. Sometime the price that<lb /><lb />he ask of the mortals be more than a mortal can pay.<lb />Sometime the Baron, he play games and grant prayers<lb />in a way the priestess do not mean. Men ask for their<lb />loved ones come back without knowing the right<lb />words to say, and corps come to them to shatter<lb /><lb />their dreams.<lb /><lb />oThis mambo, though, she know the rules. She dance<lb /><lb />the yanvalou for him"not like the dances your old<lb />grandmamaTs friends do at her parties, Marichelle. It be<lb />the dance of the serpent, the dance of Dambhalla, and<lb />Baron Samedi be pleased. She beg him to show her the<lb />grave of her son, to let her bring her son back to her<lb />through her revenge. Baron Samedi, he name his price,<lb />and the mambo, she promise it, and he tell her in<lb />twenty-four hours her MinuitTs soul would come home.<lb /><lb />oThe next night, the mambo, she sit on a raft in the<lb /><lb />bayou, again with the circle of coffee, waiting for her<lb />youngest child. So soon as the moon rose, his spirit<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 7<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />&amp;<lb /><lb />on eed eek SS tS, ~~ 16 POPE nse<lb /><lb />come. He be a bird in an oak tree, singing with the<lb />voice of a man. He say:<lb /><lb />oThree times died I, in bone, blood and hide<lb /><lb />By briar, by wire, by pyre.T<lb /><lb />oThe mambo, she paint the sign of the bird on her belly<lb /><lb />and changed to a sparrow, she go with him to fly<lb />through the night. He take her over the ocean of sleep,<lb />and there the mambo, she see through his eyes: the<lb />world upside down. Minuit fly to and froT through the<lb />night; the thick thorny sticks, they pushing him like a<lb />ball in a little childTs game. His body be bruised and<lb />battered. His brittle bones break. He look at the fore-<lb />man and die.<lb /><lb />oThe next day the foreman, he be down in the fields. He<lb /><lb />watch the négres plant the slips of the yams, and the<lb />mambo, she watch from the shade of the house.<lb />Hoodoo, she be not evil, Marichelle, she be judgment.<lb />She stand for order, respect for the night. This mambo,<lb />she know the way of it, and she make a wanga, a<lb />charm, meant to kill. It be in a black bag, not the red<lb />color for safety. The foremanTs little son, he be playing<lb />by the side of the field with the workerTs children.<lb /><lb />and the mambo, she call him to her. She give the<lb /><lb />little white boy the wanga for his Papa, and she hide<lb />herself in with the other négresses to see what be<lb />happening next.<lb /><lb />oThe little boy take the bag to his Papa right away. The<lb /><lb />foreman, he be afraid. He make the Cross over his<lb />breast. He ask the child to show him where be the<lb />woman who give it. The littke boy, he do not know her<lb />with all the other dark faces. The négresses know, but<lb />nobody deliver her from them. The foreman, he order<lb />them tell him what the wanga, the mojo, will do, but<lb />they can not, so he start to hit all of them even though<lb />the days when such could be done be long gone. The<lb />women flee to their men in the field, and the foreman.<lb />he leave for the church, to beg the priest save him from<lb />the harm that must come.<lb /><lb />oWhen the foreman be finished, the mambo wait for the<lb /><lb />SpiritTs return.?<lb /><lb />oThe foreman was dead? What happened? What did<lb /><lb />it do??<lb /><lb />oEveryone know how Minuit died. The négres all hate<lb /><lb />the white man, and no man, he would not hold him a<lb />man if he watch his woman be beat by a blanc without<lb />killing him. One of the field hands, he do it.?<lb /><lb />oThat wasnTt magic!?<lb /><lb />oNot magic? Then what made the foreman forget himself<lb /><lb />so, hit the black women at all? Never mind. Marichelle.<lb />Listen.<lb /><lb />oThat night the mambo, she have to wait long. It be past<lb /><lb />midnight when there came walking into the waters of<lb />the bayou a wild hog. The mambo, she hear from him<lb />come the manTs voice:<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />oTwo times died I, in blood and in hide<lb /><lb />By wire, by pyre.<lb />When two more are killed<lb /><lb />My revenge be fulfilled.T<lb /><lb />oShe paint the sign of the hog on her belly. Like a sow,<lb /><lb />she join him. He take her to the forest of the night, and<lb />with his eyes she see: the swelling of skin. Tight wires<lb />wrapped tight ~round his knuckles and toes, twisted<lb />with metal until his skin crack and come open, bones<lb />come apart and fingertips be taken off, passed around<lb />to the gathering crowd like souvenirs, by the stock-<lb />breeder, who laugh when Minuit die.?<lb /><lb />oA crowd, Tante Lucie?!?<lb /><lb />oOui, Marichelle. They cut off his fingers at three joints<lb /><lb />and his toes, cut off his ears and his nose and pass all<lb />the pieces around.?<lb /><lb />I had seen them at the fair, once, at a cockfight, watch-<lb />ing and screaming and yelling for blood. I'd been little.<lb />and I cried until Papa saw I was scared and took me<lb />out. He told me the roosters did not feel like we do.<lb />but I knew better"ITd seen animals weep for their<lb />lives in the barn. Poor Papa tried to entice me with<lb />cotton candy, but I wouldnTt be comforted until we<lb />went home, where my Grandmama told him that he<lb />was a fool, he should have covered my eyes.<lb /><lb />He should have covered his own, for it was their<lb />light that had frightened me most of all. He was excited<lb />like them.<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie touched my face, and I looked at her. It was<lb />a moment of silent communication, a communion like<lb />those we had had when I was young, and I wanted to<lb />climb on the chair with her the way that I used to. But<lb />she was too old, and I was too old, and times were not<lb />what they were. oI hope the breeder dies,? I said.<lb /><lb />oAnd so do the mambo. But how can she kill him? The<lb /><lb />foreman be Creole, superstitious, he know the mojo<lb />and he be smart enough to be scared. The stock-breed-<lb />er, he be a soulless white man, not even Catholic but<lb />Baptist. She can not send her revenge to him from far<lb />away. So she go to the Cajuns and trade for help from<lb />them with some powders to heal.<lb /><lb />oThe next day the mambo, she stand at the edge of the<lb /><lb />stock-breederTs house, listening to him at work in his<lb />barn. The pigs, they squeal as he lift them by their hind<lb />legs, scream as he bring his knife to their bellies. and<lb />she hear their wet guts hit the ground. She go to him<lb />and stand until he look at her, a long time: he would<lb />not stop what he do to see what an old négresse want.<lb />At last he wipe his big bloody palms on his big rubber<lb /><lb />apron. oWell, Auntie?T he ask.?<lb /><lb />oI'm hungryT, she tell him, ~Be there any part of the pig I<lb /><lb />can eat?T<lb /><lb />ooWhy should I give meat to a nigger, when I can sell it<lb /><lb />for money to whites?T<lb /></p>
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        <p>Y TRIE Fy : " ee ee ee<lb /><lb />, PAY<lb /><lb />if i<lb /><lb />o~T donTt got no money,T the mambo, she say, ~My son, he<lb /><lb />be dead. I live in the bayou alone. But I have what be<lb />here in this basket, and I give it to you for the hock of a<lb />SOW.T<lb /><lb />She open her basket. She have in there three dark<lb />brown bottles of beer.<lb /><lb />oAll men love to drink, Marichelle; the négres and blancs<lb /><lb />and even the /oa, they all of them love to get drunk.<lb />The blancs had a law then that say they could not, and<lb />beer be worth enough money that the mambo, she<lb />could have bought her a whole hog for what she car-<lb />ried there. The greedy butcher, he want it, but he make<lb />believe he do not.<lb /><lb />oI have my own beer, Auntie,T he say. ~It be not worth a<lb /><lb />hock to me. I give you a boarTs head instead.T<lb /><lb />oHe think he will cheat her, and worse, for he keep the<lb /><lb />tongue and leave her only the brains and the lips, and<lb />he take from her all of the beer.<lb /><lb />oThe mambo, she make to leave but she wait and watch<lb /><lb />the breeder man from out by the stables. By lunch time,<lb />he work up a sweat, and he take the beer with him out-<lb />side to eat under a tree. The stockman, he eat and he<lb />drink, he eat and he drink, enough to feed maybe three<lb />men, and by the time he be finished with lunch, he be<lb />already closing his eyes.?<lb /><lb />oDid she poison him??<lb /><lb />oNo, chatte, she give him something to put him to sleep.<lb /><lb />While he be sleeping she lead two horses out of the sta-<lb />ble and harness them, like they be going to market, but<lb />instead of the wagon, she hook them to the sleeping<lb />manTs legs.<lb /><lb />~Then the mambo, she tie a sharp wire around his neck,<lb /><lb />just enough to cut into his skin, almost enough to wake<lb />him, and she fix the wire hard to the tree. She hit one<lb /><lb />she get back her own that he cheated"she cut out and<lb />take home his tongue.<lb /><lb />oShe have a souvenir, like the ones he had cut from<lb />her son.?<lb /><lb />The revenge seemed as bad as the deed that inspired it,<lb />but it was just, and it satisfied me. I imagined her, old<lb />black woman of the swamp, with the manTs tongue and<lb />the boarTs head, feeding both to the gators, perhaps.<lb /><lb />oThat night, the mambo, she wait for her son. She sit<lb /><lb />near her little house, look out in the bayou. She do not<lb />know what animal will speak. Hours and hours she<lb />wait, while the moon, she track over the sky and start<lb />to wake Papa Sun. Then, as the day begin dawning, she<lb />hear a voice hissing high in the trees:<lb /><lb />oOne time I be slain, in flame, in pain.<lb /><lb />Another must die before I come alive.T<lb /><lb />oAt first the mambo, she do not know where the voice<lb /><lb />be coming from, but she look around and finally see<lb />him"a snake hanging in the moss on the trees. She<lb />paint the sign of the snake on her belly and, change to<lb />a serpent, she join him. They slither together through<lb />the sands of dream, and through his eyes she see: the<lb />crackling fire. All around him blanc women and<lb />children be playing, laughing at him and his screams.<lb />The sun be high in the morning, daylight, everyone<lb />gather to watch.<lb /><lb />oThe stumps of his legs be on fire. He hear the crackling<lb />fat of his own self and try to roll out of the flame.<lb />Minuit, he be too young to go easy to death; life, she<lb />too strong in him, and he fight the pain a long time. At<lb />last, when the bone smile through his burnt flesh, and<lb />the fire, he be going to sleep, the crowd make way for<lb />the blanc devil who be killing him, the man with the<lb />gasoline can. Minuit, he look in his brother's face.?<lb /><lb />In my world, in my youth, there was no room for<lb />betrayal, blood stood by blood, and I had not guessed<lb />at such goings on. The image of the burning man was<lb />less acrid to me than the thought that a brother would<lb />do it, would listen to his own fleshTs screams and stand<lb />by. My heart pounded so hard at the images she had<lb />evoked that I could no longer hear the cicadas. The<lb />illusory smell of burnt flesh was so strong that I had to<lb />touch my own legs to be sure.<lb /><lb />Aunt LucieTs voice dropped, oAt that very time the<lb />mambo, she go to her sonTs house, go to see Ciel, who<lb />call himself by a blanc name. She go in through the ser-<lb />vantTs doors and wait until somebody who know her go<lb />to fetch Ciel from his bed.<lb /><lb />: . ~ ocVy7y TQ , . + or 2?? &gt; ask $ .<lb />of the horses on his flank with the hogTs head, and both Where do your brother be?T she ask him<lb /><lb />of them start in to run.? oHow do I know? Do he live with me?T<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie smiled. oBy the time the horses be caught, oWhere be your brother?T she say.<lb />the breeder, his body be out of the parish, but his head<lb />be still fixed to the tree. The mambo, she pour the rest<lb />of the beer on the ground for the /oa, and she take the<lb /><lb />o~Ask the négres and buckra men, the white trash, he<lb /><lb />belong with. I have no brother no more.T<lb />boarTs head he give her home. Before she leave him, oAny of the servants, even the stock-breeder, would<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />rare<lb /><lb />10<lb /><lb />GREE ION<lb /><lb />ae al . 24 Sache TS K-Ci Sh<lb /><lb />have been smart enough to be scared of the mambo<lb />then. The /oa be on her. ~Your brotherTs soul from<lb />the animals call to me,T she say. Ciel only say he<lb />donTt know.<lb /><lb />oShe been going to slay him but she could not. She had<lb /><lb />make a mojo like for the foreman before she know<lb />who he be. The love of a mother for her son, which<lb />never do die, hold her back. She do not give it to him.<lb />Instead, she warn him, ~Leave your fields, my son.<lb />The seed that you plant will not nourish you. For lack<lb />you will hunger and die.T But Ciel, he pay no mind<lb /><lb />to her words.?<lb /><lb />Her voice trailed off. She looked in my eyes a long<lb />moment and then looked away, into the afternoon sky.<lb />I waited, in an agony of suspense, my muscles taut<lb />throughout my back and my belly, my mouth gone<lb />horribly dry. I needed to know what would happen,<lb />the penalty for betraying your kin. I was certain it must<lb /><lb />be severe.<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie said idly, oDo you think it be almost<lb />an hour??<lb /><lb />[ could not bear it. oWhat happened??<lb /><lb />She sucked at her long-emptied pipe. oNothing. The<lb />story, she be over. She through.?<lb /><lb />oTante Lucie, it canTt be. What happened to Ciel??<lb /><lb />She looked at me, brown eye moist, blue eye seeming<lb />ever more distant. oWhat do you think happen to Ciel??<lb /><lb />oT donTt know. Tante Lucie. He starved??<lb /><lb />oThat mambo, she be just an old woman. Why do what<lb /><lb />she say have that power??<lb /><lb />oTante Lucie, tell me!?<lb /><lb />She touched my face again, brushed the hair from my<lb />eyes and tucked one of the camellias more securely<lb />into its place. oYou going to be such a beauty,<lb />Marichelle,? she said, almost regretfully, it seemed.<lb /><lb />oYou grandmama and me, we too old to raise a young<lb /><lb />woman like you. You needed you Maman. You need<lb />stories of romance not blood.?<lb /><lb />o'Tante Lucie!?<lb /><lb />She withdrew her hand, unsmiling. oI tell you, since<lb />you have to know.? She leaned towards me, her face<lb />drawing cadaverously tight, at once back into the<lb />mood of her story, making my flesh creep with the<lb />quiet tone in her voice. oCiel do not believe what the<lb />mambo, she say. He do not starve, and he go on plant-<lb />ing his seed and bringing in what fruit do grow. But<lb />the mambo, she speak to him truly"the seed that he<lb />plant be poison; she sit in his belly like lead, and as<lb />days pass he swell like a woman with child. He say<lb />something move in him, biting and biting his belly,<lb />until he begin to go mad. Nobody, not the blanc doc-<lb />tor, not CielTs wife, can help him. One day Ciel, he take<lb />an ax and cut open his belly and die. Through the slit<lb />that he make come the serpent the /oa had send.?<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />I felt my stomach wrench again, clearly pictured the<lb />gore of the slit stomach, the bloody snake crawling<lb />out. oDid Minuit come back??<lb /><lb />oNon, Marichelle. It was not by her actions that Ciel die.<lb /><lb />The mambo, she have to give the Baron Samedi his<lb />price, but Minuit, he do not live again.?<lb /><lb />oTante Lucie, what was the price??<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie bent so her face was inches from mine,<lb />blue and brown eyes to my chestnut ones. Her whisper<lb />was barely audible. oThe Baron, he want to see in the<lb />living world all the time, Marichelle, and so he take the<lb />power of her eye.? She raised one yellowed claw to the<lb />watery pale eye. oMaybe he watching you now.?<lb /><lb />She actually frightened me. Aunt Lucie seemed diaboli-<lb />cal at that moment; I could easily believe Lucifer<lb />looked through that cerulean portal at me, and my<lb />hands of their own volition formed the sign of the<lb />Cross over my budding breast.<lb /><lb />oSilly chatte, | change your first diaper, do you believe I<lb /><lb />would hurt you?? Aunt Lucie laughed. oShe be only a<lb />tale like the rest. Beside, the Baron Samedi donTt care<lb />about little white girls, he only have time for the dead.?<lb /><lb />Embarrassed, I looked down at the scab I'd been pick-<lb />ing, saw I'd released a trickle of blood. I started gather-<lb />ing it with my finger, pressing it back towards the<lb />wound. oI wasnTt scared. Just pretending.?<lb /><lb />oMm, Marichelle.? She captured my hand and cleaned<lb /><lb />the blood with her palm. Her fingers were gentle but<lb />quivering, maybe a newly formed palsy of age"or<lb />something more. oSometime it be good to be scared.<lb />But no mind, I have a present for you.?<lb /><lb />She released my hand, her own now tainted red, and<lb />reached into the bosom of her T-shirt, drew out a small<lb />scarlet bag on a string. She handed it to me and I held<lb />it to my nose, checking to see if it was a cache of dried<lb />herbs like those which made my MamanTs stored dress-<lb />es unbearably sweet, but all I could smell was Aunt<lb />Lucie. oI carry her for a long time,? Aunt Lucie said.<lb /><lb />oNow it be your turn to take her. Remember: if you<lb /><lb />donTt want to know, let it be.?<lb /><lb />The truck came back for Aunt Lucie before I had even<lb />lowered the bag, and there was no time for questions<lb />or answers. The furniture was gone; the black man<lb />picked Aunt Lucie up like a child and set her into the<lb />cab between the driver and the white woman, and<lb />Aunt Lucie was waving good-bye.<lb /><lb />I didnTt know where sheTd gone or if sheTd be back,<lb />but I felt unbearably grieved"for the story, for the<lb />poignancy of the present, for the fact that beneath that<lb />white womanTs eyes I'd let her go without even kissing<lb />good-bye. I wasnTt quite sure what my feeling was,<lb />what raised the lump in my throat, squeezed like a<lb />hand on my heart. I stood on the porch and I watched<lb />as the truck drove away, watched until the rich dirt had<lb />settled and the insects resumed their loud song, until I<lb /></p>
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          <lb />felt I could move without jarring the tears from my<lb /><lb />Then I went into her house, to her bedroom, and<lb />atching the after-<lb /><lb />sat in the corner under the window, wa<lb />I must have been hours sit-<lb />listening to the cicadas<lb /><lb />eyes.<lb /><lb />noon shadows grow long.<lb />ting there, dry eyed, unmoving,<lb /><lb />come closer, to my gf% andmotherTs querulous voice call<lb /><lb />PapaTs big boots on the stairs.<lb /><lb />my name, finally to my<lb /><lb />his eyes capturing<lb /><lb />I came out to the porch to see him,<lb />oHave<lb /><lb />the last rays of sunlight, soft brown like my own.<lb />you been here all along, chére? Didn't you hear<lb />Grandmama call??<lb /><lb />He smelled of the bayou, of alcohol. His hands were<lb /><lb />flecked brown with fish blood.<lb /><lb />As I looked at him I started to cry. His face crumpled in<lb />a mirror to mine; he scooped me up in his arms and sat<lb />me down on his lap in Aunt Luc ieTs rocker,<lb />thing left of her, hugging me tight to his chest.<lb /><lb />Shelly, whatTs wrong? WhatTs the mé utter? Don't cry.<lb /><lb />the ny<lb />, little<lb /><lb />inst mine. He<lb /><lb />I felt the scruff of his unshaven cheek agalt<lb /><lb />was warm and solid; I loved him so dearly it hurt.<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie had gone, but |<lb /><lb />I thought I would ask where<lb />oTante Lucie<lb /><lb />My own words were<lb />It scared me.?<lb /><lb />didnTt. a surprise.<lb /><lb />told me a story.<lb />oWhat! Which one, Shelly? Jacka-my-lantern/ The ghouls??<lb /><lb />» got killed. He was burned.?<lb /><lb />oNo, Papa. About a man wh«<lb /><lb />I felt his chest heave against mine; his sigh warmed the<lb />back of my neck, and | knew then that it was ttue"<lb /><lb />maybe not in the way Aunt Lucie told it, but that peo-<lb />ple did die, were killed.<lb /><lb />Papa turned me to look at him, brushed my hair out of<lb /><lb />oThere was a party,<lb /><lb />my eyes. oante Lucie is not well, Shelly.? He absently<lb />wiped at the color on my mouth with his wpa<lb /><lb />They'll take<lb /><lb />oSheTs<lb />gone to a new hospital for old Negroes<lb />good care of her there. She should sa known better<lb />than to tell so tender a heart such a thing. Not since<lb />before you were born has anyone been lynched in the<lb />Bayou State"maybe not anywhere in America. People,<lb />they used to be cruel.?<lb /><lb />Papa. People came to watch. They<lb /><lb />took parts of him home.?<lb /><lb />He flinched and started rocking me, holding my head<lb />to his shoulder, making little sounds like a woman<lb />Marichelle; no more.?<lb /><lb />would comfort a child. oNo more,<lb /><lb />Papa.<lb /><lb />I grew up that night; I was no longer his little girl.<lb />cried forever, then a fever kept me in bed for a ache<lb />By the time I was better the gris-gris was gone. In less<lb />than a month we went to Crowley to visit Aunt LucieTs<lb />nursing home, but when we got there we found she<lb />had died. By the next summer, she and her story had<lb />been tucked into a remote part of my mind with my<lb />childhood. Shortly thereafter her house was destroyed;<lb /><lb />everything Lucie was gone.<lb />So I believed.<lb /><lb />But I found the gris-gris today, here, in my MamanTs<lb />chest, with my dolls and my scribblings, her delicately<lb />embroidered baby and maternity clothes, the things he<lb />has secretly treasured the most. All these precious<lb />things, left to me to pack to bring to Atlanta now that<lb /><lb />he. like Aunt Lucie, is too old to be on his own.<lb /><lb />From the window ITm looking down at him by my<lb />swing with my Rosalie, my little girl. She adores him as<lb />| did when I was her age; in her eyes he can do noth-<lb />ing wrong. But even though she is now also his chere, |<lb />have always known I remain first in his heart.<lb /><lb />Inside the scarlet skin of the gris-gris is another, a black<lb />one. It is sewn tightly closed, and still the curious cat, I<lb />want to open it, finally see. 1 remember what Aunt<lb /><lb />Lucie told me, oIf you donTt want to know, let it be.? I<lb /><lb />didnTt understand at the time.<lb /><lb />Aunt Lucie, I long ago swallowed the serpent you<lb />gave me; his name was Suspicion; but I ignored the<lb />enawings within. I won't ask why you fed me this,<lb /><lb />for I know. I am my PapaTs seed, pl: inted against your<lb />What I donTt, what I canTt, understand is my<lb />s"leaving this bag with his treasures,<lb /><lb />advice.<lb />PapaTs part in thi<lb />where it would finally have to be found.<lb /><lb />He put the ax into my hand.<lb /></p>
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          <lb />12<lb /><lb />RRA eee<lb /><lb />Aslee<lb /><lb />PROSE<lb /><lb />SY ANGELA - BGACOR BED<lb /><lb />1H £OCE Fis B41 T- FLEE CRABS<lb />on the beach. They hunker down and scuttle backwards<lb />and sideways, throw sand at each other, deliberately<lb />stomp each otherTs small feet. Innocent children,<lb />untended. Unaware that anyone else is awake.<lb /><lb />I know them. The elder, sheTs about six, she is my<lb />brother Peter in miniature"dark hair, fair skin. No one<lb />would doubt she is related to me. If I picked her up and<lb />carried her off from here, if I could somehow wipe clear<lb />her memories, sheTd pass for my child. I could save her,<lb />if itTs not already too late.<lb /><lb />Wipe clear her memories. As if she needs my help to do<lb />that. Funny how even I speak of it as if it were impossi-<lb />ble, a difficult thing to do.<lb /><lb />My Pic ~n Pay plastic sandals slap against the planks as<lb />[ come nearer. These litthe walkways have a distinct<lb />sound"the sand rubs like sugar on linoleum; thereTs<lb />the forced unevenness of water-warped boards. And<lb />the smell! ItTs so rich. Salt and space. ItTs hard to<lb />explain what space smells like to someone who<lb />doesnTt know. When you've lived in close places,<lb />crowded places, thereTs always a smell of people: per-<lb />fumes and deodorants and diesel oil. Sometimes out<lb />here, when the windTs coming off of the water, you<lb />can close your eyes and breathe in and believe youTre<lb />the only one in the world.<lb /><lb />I wish I was wearing my sweater. Not that itTs cold, but I<lb />am. ITm nervous and wishing that I hadnTt come.<lb /><lb />It's going to be a beautiful day. I know this; I can read<lb />the waves like a fisherman, judge by the glint of the sun.<lb />These little rows of over-priced houses line the beach<lb />like so many hopeful children watching the water. Will<lb />it be warm? Will it be worth what they paid? Wet bathing<lb />suits from yesterdayTs swimmers hang over wooden<lb />rails, flap in the early breeze. Like flags they speak of<lb />the people they stand for"in that house, a large<lb />woman with two little kids. In the other must be an old<lb />couple"fanny ruffle over her bathing suit bottom to<lb />hide a middle-aged spread. I look back at my own par-<lb />entsT deck. Little suits"yellow with blue stripes, Minnie<lb />Mouse. My motherTs chaise lounge, plastic bamboo and<lb />blue vinyl cushions, brushed clear of sand. My fatherTs<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />at ae al . Fo Sabie ED) Keeble Sha,<lb /><lb />SECOND<lb /><lb />PLACE<lb /><lb />Dp and Dreaming<lb /><lb />big rubber waders, his fishing pole. They havenTt been<lb /><lb />used in some time.<lb /><lb />I stood in the surf once, on a morning like this. I remem-<lb />ber that pole thrusting over the water. There were sand<lb />sharks, a million it seemed. Little ones, washing ashore.<lb />[ picked one up by the fin on his back and his belly; he<lb />didnTt move. He didnTt smell right, fake, like tuna fish<lb />out of a can. His skin felt as rough as if he really was<lb />made out of sand. I carried him into the house to show<lb />to my mother, but she was still sleeping.<lb /><lb />And dreaming. As good people should.<lb /><lb />[ treasure the memory. ItTs so rare that I get one<lb />that clear.<lb /><lb />oI know you.? ItTs one of the children, the older. Carly,<lb /><lb />the little blonde, shrinks away. Penny looks grave and<lb />somber, a serious little girl. Scrawny where Carly is<lb />plump. oDaddy has you in his wallet.?<lb /><lb />CarlyTs frankly curious now. Seems sheTs decided she<lb />knows who I am; she wants to know what ITm about. I<lb />know I look strange. My skirt is too long and too full; it<lb />ties my legs. ItTs an Indian print, and it clashes with my<lb />sleeveless green flannel shirt. My hairTs gotten longer,<lb />down past my shoulders, and itTs all uneven because I<lb />chew on the ends. I wish I'd thought to pick up one of<lb />those temporary tattoos; that would shore up my<lb />armor. This is not nearly enough to protect me from<lb />three-year-old eyes. They see things, they notice, and<lb />theyTre not afraid to make comments. The first time she<lb />met me, five years ago now, JenTs little Melissa said that<lb />[ looked like a man. Her father and grandmother<lb />shared these significant glances, like to say, oOut of the<lb />mouths of babes.?<lb /><lb />And into them.<lb /><lb />Damn. Unwanted thought. Hold my breath for a<lb />moment and count, and it leaves.<lb /><lb />oI know you, too,? I tell her. oYouTre Penny. I remember<lb /><lb />when you were born.?<lb /><lb />oMy name is Penelope,? she recites. oIf Daddy wanted me<lb /><lb />to be Penny, Penny would be my name.?<lb /></p>
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        <p>ILLUSTRATION PAULA CREECH<lb /><lb />2%<lb /><lb />Fa ahead<lb /><lb />| }<lb />"Ss<lb /><lb />. -<lb /><lb />- ae<lb /><lb />"TR<lb /><lb />wee LETT rs Ft ae ~""*<lb /><lb />REBEL NINI<lb /><lb />Y<lb /><lb />ere eenrerse vee dx MIRE 6 MME<lb /><lb />FOT<lb /><lb />R<lb /><lb />ls<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />14<lb /><lb />7) ar Pabaateee ie Sle ean ieee ess bit LOO<lb /><lb />The tyranny of parents"even my brother is doing it<lb />now. oYou look like a Penny to me. You were named<lb />after a girl in a TV show your daddy and I used to<lb />watch. You know it? She was pretty, like you.?<lb /><lb />oDid it have a spaceship??<lb /><lb />I smile, but before I can answer, Carly bursts into<lb />motion. oMa! Ma!? SheTs running and yelling down the<lb />beach, fit to wake the sleeping tourists. ITm trying to tell<lb />her to hush; there are penalties for waking them. They<lb />might not come back. And my parents would lose on<lb />the income. But then I see itTs my mother, jogging<lb />towards us at the waterTs edge where the sand is firm.<lb /><lb />oAunt Alice is here!?<lb /><lb />Mother slows. Her approach is guarded, but she has to<lb />approach. SheTd leave them unwatched by the ocean,<lb />but she won't leave these girls here with me.<lb /><lb />ItTs painful looking at her, all the more because she<lb />doesnTt seem to have changed. She looks powerful,<lb />more fit than Ill ever be. The leotard under her running<lb />shorts outlines these incredible calves; they bulge like<lb />my fatherTs biceps did when I was a girl. ItTs hard to<lb />believe sheTs fifty, she looks so young. Her hairTs grown,<lb />too"past her shoulders. I wish she would take off<lb />those Ray Bans, let me get a look at her eyes.<lb /><lb />She stops just before she reaches us. oAlice, what do<lb />you want??<lb /><lb />She knows how I hate that name. But she hates my<lb />perversion of it even more. When I was a teenager she<lb />seldom approved of my friends; she called me a magnet<lb />for trash. So in what I thought was a moment of<lb />brilliance, I decided to call myself Ellis"like the island.<lb />Immigrants. All that. She never got it, but I came to like<lb />what it stood for to me. Now most of my friends<lb /><lb />call me El.<lb /><lb />oHaven't you hurt us enough?? They are melodramatic<lb /><lb />lines, flatly delivered. ThatTs always been my motherTs<lb />problem"she knows the role, but she canTt quite con-<lb />vey it convincingly. SheTs got the sense to know we're<lb />better without an audience, though. ITm not very good at<lb />keeping to script. She turns to these two little girls and<lb />suggests they go play.<lb /><lb />oMa, can we swim? You're here.? Little one, Carly. When<lb /><lb />Mother nods, she screams like a gull, running up the<lb />wooden walk towards the deck. Strange, ITm already<lb />forgotten. You'd think meeting her only aunt for the<lb />first time in her life would count for a little. More slow-<lb />ly Penny follows behind her, age already weighing her<lb />down.<lb /><lb />Mother looks at me, tilts her head back and examines<lb />me the way she did when I was a child. I can almost<lb />hear her toting it up in her brain"chapped lips, split<lb />ends. No make-up. Still not taking care of myself. Still,<lb />she might guess, tending bar. And ITve lost weight again.<lb />Nothing outrageous, just decreased my skirt size an inch<lb />or three. oDo you still live with that girl??<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />Rae ee ol Ee : : 2 % _ i<lb /><lb />oNo, Mother. Jen and I, we broke up.?<lb /><lb />She smiles. Score one to mother. She turns and starts<lb />walking up towards the house. Expecting, of course,<lb />that I'll follow.<lb /><lb />oITm with another girl now.?<lb /><lb />ITm not, this thing with Jen is too fresh to consider it, but<lb />I donTt want her to think I gave in. She thinks that I am<lb />what I am to get back at them, although what she thinks<lb />I have to get back for is a mystery to me since sheTs<lb />always denied they did anything wrong. Very early in<lb />our relationship Jen and I had a fight, not so rare at the<lb />end, where she accused me of that very thing. She said<lb />it quiet and sad because she believed it, and for a little<lb />while I did too.<lb /><lb />| donTt want to think about Jen. It still makes me weepy,<lb />and for this I have got to be strong.<lb /><lb />oWhereTs Peter?? I ask her. oI see you've got the kids. Is it<lb /><lb />a good time, with /im in the hospital??<lb /><lb />I can see that she wonders who told me. She ought to<lb />know. ITve got aunts and uncles, cousins. One of my<lb />cousins is going to Duke, and he spends lots of time at<lb />the bar. He tips pretty good. And he doesnTt think ITm<lb />disgraceful. At least, not so disgraceful as to cost him the<lb />joy of sharing bad news.<lb /><lb />oYour fatherTs fine,? she says. oHe has to stay in bed<lb /><lb />for a few days, but with the medicine he sleeps a lot.<lb />The girls are good; theyTre quiet...? Not like me, she<lb />means, but I know better; I heard that little one. They<lb />havenTt broken her yet. Mother stops at the first step<lb />and sits down. oPeter and Stephanie went to a conven-<lb />tion in Atlanta. They didnTt know what else to do<lb /><lb />with the kids.?<lb /><lb />She says it disdainfully. What else to do with the kids:<lb />she has unusual ideas about that one, my mother. I<lb />remember my mother in my bedroom once, me about<lb />nine or ten. ItTs late, near my bedtime, as most of my<lb />memories are. ThereTs that lamp that I used to have"lit-<lb />tle stuffed dog skewered through by a pole and a light<lb />bulb. ItTs raining outside, so hard I canTt tell where the<lb />sound of the ocean begins. ThereTs her eyes, that clear<lb />blue. No expression at all on her face, never is, especial-<lb />ly not when sheTs angry. oDonTt have children, Alice. It<lb />isnTt fair, bringing them into this world. ItTs selfish.?<lb />Silent, but understood"J/ I had it to do over, neither of<lb /><lb />you would have been born.<lb /><lb />MotherTs watching me, or I think that sheTs watching<lb />me"with those smooth black mirrors itTs hard to be<lb />sure. So I sit down beside her, better than facing her, and<lb />| look back over the water. Picture pretty. Gentle white-<lb />caps, nothing a surfer would want. ItTs a wonderful<lb />morning for swimming. Penny and Carly are up on the<lb />deck changing clothes, unself-conscious, it seems. I rec-<lb />ognize the slurping sound of wet cloth sticking to flesh,<lb />the peculiar pop of a one-piece shoulder-strap being<lb /></p>
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          <lb />oYou know what ITm talkin<lb /><lb />adjusted. They must feel really bad on, those suits, but<lb />the lure of the water makes up for it. ve never forgotten<lb />that part.<lb /><lb />oAlice, you know what you have to do if you want to<lb /><lb />come home.?<lb /><lb />oIT donTt want to come home.?<lb /><lb />SheTs frowning. I donTt need to look over at her to know<lb />that. If she could do it extempore she would ask me<lb />why not or even, then, why I came. But she canTt, so she<lb />says what she thinks she should say. oDo you know how<lb />much youTve hurt your father and me? How you've<lb />embarrassed your brother? ITm not sure we Can ever for-<lb /><lb />give you.?<lb /><lb />I should be angry, but I donTt feel angry. I'm frightened.<lb />ITm sad. My hands are shaking as I reach into my p cket<lb />for a cigarette. Then I remember that since she doesnTt<lb /><lb />smoke I left the pack out in the Plymouth. Traitor. Why<lb /><lb />do I need to appease her now?<lb /><lb />oForgive me for what, Mom? For Jen? Or s« ymething else??<lb />oYou turned on us, Alice.?<lb /><lb />oTurned on you, Mom? With Jen? Or something else??<lb /><lb />9 about. ThereTs no reason<lb /><lb />oO<lb /><lb />you should pretend.?<lb /><lb />Lie, she means. ITm the familyTs liar. When I was four |<lb />saw Heidi, the year they preempted the game. My dad<lb />was upset enough to write a letter to the station manag-<lb />er, but thatTs not what I remember about it. | remember<lb />Klara. WasnTt she something? I remember when she<lb />dragged herself over the fields, the way her sheer<lb />willpower took her to her feet and reminded her that<lb />she could walk. I think of it now because weeks after I<lb />told everyone that I was her. She was my hero. I donTt<lb />remember it, but I take their word that hand over hand |<lb />dragged myself everywhere, through the living room,<lb />down the pier, over the beach. When I try to imagine<lb /><lb />JenTs little girl doing something like that it seems funny,<lb /><lb />but for some reason it embarrassed my mom. Made her<lb />mad, I guess, to think that her daughter would lie.<lb /><lb />Mad. HowTs that for a loaded word?<lb /><lb />oWhat are you laughing at??<lb /><lb />oI was just thinking of when I was little.?<lb /><lb />She touches me on the back of my head. oYou need a<lb />haircut,? she says.<lb /><lb />Short hair looks bad on me. It took me years to notice<lb />that. I remember me in first grade. Some kid in his<lb />snazzy blue uniform"funny kind of fanatical look in<lb />his eye, a recruiter in making. Would I like to join the<lb />Cub Scouts? Didn't I cry. My mother cut it that way, so<lb />short. And so sudden! Until I was five it was long"his<lb />little Rapunzel, my dad said. It got snarled, she said.<lb />Took too much time to brush out. So one night she cut<lb />it all off.<lb /><lb />oMother, do you remember when I was real littke and you<lb /><lb />found me one morning asleep with my eyes open? And<lb />you thought at first I was dead??<lb /><lb />oNo,? she says.<lb /><lb />oCome on, youTve got to. You scared everybody, you<lb /><lb />yelled so loud. DonTt you remember that??<lb /><lb />oYou probably dreamed it, Alice. You had so many bad<lb /><lb />dreams.?<lb /><lb />oNo, Mom. Forget it.? She obviously already has. Little<lb /><lb />hurricanes push past us. CarlyTs hand touches my shoul-<lb />der, steadies herself, as she and her sister run down the<lb />stairs to the beach. CarlyTs got the bikini"thereTs a<lb />mouse tail drawn on the rear. I think itTs meant to be<lb /><lb />cute.<lb /><lb />oAre you still seeing that doctor?? Mom asks me. oThat<lb /><lb />doctor who says its okay for you to be with a woman??<lb /><lb />The tickler, that I want to be with a woman. ItTs strange<lb />that it was for JenTs sake I went to the doctor. I was<lb />really afraid I was taking advantage of her. Maybe |<lb />didnTt love her, or maybe what I loved best about her<lb />was that she would hurt my parents, or just that she<lb />wasn't a man. It took me a long time to be comfortable<lb />enough with myself to realize it wasnTt about them.<lb />Even now it embarrasses me when it comes up in con-<lb />versation with people who donTt understand: oEl had<lb />problems with her old man.? Aha, their eyes say, that<lb />explains it. But it doesnTt. And I hate that they have to<lb />make ugly my feelings for the one person in my life<lb /><lb />who ever made me feel good.<lb /><lb />oYes, ITm still seeing that doctor. CanTt I have someone<lb /><lb />to listen??<lb /><lb />oI listened to you. I always listened to you.?<lb /><lb />oYou didnTt listen. Even when you read my diaries you<lb /><lb />didnTt listen. Everything was my imagination, a dream.<lb />Or I lied.?<lb /><lb />oHow can you say such a thing? I was a go« x1 mother.<lb /><lb />Look at your bré ther.?<lb /><lb />oYeah, look at him. He still drinking??<lb />oHe doesnTt drink.?<lb /><lb />oHe still screwing around on his wife??<lb /><lb />That hurts her, hurts me, that ugly word. When I say it |<lb />get an image of my father out in his garage with his drill,<lb />spinning and splintering wood. I think of Peter's wife<lb />Stephanie, sweet, stupid Stephanie. Sleep-walking.<lb />Never a clue. And Peter, now ITve betrayed him, drag-<lb />ging his sins to the light to drive home a point. He's<lb />weak but never unkind.<lb /><lb />oEveryone blames the mother,? she says. ItTs rote, without<lb /><lb />feeling. For a minute I almost broke through. oI gave<lb />birth to you, but ITm not responsible for your life.?<lb /><lb />What an ironic statement, it catches me off guard so that<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />een<lb /><lb />16<lb /><lb />CMRI S ee Sl tt een See In,<lb /><lb />I almost laugh. But thereTs truth enough there to stop<lb />me; sheTs right about blaming the mother. I used to.<lb />Maybe sometimes I still do. But this is different. And I<lb />donTt know how to make that fact clear.<lb /><lb />Penny and Carly bob like buoys in the water. They canTt<lb />be deeper than their waists, but theyTve mastered that<lb />kid-trick of kneeling, pretending itTs over their heads. |<lb />used to love to go out in the water, spending hours and<lb />hours facing out to the sea, making believe there was<lb />nobody else in the water but me.<lb /><lb />It wasnTt easy, with the summer trade. When I was older,<lb />a little alcohol in me, I'd brave the water in winter. One<lb />time, I must have been fifteen or so, I lost it"I donTt<lb />know exactly what, how"but one minute I was floating<lb />and fine and the next I was flailing and yelling, and it<lb />was like I didnTt remember I knew how to swim. Thank<lb />God my brother heard me. Thank God my mother didnTt.<lb /><lb />But then, she always slept very soundly.<lb /><lb />I lean forward, pick up a handful of sand. ThereTs one of<lb /><lb />those teeny little blue shells; fairy clams I always called<lb />them. Peter and I used to watch them burrow into the<lb />sand at the waterTs edge. I sort of imagined they had<lb />cities down there, just a little bit further than we could<lb />dig. The ones we saw were ambassadors, spies. Peter<lb />played along; he said they were vehicles"armored, like<lb />tanks. This oneTs been abandoned; itTs open and empty.<lb />I wonder if the kingdomTs still there.<lb /><lb />oWhy did you come, Alice? What do you want from me??<lb /><lb />oItTs a long ride here from Durham,? I tell her. oTook me<lb />five hours. I was thinking along the way"do you know,<lb /><lb />since ITve started seeing that doctor ITve spent about<lb />twenty grand? ItTs a good thing ITve got insurance.?<lb /><lb />oMoney,? she says, her voice hard and cold. ItTs a touchy<lb /><lb />subject with Mom, worse than sex. She was born poor.<lb />When we were little she used to drive us out to the<lb />boondocks, down around Salter Path, then up into<lb />Morehead and back streets. oThatTs where you'll live,?<lb />she'd tell Peter, oif you donTt make enough money.?<lb />Man, we didnTt want to live there. It was easy for me, I<lb />could get married like she did, but poor Peter. No won-<lb />der he drinks.<lb /><lb />oNot money,? I say. oITm not asking for money. I just want<lb /><lb />you to know itTs important.?<lb /><lb />oYou never could manage your money,? she says. oYouTd<lb /><lb />have made it through college if youTd saved something<lb />from your job at the store.?<lb /><lb />oI'd have made it through college if I hadnTt had a break-<lb /><lb />down. I was okay with the student loans, summer jobs.<lb />It wasnTt money, Mom. It isn't.?<lb /><lb />oThen what is it? What didnTt I give you? You had a roof;<lb /><lb />you had food... You lived on the beach. Do you know<lb />how much people pay to bring their kids to the beach?<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />But it was here for you. Everything, here for you.?<lb /><lb />Cook-outs in winter time. ThatTs a pleasure most kids<lb />never know, what itTs like to sit on the beach with the<lb />wind blowing cold and an open fire. Of course, the<lb />Parks and Recreation people donTt let you do that any-<lb />more. I understand you canTt even bring cans to the<lb />water, although to look around most people still do. ITm<lb />just beginning to remember that kind of thing"my<lb />father roasting hot dogs. And laughing.<lb /><lb />What's wrong with this picture? ThatTs been my question,<lb />you know"the big one. All my life, what a beautiful<lb />picture. Sure, you look a little closer and you see my<lb />momTs kind of weird"sheTs got this obsession with<lb />money, and she seems sort of plastic except when sheTs<lb />mad, and when she gets mad, she gets very mad. But at<lb />the same time, she loved us. She made me all these cute<lb />little dresses with matching pants and scarves and little<lb />dancing bears on them, very feminine little things. She<lb />paid for me to learn ballet and horseback riding. She<lb />spent hours and hours down on the beach watching me<lb />learn how to swim. And she tucked me into bed each<lb />and every night, without fail, with a sweet smile to wish<lb />me goodnight. Every night, all soft and fuzzy in the light<lb />from the hallway, she whispered to me with that mean-<lb />ingless, well-rehearsed voice, oAsleep and dreaming,?<lb />and in my head I would preface it, as she meant me to,<lb /><lb />oAll good people are.?<lb /><lb />Good people. It took me a long time to finally<lb />fall asleep.<lb /><lb />It's taken me this long to start to wake up, to stop<lb />dreaming. So long to realize what was happening when<lb />I closed my eyes.<lb /><lb />oMom. Did you like me when I was a girl??<lb /><lb />oWhat kind of question is that? YouTre my daughter; I love<lb />you.?<lb /><lb />oLike Dad did??<lb /><lb />She flinches, flinches so hard that it scares me a moment;<lb />I think sheTs going to hit me. She knows. But, no. Mom<lb />never hit. Never knew. ItTs what I said, and the way that<lb />I said it: Dad. I thought I was under control, but some-<lb />thing escaped me, something must show.<lb /><lb />She stands. oPenelope, Carly. YouTre getting too deep.?<lb /><lb />They would like to pretend not to hear her, but they<lb />canTt, of course; they canTt. SheTs too big and too<lb />powerful. On a whim she could pull them out of the<lb />water completely, banish them to the quiet and dark of<lb />the house.<lb /><lb />Quiet, dark house. I was afraid of the dark, so afraid.<lb />The only light that I got in my room was thé light from<lb />the living room, filtering down the hall. I was the closest<lb />to the front"me, then Peter, then them. So long as they<lb />were up, watching Johnny, what have you, the light<lb />would be on. But it would get dark. And I tried so hard<lb /></p>
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          <lb />to capture that light with my eyes, that last moment,<lb />make an imprint of the room all around me. Like some-<lb />how that would make it easier to detect when move-<lb />ment came.<lb /><lb />ItTs funny, Jen and I fought about that one a lot. In our<lb />apartment in Raleigh there was a street light outside our<lb />window. All the time, not nightly but close enough, I'd<lb />wake up in the night and open the curtains, let that light<lb />in. The light didnTt bother Jen, but we lived on the<lb />ground floor, and she was afraid someone would see us,<lb />know what we were, and take Melissa away.<lb /><lb />So Penny and Carly come in just a little, enough. They<lb />keep an eye on my mother until her face relaxes, and<lb />then they get back to their play.<lb /><lb />oOkay, Mom? Got it together??<lb /><lb />She looks at me and walks past me, walks up the board-<lb />walk towards the deck. But ITm feeling stronger now,<lb />more in control. I get up and follow behind.<lb /><lb />oWhy are you running from me??<lb /><lb />She stops on the last few steps to the deck, turns around.<lb />oYou have an evil mind.?<lb /><lb />o All good people, Mom.?<lb /><lb />Her face blanks. She doesnTt get it.<lb /><lb />oHow ever did you manage to stay asleep??<lb /><lb />oWhat kind of child, what kind of person, would<lb /><lb />come here"?<lb /><lb />oNo, I'd like to know. See, sometimes I have insomnia.?<lb />o"knowing that your father is ill, and try to do some-<lb />thing like this??<lb /><lb />oAnd sometimes I have bad dreams.?<lb /><lb />oYou always had bad dreams, Alice. Even when you were<lb />a baby you cried at night.?<lb /><lb />oAnd whose fault I was crying??<lb /><lb />oYour father loved you. He sacrificed everything for you.<lb />You were his special child, his little girl. And you act<lb />like, you treat him like some kind of monster""<lb />oMom, I was speaking of you.?<lb /><lb />ThatTs a slip on her part. She assumed I meant him. I'm<lb />halfway to victory.<lb /><lb />o How can you be so unkind to your mother?? Be quiet,<lb />Jen. WeTre over. You canTt lecture me now. But she can.<lb />I still see her face, so serious. She looked a lot like<lb />Melissa. She was sitting down with one of her psycholo-<lb />gy books, doing her homework, half-listening to me rant<lb />and rave while I got dressed to go to the bar.<lb /><lb />~ Woman is the universal victim.?<lb /><lb />* Always blaming the mother,? Mom says now.<lb /><lb />I'm not blaming the mother. I blame her"her the per-<lb /><lb />son, not her the role, the institution, the toilet-training<lb />and socializing and all of that. Her, sleeping beauty. Her,<lb />sanctimonious bitch.<lb /><lb />oYou should pity your mother,? Jen said. It felt like she<lb /><lb />slapped me. She sat at the table, chewing the end of her<lb />pencil, looking at me over the rim of her glasses.<lb />Analyzing, accusing. In the old days she would have<lb />hugged me, held me. Tried to make me feel better. I<lb />yelled, much too loud, so loud that I woke Melissa, oPity<lb />her? Pity me!? oI donTt have to,? she said. oYou can do<lb />that for yourself?<lb /><lb />DonTt make me"lI cried every night"donTt make me<lb />go to sleep. All good people. But dreaming, the dreams.<lb />Good girls are quiet. They stay asleep. Mom, you were<lb />such a good girl.<lb /><lb />ITm trembling. ItTs cold. Mom is trembling, too.<lb /><lb />oWhat do you want from me??<lb />oI want you to admit there was something wrong.?<lb />oAlice, everyone has something wrong.?<lb /><lb />oThis isnTt about everyone. This is me. Me and you. My<lb /><lb />suffering, Mom. Mine.?<lb /><lb />She turns and takes the last few steps to the deck, stoops<lb />mindlessly to pick up the kidsT clothes from the floor.<lb />She smoothes them over the railing, weights them down<lb />with a conch. oYou should think about othersT suffering.<lb />It might make you appreciate what you had.?<lb /><lb />And now I, too, am on the deck; the sliding glass door is<lb />a time machine. ItTs scary. I have to turn away and look<lb />over the water, see the girls splashing close to the shore.<lb />The sunTs getting high. Where are the tourists? I want to<lb />yell out to come on then, itTs time to wake up.<lb /><lb />But my backTs to the door. I can feel it, and I must look<lb />at it, like I once stared at my bedroom door in the dark-<lb />ness, like I look to a needle piercing my flesh because it<lb />hurts much too badly when you look away.<lb /><lb />The last time I was here that door was my path to<lb />escape. For some reason I chose it over the front, chose<lb />to walk out on the beach. Into the sunset. Twenty-two, |<lb />was. And it came from the phone call"anonymous call<lb />to my dad. oDo you know about your little girl?? That<lb />shed some light in the darkness. Of course they had<lb />known about Jen, but only about her. Who would have<lb />thought, no less with a married woman? I can only imag-<lb />ine the ideas he had in his mind as he stood screaming<lb />behind me that I was a freak and a whore, flung my<lb />clothes out to scatter over the deck.<lb /><lb />Twined with Jen in her bedroom, her husband at sea, |<lb />couldnTt choose between crying and laughing. | felt<lb />ashamed, even more I felt free, but I wasnTt. Even<lb />though she left her husband, took an apartment with<lb />me, Jen crouched in that closet through all of our five<lb />years together. So thereTs me, standing out in the open,<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Rete en ER<lb /><lb />o<lb /><lb />IS LITERARY<lb /><lb />a F + Garhi FS Red ipy Shug<lb /><lb />as far as sheTd let me, and thinking, oThe things that we<lb />do for the people we love.? With no one to blame but<lb />ourselves if it hurts. oDo you love me El? Really love me?T<lb />Then I have to keep quiet, I know.<lb /><lb />But I won't, and I couldnTt. I got too loud, Jen, and you<lb />started to change. But I just couldnTt keep dreaming. I<lb />won't stay asleep anymore.<lb /><lb />So I turn and face her, face the deck and the time<lb />machine. It strikes me how shabby everything looks<lb />from up here. Did the wood used to be rotten around<lb />the door? There are boards peeling loose in the corner.<lb />And look at Mom. I didnTt notice those wrinkles around<lb />her mouth in the glare of the sun. Not smile lines, sure-<lb />ly, but there. And deepening.<lb /><lb />SheTs frightened. SheTs frightened of me.<lb /><lb />oStop squirming!? she said. Not even a towel on my<lb /><lb />shoulders, the scissors flash next to my eyes. It gets<lb />down the neck of my nightgown, next to my skin, and it<lb />itches. As much as the fear of the scissors, that makes<lb />me scream. My bedroom is dark: itTs past midnight; the<lb />light is the light from the hall. SheTs plastic; that face, itTs<lb />unmoving. No anger. No feeling at all. My hair falls in<lb />black clumps on my bedspread. My father looks ready<lb />to cry.<lb /><lb />SheTs frightened. SheTs frightened of me.<lb /><lb />oMom, you donTt want me coming back home.?<lb /><lb />SheTs startled. ITve slipped the script once again. SheTs<lb />backed up to the doorway, standing against it, caressing<lb />the glass with her hand. oNot until youTve changed,? she<lb />says. oItTs not natural, what you do.?<lb /><lb />oNot good, Mom? Not what good people do?? I hear the<lb /><lb />anger; I hear the threat in my voice.<lb /><lb />You shouldn't be mad at your mother; she was a victim<lb />like you.? Self-conscious Jen. Guilty Jen. Do unto others,<lb />I hear what you mean: donTt hate her for her failings, in<lb />case Melissa might also hate me. oYou're projecting. You<lb />identify with your mother. Your anger at her inaction is<lb />anger you feel at yourself.? So I should ally with her the<lb />way she allied with me. I should hope in the future the<lb />people that I betray are similarly understanding.<lb /><lb />She slides the door open, steps back. The house hisses,<lb />air conditioning spills out on the deck.<lb /><lb />The time machine is open. SheTs retreating into the liv-<lb />ing room, and ITm stepping into it, feeling my terror<lb />begin. I can see it"chartreuse flowered sofa bed frayed<lb />at the bottom where PeterTs toy soldiers would hide;<lb />bronze-footed coffee table, photographs covered with<lb />glass, our little hand prints frozen forever in plaster; and<lb />the clock on the cabinet, that treacherous, villainous<lb />clock. Six oTclock, seven and bath time with him<lb />through the half-open door.<lb /><lb />Mother stands still in the hallway; ITm counting and<lb />shaking my head. ItTs not there. The sofa is white, over-<lb /><lb />AND ARTS<lb /><lb />stuffed, strewn with pillows. The table is gone. No hand<lb />prints, theyTre portraits now"glossed-over photos by<lb />Olan Mills. Penny, dark-eyed in her motherTs lap;<lb />StephanieTs eyes are half-closed. Carly and Peter. Peter<lb />holds Carly before him; he hides. She laughs. ThereTs a<lb />sheepish regret to his grin.<lb /><lb />Mother is frozen. I look at her, past her, look down the<lb />hallway that leads to my own little box. She backs<lb />away as I near her, as if she thinks that ITm going to<lb />attack, but she matters less for the moment. ItTs time<lb />now to open my eyes.<lb /><lb />Here, the bedroom is different. Bunk beds, no less, for<lb />these two little girls of their son, forgotten outside. |<lb />walk to the window and look out, to the water, see<lb />them both playing close to the shore. Alive and unin-<lb />jured. Hopefully too sheltered to realize that protection<lb />is at best an occasional thing. Out on the beach Miss<lb />Ruffled Rear-End stands with a coffee cup, smiling up<lb />at the sun.<lb /><lb />Please let her protect them. I canTt, not now. When I<lb />leave here I'll call my brother. I'll make sure that he<lb />understands.<lb /><lb />But how can I? I canTt understand it myself. ThereTs no<lb />smell, no sight, nothing in here to bring back the little<lb />girl Alice. ItTs as if all the feelings, the pain, that I felt in<lb />this room never were, like a dream. But sheTs here; sheTs<lb />still dreaming. Darkness shrouded my memories all<lb />these years. I didnTt understand the darkness or fear. I<lb />couldnTt figure out my motherTs anger. I didnTt under-<lb />stand that she hated my father. And me.<lb /><lb />oYou knew, Mom.?<lb /><lb />Dreaming: my mother at breakfast, my orange juice<lb />spewed over the table and dripping down onto the<lb />floor. Her hand on my shoulder; sheTs shaking me, back<lb />and forth, so hard that she topples my chair. What is she<lb />saying? I canTt quite remember"something. My home-<lb />work and school.<lb /><lb />I hear her panic, voice quivers. oPlease, Alice. I donTt<lb />want to hear.?<lb /><lb />Penny stoops down to a face full of water, stands up.<lb />She looks so open and free.<lb /><lb />oYou didnTt then, either. You already knew.?<lb /><lb />Dreaming: that sickly sweet smile. ITm crying, snot rop-<lb />ing down from my nose. ITm four, maybe five. SheTs<lb />soothing me. oJust a nightmare.? Through the slits in my<lb />closet I see him, I think. HeTs holding his hand to his lips<lb />as it moments ago had held mine. WhereTs Daddy? The<lb />question that never got answered. The question that<lb />never got asked.<lb /><lb />oYour mother as victim"? She sold me out, Jen. And I<lb /><lb />know, donTt even begin, my father abused me, not her.<lb />But how could she let it go on?<lb /><lb />Her hands on my shoulder, heavy and needing. SheTs<lb /></p>
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          <lb />crying, my mom. ITve never heard of her crying before,<lb />so I turn to look. Her Ray Bans are still on. ItTs incredi-<lb />ble. Who would believe?<lb /><lb />In the hallway beyond her, my fatherTs here.<lb /><lb />Guess they already let him come home.<lb /><lb />o Alice,? he says, all dizzy and dazed.<lb /><lb />Sure, I should have known it. oHeTs sleeping,? she said,<lb />and oThey're quiet.? Why would it matter that the chil-<lb />dren were quiet unless he was sleeping at home?<lb /><lb />o Alice.? He says it again.<lb /><lb />My, but heTs weathered. And old. Did five years change<lb />him so much? His skin doesnTt look like it fits anymore,<lb />like it stretched in the wash, and he didnTt have anything<lb />else to put on. I could tear him, I think, with my fingers.<lb />This isnTt the man of my memories. That man was pow-<lb />erful, strong.<lb /><lb />I look back at my mother. I take her Ray Bans in my<lb />hands, and I take them off, pretty gentle and slow. SheTs<lb />still sobbing, my father more or less out of focus over<lb />her shoulder. I donTt care if heTs angry or sad.<lb /><lb />oGet out,? he says. Mad, then. He seems hurt that he isn't<lb /><lb />the focal point of my attention. I wouldnTt have come if<lb />IT'd known, but now that ITm here I find that he just<lb />doesnTt matter. HeTs history. Already dead. My doctor<lb />would say ITm avoiding and maybe I am, but today he<lb />isnTt important. Today I am here for her.<lb /><lb />This woman. She was the beast of my childhood. She<lb />was the one that I trusted, I needed, the one who never<lb />would see. The one that I need to see, even now. We<lb />can be each otherTs salvation. Give me permission, and |<lb />will forgive you. Let me let go of the pain.<lb /><lb />Those eyes, blue, clear. TheyTre focused and dry.<lb /><lb />oGet out, or ITll call the police.?<lb /><lb />He staggers; medication, Mom said. I donTt care. oGo<lb />back to sleep.?<lb /><lb />Because she is the one that ITm waking. I drop the Ray<lb />Bans to the floor, take her face, still sticky from her<lb />morning run, and kiss her soft on her cheek.<lb /><lb />Taste the salt of her sweat and the ocean, but never the<lb />salt of her tears. Her delusions are sealing her eyes.<lb /><lb />I stabbed her, I know. Stabbed her deeply. These<lb />sounds coming out of her throat are alarms. She may<lb />wake; she may not. In some sense, .I am freed by her<lb />pain. In itself it proves she believes. In truth I expect<lb />no more.<lb /><lb />But then comes my validation, in the form of a feeble<lb />excuse. oIt wasnTt my fault; it was him.?<lb /><lb />My father looks like his heart will fail him again any time.<lb />He looks at my mother, bleakly. My motherTs not looking<lb />at him. She will, I imagine. I'd have to hear a more heav-<lb />enly voice than JenTs before I'd believe this a permanent<lb /><lb />change. I'll never know what brought this from her.<lb />Maybe itTs having me here, in this bedroom, him here.<lb />What pictures does she see when she closes her eyes?<lb />What nightmares when she dreams?<lb /><lb />Now my father is looking at me"naked guilt, naked<lb />need. ItTs out in the open; his accomplice has turned. He<lb />expects more, I think, center stage, but heTs not the star<lb />of the show. ItTs my mother, my broken mother. She<lb />stands in the midst of her shattered delusions of every-<lb />thing: him, her and me.<lb /><lb />The roles are reversing. HeTs leaving, almost running<lb />down the hall to his bedroom, the way she so often left<lb />me. She plays little Alice; sheTs bleeding. She begs some-<lb />thing ITve never seen.<lb /><lb />Mercy. Forgiveness. Not me, it was him. Never me. Can<lb />she be excused?<lb /><lb />Not by paying so little. Not by me.<lb /><lb />She was never his victim; she helped him. Silent, she<lb />might as well have held me down.<lb /><lb />And ITm leaving.<lb /><lb />Out into the living room. ItTs darker inside than out; the<lb />open door glows and mimics itself in a square patch of<lb />light on the ground.<lb /><lb />oMore than once,? she says.<lb /><lb />I'm not stopping. Out on the deck and ITm taking the<lb />stairs from it to the boardwalk two at a time. No sign of<lb />Miss Ruffled Rear-End. The kids are still playing alone.<lb /><lb />oMore than once I found you with your eyes open in the<lb /><lb />morning. I found you that way all the time.? SheTs fol-<lb />lowed me out. I almost expect to see clothes flying into<lb />the wind, my meager possessions flung after me once<lb />again. She stops on the porch, and her voice grows more<lb />steady, that tattle-tale quiver is gone. oI did what I could<lb />to keep you away from him.?<lb /><lb />But not oto keep him from you.? I have to look. So I turn,<lb />and I see her standing there, waiting. SheTs curiously<lb />regal, all things considered. She could almost be wearing<lb />a crown.<lb /><lb />«But, Alice, there was nowhere for me to go, no one to<lb /><lb />help. What did you want me to do??<lb />Gee, Mom. You might have woken up.<lb /><lb />I donTt say it out loud. I donTt need to. ItTs heard, and itTs<lb />understood. And ITm leaving. Not angry, so much any-<lb />more. It isnTt easy, I guess, to stay mad.<lb /><lb />Because we all have our prices. Jen sold me out for<lb />Melissa. In his own way my father abandoned my mom.<lb />And Mother: the ultimate broker. Even me, to keep Jen<lb />and my mom, I sold myself. Forgot what I knew had<lb />happened.<lb /><lb />Everyone can be bought, or bribed, to stay sleeping. All<lb />these good people can. Someone should tell them what<lb />price they must pay for the dream.<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb />19<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />nn aii ke tet el eee<lb /><lb />me al id . Fela t Wesel Sas<lb /><lb />PROSE<lb /><lb />Man and<lb /><lb />ELCHEHABI<lb /><lb />A<lb /><lb />BY JOSEPH<lb /><lb />Being master of all you survey is the most fascinating<lb />part of maintaining a miniature world...<lb /><lb />"The New Tropical Fish Handbook<lb /><lb />Harold was scrutinizing the small plastic bottles of fish<lb />food when Mrs. DeVane said hello to him. At first he<lb />pretended not to hear. But she came closer to him,<lb />called his name a second time and touched his shoul-<lb />der. He bit the corner of his bottom lip and turned<lb />around to face her, something heavy weighing down<lb />his stomach.<lb /><lb />As she talked, he stared at his cracked leather boots.<lb />His sweaty hands were stuffed into his black corduroy<lb />pants, and like spiders they writhed in his pockets and<lb />pinched him. Occasionally he looked down at her, into<lb />her brown eyes, because he knew it was the polite<lb />thing to do when someone was speaking to you. He<lb />tried to make sense of the words popping out of her<lb />bright red-painted lips, but his brain was going all<lb />screwy. He could actually feel the cogs and sprockets<lb />grinding and smoking inside his skull. Certain words<lb />would register in his mind, snap into place like jigsaw<lb />puzzle pieces, but others would not fit, no matter how<lb /><lb />hard he pushed and pushed.<lb /><lb />Harold. Grass. Jungle. Grass. Overgrown. Grass.<lb />Please. Cut. Money. Pay. Please. Grass. Cut, cut.<lb />Tomorrow.<lb /><lb />Harold nodded dimly, loose strands of black-silver hair<lb />falling into his face. He bit on the edge of his lip hard<lb />enough to draw blood. The taste was salty.<lb /><lb />oOkay,? he said. Even that much took great effort. His<lb /><lb />tongue felt as if it were stuck to the roof of his mouth<lb />with peanut butter. He swallowed hard, then: oYou"<lb />you can count on me.?<lb /><lb />Mrs. DeVane thanked him with a smile that made her<lb />lips do odd things at the comers. She pushed the shop-<lb />ping cart down the aisle. One of the wheels was loose<lb /><lb />and squeaked.<lb /><lb />Harold shrugged, focused his thoughts again on the<lb />small plastic bottles of fish food that were on the metal<lb />rack before him. One of his hands, strong and thick-<lb />fingered, crawled out of his pocket, and the other did<lb />the same but a litthe more slowly. Together they<lb />reached for a bottle of Big Fish Fish Food.<lb /><lb />RAs: AND ABTS<lb /><lb />THIRD<lb /><lb />PLACE<lb /><lb />ie ea vad of BU<lb /><lb />Someone slapped him on the back.<lb /><lb />oWhat's up, Aquaman?? Raymond asked. He was tall<lb /><lb />and bony and his arms seemed to hang too far below<lb />his waist. Behind Raymond stood Billy. A comic book<lb />was rolled up tight in his fist. Both of them were wear-<lb />ing those big blue jackets with the white leather<lb />sleeves, the kind with the letters on them, the kind you<lb />get when you play football. The letter on their jackets<lb />was an A. Harold knew A was the first letter in the<lb />alphabet. He tried to meet eyes with Billy, but Billy<lb />wouldnTt look at him.<lb /><lb />oI ainTt done nothing wrong,? Harold said to Ray, but<lb /><lb />he was still trying to meet eyes with Billy. oMy<lb />fishes is hungry.? He leaned forward, faced Billy so<lb />his eyes wouldn't escape him. oHey, Billy, howTs your<lb /><lb />daddy doing??<lb /><lb />BillyTs lips hardly opened when he spoke. oJesus. HeTs<lb />dead, Harold. Been deader than dog shit for awhile.?<lb /><lb />He crossed his arms over his broad chest, grunted.<lb /><lb />oRetard,? he mumbled.<lb /><lb />HaroldTs eyes were watering. His hands crawled back<lb /><lb />into his pockets and did their crazy dance.<lb /><lb />oListen up,? Ray said. oWe seen you talking to Mrs.<lb /><lb />DeVane. What she want from you, anyhow??<lb /><lb />oITm gonna cut her glass. I mean grass. ITm gonna cut<lb /><lb />her grass.?<lb /><lb />Raymond bowed his head and laughed into his cupped<lb />hand, and BillyTs hard lips were bent into a jagged<lb />smile. Harold laughed with them.<lb /><lb />oGoddamn, you stupid man,? Ray said.<lb /><lb />oRetard,? Billy said. And they left.<lb /><lb />Harold bought the fish food, tucked it inside his book-<lb />pack, next to his Velcro wallet, and left the Wal-Mart.<lb />For two miles he walked down 701, the August heat<lb />sucking the sweat from his skin. He walked with his<lb />hands in his pockets, his head bent low and his broad<lb />shoulders hunched. He was thinking about Billy<lb />Seevers, about the word retard. He was also thinking<lb />about his fishes.<lb /><lb />He wanted to see his fish immediately, but he<lb /></p>
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        <p>stopped himself. He had a routine. He always kept to<lb />his routine.<lb /><lb />The house was big and silent and he moved through it<lb />carefully, like the way a crab scuttles on the sea floor,<lb />making sure the windows were shut and locked, that<lb />the blinds were sealed and that the front door was dou-<lb />ble-bolted. When this was done, he felt safe. He went<lb />into the kitchen and placed the small plastic bottle of<lb />fish food on the blue formica tabletop. While he ate<lb />Chef Boyardee cheese macaroni out of a can, he exam-<lb />ined the bottle, turning it between his callused thumb<lb />and forefinger, pausing every time he swallowed a<lb />mouthful of mushy macaroni.<lb /><lb />On the bottle were two zebra-striped angelfish. They<lb />were kissing. The printing on the bottle was tiny, the<lb />words crawling like bugs. His blue eyes studied them<lb />intently; his forehead wrinkled and his brows drew<lb /><lb />together. Harold could not read.<lb /><lb />After scooping the last bit of macaroni out of the can<lb />and licking the spoon clean, he made sure to straighten<lb />up and wash the spoon. It was very important to him<lb />that he wash the spoon.<lb /><lb />oAll done,? he said.<lb /><lb />None of the plants in the living room were real. The<lb />cacti were rubber and plastic, so were the two six foot<lb />palm trees. The roses in the straw basket on the coffee<lb />table were nylon and wire. A stuffed mallard duck,<lb />most of its shiny green head worn bare, was perched<lb />atop the twenty-four inch black and white TV. An old<lb />black man with no front teeth had given him the dead<lb />bird. It looked ancient and wise, its smoky-yellow glass<lb />eyes gazing at the two-foot by four-foot aquarium<lb /><lb />across the room.<lb /><lb />The tankTs air filter was making a deep-thr« vated hum, a<lb />sound that Harold associated with all that was good<lb />and perfect. Gus and Thelma, HaroldTs two celestial<lb />goldfish, were waiting patiently. They looked like fat<lb />chunks of orange candy. Their long, delicate fins<lb />reminded him of gossamer veils of spider web. And<lb />their eyes. They bulged out like bubbles about to burst,<lb />and were permanently screwed upward, always watch-<lb /><lb />ing heaven. Harold knew they were watching God.<lb /><lb />oCouldnTt make it to the fish shop today,? he told them.<lb /><lb />4 TRGM ETE ING<lb /><lb />E<lb /><lb />BE<lb /><lb />NINETY<lb /><lb />Y<lb />E<lb />re<lb />a<lb />&gt;<lb />ac<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATIONS<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />7 ar Pena a) eatin eb Nae<lb /><lb />arn al ae . : hb EWS Tha,<lb /><lb />oHad to go to the Wal-Mart. Mr. Bullard was sick and<lb /><lb />couldnTt gimme a ride.?<lb /><lb />Gently he held flakes of fish food between his thumb<lb />and forefinger just below the warm water's surface.<lb />Their little fish mouths nibbled at the food.<lb /><lb />He studied Thelma. She was ripe with eggs, would give<lb />birth in about a week. The babies would need brine<lb />shrimp. Dale had told him that.<lb /><lb />The first fish heTd had were guppies. He had bought<lb />them and a small globe-like bowl at a pet shop in<lb />Wilmington called CharleyTs. Charley was a fat man<lb />with beady eyes and a red beard. Men in red beards<lb />scared Harold. Mr. Jessup had a red beard.<lb /><lb />The guppies died in two days. He buried them in a<lb />cigar box, the fancy wooden kind with a hinged lid, in<lb />the backyard, with one of his fake roses.<lb /><lb />A couple of days later he found a new pet store, this<lb />one in Fayetteville. It was a pet store that sold only<lb />tropical fish.<lb /><lb />The kid who worked there was named Dale. The thing<lb />Harold remembered most about Dale was his ear. The<lb />left one was ragged. Dale said it was like that because<lb />when he was seven his neighborTs rottweiler mauled<lb />him. He said they put down the dog.<lb /><lb />HaroldTs daddy was put down too.<lb /><lb />Lit G@aaAaAgyY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />oItTs like this, Dude,<lb /><lb />Not because he did something bad, but because he was<lb /><lb />in a car accident and never woke up. The nurse with<lb />the hairy mole on the edge of her chin had used the<lb />word vegetable. He heard her.<lb /><lb />Harold told Dale about the man with the red beard and<lb />about the guppies.<lb /><lb />oSome pricks just shouldnTt be selling animals,? Dale<lb /><lb />said. oCome with me, Dude.?<lb /><lb />Dale lead him into the back, into a storage room. The<lb />fishy, salty smell was not as strong here. Cardboard<lb />boxes and empty crates were stacked shoulder-high<lb />against the lime green walls, and the floor was littered<lb />with styrofoam peanuts. In the center of the room,<lb />lying top-down on a paint-splattered sheet of canvas,<lb />was an aquarium.<lb /><lb />?<lb /><lb />Dale said. oIf my old man knew I<lb />was doing this, heTd kill me, really.? He set the tank<lb />upright. oItTs yours, man.? Dale put his hands on his<lb />skinny hips and wrinkled his nose. oDamn,? he said.<lb /><lb />oIt'd be kind of shitty of me to give you a tank without<lb /><lb />any fish.?<lb />Harold nodded. oFishes!?<lb /><lb />So, Dale gave him two celestial goldfish. He told him<lb />how to get the chlorine out of the water and how to<lb />heat it, how to hatch the brine shrimp and what kind of<lb />fish food was best to buy. He also gave Harold a book<lb />about tropical fish. The bookTs cover was green and tat-<lb /></p>
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          <lb />tered, and the pictures inside were black and white.<lb /><lb />That bookTs ancient, man,? Dale said, smiling. oWas<lb /><lb />one of the first books I read about raising tropical fish.?<lb /><lb />HaroldTs eyes going red and watery, his big hands<lb />scampering over the bookTs pages like hungry things<lb />that needed to be fed. oOh, thank you, Dale.?<lb /><lb />oCalm down, Dude,? Dale said and patted Harold's<lb />shoulder. He pushed his glasses up the slippery bridge<lb />of his nose. oRaising fish ainTt easy, Harold, but if<lb />you're good to them, they'll be good to you. Just feed<lb /><lb />~em and clean Tem, and they'll love you.?<lb /><lb />oTll feed Tem. I'll clean Tem.?<lb /><lb />Dale smiled. oYou all right man, you know that? You<lb />all right.?<lb /><lb />He liked Dale and he liked the book. At first he did not<lb />like that the bookTs pictures were not in color, but he<lb />had quickly come to appreciate them. Now c lors<lb />confused him. They tickled his eyes, made him feel<lb />funny. He knew that fish and God saw things in black<lb />and white. When you see things in black and white, he<lb />thought, you see them as they really are. Colors only<lb />get in the way.<lb /><lb />And names fascinated him. He always asked Dale<lb />about the names of the fish until he could name every<lb />fish in the store and he chanted them religiously. He<lb />liked the way they made his tongue feel.<lb /><lb />Cichlasoma. Hyphessobrycon. Semifacioulatus.<lb />Oliglepis.<lb /><lb />It was important to him that he knew he did not have<lb />just goldfish, but celestial goldfish; and that one of<lb />them was Gus and the other Thelma. When he knew<lb />the name of a fish or when he had named his own fish,<lb />he felt a kind of power that made his arms warm and<lb />the hair on his neck stand on end. He knew it was how<lb />God felt.<lb /><lb />oAll done.? he said to Gus and Thelma. oBedtime.?<lb /><lb />Before he went to bed he stopped by the closet next<lb />to the bathroom. The closet was filled with boxes and<lb />some of them contained old photographs of him, his<lb />mother and his father. He had sealed those boxes<lb />with duck tape, had never opened them after his<lb />daddy died. He did not want to look at them. They<lb />made him sad.<lb /><lb />He took out a heavy box, carried it to his room and set<lb />it on his bed. Inside were some of his old clothes that<lb />were too small for him. Wadded up tight in a plastic<lb />Wal-Mart shopping bag was a pair of jeans. He pressed<lb />them to his face and inhaled. After eight years the smell<lb />of urine was still there, lurking underneath the musty<lb />odor of mothballs. He wrapped the jeans in the bag,<lb />put it in the box and stuffed it back in his closet, next<lb />to his daddyTs old rubber hunting boots.<lb /><lb />They were not his jeans. They were Billy SeeverTs. One<lb />REBEL<lb /><lb />NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />RIS oe ayn ne Ne ebebeniihiietades corneal a Pemrereret sn tnd<lb /><lb />October afternoon Billy, who was eleven then, was<lb />playing football at the park with his friends. He had to<lb />go to the bathroom really bad, but he was having too<lb />much fun. Finally, he couldnTt wait anymore, and he<lb />went to pee in the bushes, but his zipper got stuck, he<lb />pissed his pants, and he cried.<lb /><lb />Harold heard him in the bushes. He took him home, let<lb />him wash off and gave him a pair of his old jeans to<lb />wear. Afterward, he made some hot cocoa and they<lb />played Pacman on the Atari.<lb /><lb />oYou ainTt gonna tell no one, are you?? Billy asked him.<lb />oNo I ainTt. YouTs my friend. I ainTt gonna tell no one.?<lb /><lb />But now HaroldTs hair was thinning at the crown and<lb />going the color of polished chrome at the edges, and<lb />Billy was big, bigger than he was, and he played<lb />football, dipped snuff and kissed girls. And he called<lb />him retard.<lb /><lb />It made Harold sad. All of it. Why did people change?<lb />Why did they forget when they got older? Maybe they<lb />couldn't help it. He bad to smell the sour piss on the<lb />jeans. It told him he was real, that Billy really had<lb />pissed his pants that day, that he and Billy really had<lb />drunk hot cocoa thick with marshmallow cream and<lb />played Pacman.<lb /><lb />He wondered what it would be like if you woke up<lb />and forgot your name. Would you still be you? Or what<lb />if you knew your name but everyone else had forgot-<lb />ten it? If a Hyphessobrycon had been called a<lb />Semifacioulatus, would it be a Semifacioulatus instead<lb />of Hyphessobrycon, or would it still be a<lb />Hyphessobrycon? The cogs and sprockets inside his<lb />skull were grinding and smoking again. He said the<lb />magic words" cichlasoma, hyphessobrycon, semifa-<lb />cioulatus, oliglepis"and soon he fell asleep, and had<lb />the dream about Mr. Jessup again.<lb /><lb />They took the pregnant dolphin that they caught and<lb />laid its guts open upon the hot red brick bench in front<lb />of the Wal-Mart. Mr. Jessup did the cutting.<lb /><lb />oThe best meatTs right here, right here, I tell you,? he<lb />said. The greasy razor danced in his hand and separat-<lb />ed the flesh from the blubber. When the half-dolphin,<lb />half-human baby hit the hot cement it made a wet<lb />thump and slid, kicking and screaming, half-entangled<lb />in its motherTs innards, several feet into a bicycle,.<lb /><lb />oWe gotta be quick,? Mr. Jessup said. oTake the razor.<lb />Quick. I need help, damn you!?<lb /><lb />But Harold could not take the razor. He stood<lb />there watching the baby thrash and squeal. oITm sorry,?<lb />he said.<lb /><lb />oRetard,? Mr. Jessup said, laying out slabs of the<lb />motherTs meat on the brick. He was neat about it, care-<lb />ful and brusque.<lb /><lb />24 LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />oITm sorry,? Harold said again.<lb /><lb />Mr. Jessup smacked him with a slippery backhand.<lb /><lb />oGrow up.?<lb /><lb />Harold made like he was going to pick up the baby.<lb />Several crying girls in flower print dresses and sandals<lb />were running toward them with small plastic cups of<lb />ice water.<lb /><lb />oNo!? Mr. Jessup said and he slashed the baby open. He<lb /><lb />looked at Harold, grinned. oAnd youTre gonna eat it,<lb />too, buddy-boy. ITll make sure of that.?<lb /><lb />The DeVanesT three-story house squatted in the middle<lb />of the sprawling, bright green ten acres like a white<lb />elephant. Harold navigated the rumbling John Deer<lb />lawn mower through the knee-high blades of grass,<lb />giving the sea of green form, a clean-cut geometry<lb />where there was none before.<lb /><lb />Mr. and Mrs. DeVane were on the balcony of the sec-<lb />ond floor, watching him from under a parasol and sip-<lb />ping lemonade from tall glasses. Mrs. DeVane, her<lb />wheat blond hair carelessly falling over her shoulders,<lb />was wearing white cotton shorts and a blouse decorat-<lb />ed with blue and red and yellow and green parakeets.<lb /><lb />Mr. DeVane was in a wheelchair. He was always in a<lb />wheelchair. Mrs. DeVane had told Harold that her thir-<lb />ty-nine-year-old husband had been a Lieutenant<lb />Platoon Leader during the Panama Invasion. She said<lb />his platoon had been digging in dumpsters for classi-<lb />fied documents that some soldiers had accidentally<lb />thrown away from a gutted building. Lieutenant<lb />DeVane didnTt know that another American platoon<lb />had booby-trapped one of the dumpsters with a dam-<lb />aged LAW. A LAW, Mrs. DeVane had explained to him,<lb />was a short-range rocket launcher. Lieutenant DeVane<lb />was twenty feet from the two young men who were<lb />rummaging through stacks of computer print-outs and<lb />maps when the rocket went off. The mouth of the<lb />dumpster erupted dragonfire and thunder, ripping out<lb />the teeth and tearing off the faces and limbs of the<lb />two young soldiers, leaving Mr. DeVane paralyzed,<lb />one-armed and deaf.<lb /><lb />[t was hard for Harold to look at Mr. DeVane directly.<lb />It was as if a child had gone over his face with a<lb />pizza cutter, and the only thing he would say was,<lb /><lb />oJeemeeflummung.? Jimmy Flemming was the name of<lb /><lb />one of the young men who had died. She told Harold<lb />the story of his accident whenever he came over to<lb />cut the grass.<lb /><lb />When he was finished, Harold, thick with the sweet<lb />smell of fresh-cut grass and sweat, parked the lawn<lb />mower in the garage and looked out at the ten acres. In<lb />his dreams, the DeVanesT jungle of grass had grown<lb />from the body of a slain giant, the same giant who had<lb />the magic goose that laid golden eggs. The giant was<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />long dead, but the same grass that had shot up from<lb />between his ribs and through his eye sockets was still<lb />growing thick as dog hair. The only thing that gave<lb />Harold more pleasure than feeding and caring for his<lb />fish, was the cutting of the DeVanesT grass. It made him<lb />feel like he was worth something.<lb /><lb />Harold was about to leave when Mrs. DeVane stopped<lb />him. She placed a crisp twenty-dollar bill in his hand,<lb />closed his fingers over it. The contact of skin against<lb />skin sent warm waves of electricity up his arm and<lb />down into his stomach. His knees almost buckled.<lb /><lb />oWhy donTt you have supper with us, Harold? I would<lb />appreciate it ever so much. Go wash up. WeTre having<lb />something special.?<lb /><lb />Her words didnTt sound jumbled. They were clear and<lb />sharp. Like broken glass.<lb /><lb />oPlease, Harold?? She moved closer to him, put her<lb />hand on his crotch, gently pressing. He could feel the<lb />warmth of her hand through his jeans. oPlease??<lb /><lb />gf 8S I<lb /><lb />She slid closer, against him, her breath warm on<lb /><lb />his cheek, the parakeets on her blouse exploding into<lb />color. oYou and me Harold,? she said, oweTre a<lb /><lb />lot alike.?<lb /><lb />Harold gulped down the spit that had been building in<lb />his mouth. Fat globs of sweat were rolling down his<lb />forehead and into his eyes, burning them. And his<lb />hands. They were balled into tight fists. They wanted<lb />to touch her, but they were afraid.<lb /><lb />oCome eat with us.? She turned away from him, sighing.<lb />oITm a lonely woman, Harold,? she said and went back<lb />inside.<lb /><lb />oLawd,? Harold whispered.<lb /><lb />She had touched him the way Mr. Jessup had, but her<lb />touch did not make him sick to his stomach like Mr.<lb />JessupTs. Mr. Jessup was the man who worked for the<lb />city and checked up on him. One day Mr. Jessup had<lb />promised to take him to the aquarium in Wilmington to<lb />see the dolphins. Instead he had taken him to a desert-<lb />ed parking lot behind Sears. When Mr. Jessup fondled<lb />his crotch through his Bermuda shorts, Harold<lb />knocked out three of his front teeth and crushed his<lb />cheekbone with a crowbar. Mr. Jessup had not been by<lb />to check up on him for three months now.<lb /><lb />oJeemeeflummung!?<lb /><lb />When Harold went into their house to use the<lb />bathroom, Mr. DeVane tried to knock him in the<lb />stomach with his only good arm. Except at his wife,<lb />Mr. DeVane swung at everyone who got close<lb />enough to him.<lb /><lb />Harold dodged the scarred fist and ducked into the<lb />bathroom. He bent over the pink washbasin and ran<lb /><lb />cold water, splashing it over his face, on his head and<lb />down his neck. When he was drying off, he saw the<lb />rainbow trout swimming in the bathtub.<lb /><lb />It was big, about a foot long. Its coloring tickled<lb /><lb />his eyes.<lb /><lb />He ran out of the bathroom.<lb /><lb />oMrs. DeVane. There a rainbow trout you gots in<lb /><lb />you tub!?<lb /><lb />oI know, sweet-pie. Mr. Bullard dropped that by today.<lb /><lb />ITm keeping it fresh, sugar. We gonna have it for<lb />supper.? She winked at him and went back to cutting<lb />her carrots.<lb /><lb />Harold ran back to the bathroom, and Mr. DeVane<lb />caught him square in the gut with his fist, knocking the<lb />air out of him.<lb /><lb />oJeemmeeflemmung!?<lb /><lb />Harold grunted, wobbled past him and made it to the<lb />safety of the bathroom. He slammed the door shut.<lb /><lb />oJemmeflemmung!? Mr. DeVane laughed. He was<lb /><lb />beating the door.<lb /><lb />HaroldTs arms and legs were shaking. He wasnTt going<lb />to let them eat the trout. It was wrong. He looked<lb />under the sink, found a big bucket. He put the slippery<lb />trout in it and bolted out of the bathroom.<lb /><lb />Mr. DeVane grabbed him, nails biting into his arm. The<lb />water in the bucket was sloshing everywhere.<lb /><lb />oJemmeflemmung!?<lb /><lb />oHyphessobrycon!? Harold screamed and kicked Mr.<lb /><lb />DeVaneTs wheelchair as hard as he could. Mr. DeVane<lb />crashed on his back like a defenseless crab. Harold ran<lb />out of the house and down the long driveway. He<lb />didnTt stop running until he got home.<lb /><lb />He kept the rainbow trout in his bathtub, huddled by it<lb />while eating a can of Chef Boyardee ravioli. He shoved<lb />the TV against the door, just in case the policemen and<lb />Mr. and Mrs. DeVane tried to bust in.<lb /><lb />But they didnTt.<lb /><lb />At night he made his way to Snake Creek, the rainbow<lb />trout in the bucket. He jogged down deserted dirt<lb />roads, passed ramshackle clapboard houses and little<lb />black children on bicycles. An old black woman with a<lb />face like a shriveled prune asked him what he had in<lb />the bucket. He didnTt tell her. Maybe she was working<lb />for the police.<lb /><lb />He kissed the rainbow trout and named it Maria. Maria<lb />was his motherTs name. He knew that, because his<lb />daddy had told him so. Pale moonlight made the water<lb />shiver and he watched Maria dart upstream past a<lb />bend, and then she was gone.<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>PROSE/EDITORST.CHOICE<lb /><lb />wOmesticity<lb /><lb />oF £20O0N WW. MIiCKtas<lb /><lb />oWhat time is it?? oHoney, just because two people have a different sexual<lb />orientation than we do, doesnTt mean they donTt have<lb />similar lives. Why donTt we just try to stick to neutral<lb />oAren't you going to get dressed? We told them to be here _ conversation? You'll be less likely to blurt out anything<lb /><lb />oSix-thirty.?<lb /><lb />at seven.? embarrassing that way!?<lb /><lb />oYou know it only takes me a minute to get ready. Okay, oBut thatTs just what I mean! We canTt talk to them like we<lb />okay. I'll hop in the shower now.? would any other couple.?<lb /><lb />oItd be nice just to relax for ten minutes before they get oI was joking. Though, I do sometimes enjoy that bright<lb />here, donTt you think?? crimson you turn when youTve embarrassed yourself.<lb /><lb />Honey, you're not good at playing the pussyfoot game.<lb />You're too honest. I washed my new jeans last night, are<lb />oI know, I know. ITm still a little stressed. This is kind of they in the drawer? Oh, thanks. No, you donTt like to<lb />unusual, for us.? hurt other people, and it bothers you to think youTve<lb /><lb />oRelax. TheyTre very nice people. It'll be a fun evening.?<lb /><lb />eee BE 7 somehow, unintentionally, been rude to anyone. ThatTs<lb />TheyTre an average couple, just like you and me. ' Sa aes<lb />one of the reasons I love you. But I seriously think you'll<lb /><lb />oNot quite like you and me.? like these two. And theyTve been looking forward to<lb />P ~i ae meeting you.?<lb /><lb />DonTt hold that against them. Towel? 5 3<lb />. me oHave you ever met the spouse??<lb />oHere, in the basket. Well, you know what I mean. WeTve<lb /><lb />never spent a whole evening, in our home, with anyone "_ oNo, but ITve seen their picture on ScottTs desk. Nice look-<lb />different than us.? ing. And same name as yours"Chris.?<lb />oYes, we have lots of times.? oHa! Well. Good bi-gender name. I know you think ITm<lb /><lb />saad ' ie silly, but I'd hate to have them think weTre doing this just<lb />Single people, yes. But never couples. It feels different.<lb />to be trend setters. I really do want to meet them.<lb />oThe only thing different about them is their sexual pref- Especially since ScottTs the best office manager youTve<lb />erence. WeTre out of shampoo!? had in a long time. So just what kind of neutral topics<lb /><lb />ies we ~ were you thinking of raising??<lb />oLook under the counter. That herbal stuff you like. But ) 5 5<lb /><lb />isnTt that enough of a difference? DonTt you think that oI was joking. ScottTs pretty open. I think you'll find he<lb /><lb />makes them different from us? I mean, weTre all human pretty much says whatever's on his mind. Like you. Wait<lb />beings and God help me should someone call me a a minute. Did I just say ~just like youT? Could it be we all<lb />bigot or something.? have something in common? Could we maybe be about<lb /><lb />Perey i eae to make some new friends??<lb />You've always been open to intellectual progress.<lb /><lb />oWhat?? oCould we maybe be less heavy on the sarcasm tonight??<lb />i ; a oHereTs how I think the evening, which starts now in<lb />I said you've always been a good sport! é :<lb />ten minutes"<lb />oYes! Well, even so, our /ifestyles are different. When .<lb />2 . ye aie on oWhoops. Close the door to the guest room, ITve got my<lb />our regular friends come over, itTs so much easier to x ;<lb />, epee ee studentsT papers strewn all around.<lb />relate to what is going on in their lives. We all have<lb /><lb />similar experiences.? oHereTs how I think it will go. They will come in. We will<lb /><lb />26 LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />"_ &gt; "<lb />~ : rae ecmapasecuersie g Pa re ee ?"? o26 - "<lb />al rash ape decennial a a eee natal a an : - * - ,<lb /></p>
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          <lb />pass around the introductions. We will get them a drink.<lb />We will sit and talk and laugh. Scott will tell a few funny<lb />_ ries about me at the office. I will tell a few about him.<lb />You and Chris will learn that you have a lot in common,<lb />Scott will be interested in your immigrant heritage, you<lb />will tell an anecdote about one of your students, and we<lb />will all sit down to a good dinner. Good drink, good<lb />conversation, good dinner, good people. That's all any-<lb />one could expect.?<lb /><lb />oThink so??<lb />oKnow so.?<lb /><lb />oTk a , : ,<lb />know you're right. Guess ITm a little nervous about<lb />the unknown.?<lb /><lb />a c 4 y re<lb />know you're not nervous about what other pec yple<lb />will say.?<lb /><lb />o5 ¢ 1 oee<lb />: ! No, ITve never really cared what other people<lb />ought. ITve usually found that, most of the time, they're<lb />not thinking.?<lb /><lb />Ready to have a good time??<lb /><lb />oYes " T i<lb />es. I guess, really, ITm worried that they might not like<lb />. I guess we must be pretty different for them.<lb />Different, but familiar.?<lb />oy : a ; i ?<lb />ou know, this is pretty brave for them to do.<lb />" Very,?<lb />a at ? . .<lb />O letTs get this straight: No one comes to my home and<lb />has a bad evening, got it??<lb />One kiss, before they get here??<lb /><lb />hereTs the doorbell! One kiss now, one promised for<lb />ater.?<lb /><lb />(hanks for having them over.?<lb />Honey, would you relax? You act like itTs a big deal!?<lb /><lb />oa S rear ?"? . P : ~ ;<lb />swear, there must be a history of split personality in<lb />your family. Now remember, theyTre just an average,<lb /><lb />normal, straight couple.?<lb /><lb />oWho've probably never seen a gay couple before. Any<lb />bids for neutral conversation, honey? Too late! Scott! Hi.<lb />ITm Chris. Good to meet you. Hi Christine, ITve heard a<lb />lot about you, real glad to finally see you. Come on in,<lb /><lb />make yourselves at home.?<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION TOM KIM<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 27<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>no SS : aa al ed . Pe DART REDE NS . ae Ber PI - - _" 2 - "<lb /><lb />" e28:8 ee eas oP oe eee es ok nee<lb /><lb />PROSE/EDITORST CHOICE<lb /><lb />The DPadies; Who .sunch<lb /><lb />ANGELA RAPER<lb /><lb />WHEN DELIA STEPPED OUT OF THE forward to it with a knotted mixture of joy and appre-<lb />glaring sunlight of early June and into the airy coolness hension. She and Fuller hadnTt planned on having a<lb />of the pseudo-French cafe, she realized that she wasnTt baby this soon, but they were financially comfortable<lb />going to be able to spot Prue as easily as she normally enough that this pregnancy wasnTt unwelcome.<lb /><lb />could. For one thing, Prue wasnTt sitting in the right<lb /><lb />hi oFuller's goin overboard on this whole ~miracle of birthT<lb />place. The two women had chanced upon the small<lb /><lb />thing,? Delia snorted, rolling her large brown eyes<lb /><lb />restaurant in the French Quarter nearly three years P ;<lb />expressively. oI told him the other day be ought to be<lb /><lb />before and had been charmed by its carefully cultivat- oi<lb />; a ee . the pregnant one. Then he could have all the labor<lb /><lb />ed Provencal air, complete with huge lace-framed pic- ca<lb />pains, and/ could stand on the side, coachin him on<lb /><lb />ture windows, lush greenery in the form of ferns and meng<lb />his breathin and tellin him to push.<lb /><lb />hot-house flowers and wrought-iron tables and chairs.<lb /><lb />It had become a frequent haunt, the scene of innumer- Prue pulled her narrow face into an expression of<lb /><lb />able lunches and teas, and the small, dark maitre dT exaggerated sympathy. oDoes it hurt when it kicks??<lb /><lb />automatically led them to a particular two-seater table ee 2<lb />hy s A little, sometimes, but"<lb /><lb />at the far window, provided it was free.<lb /><lb />A smiling blond waiter interrupted with a cheerful<lb /><lb />request for their drink order. oUnsweetened tea,? Delia<lb /><lb />But they were having company today, and Prue"<lb /><lb />assuming she had already arrived"had probably relo- , ihe 6<lb />~ is replied, and Prue requested a KillianTs, causing<lb /><lb />cated to a regular table. Or maybe a booth. Delia ayn<lb />~ Steak i ane Delia to screw up her face in distaste. How can you<lb />couldnTt tell; the combination of sunlight streaming in ote<lb />drink that stuff?? she asked once the waiter was out<lb /><lb />the spotless windows, reflecting off the light oak floor, rh x<lb />and the lingering smoky sting from the Ghosts of ree<lb /><lb />Cigarettes Past and Present made her squint until she oIt smells awful, and I donTt even want to think about<lb />could barely see two steps in front of her, much less the taste.?<lb /><lb />distinguish one patron from another. ~ItTs a pre-requisite for bein an English professor.? Prue<lb />S  juis ein an English professor.? Prue<lb /><lb />oDelia!? Instinctively, she turned in the direction from leaned forward with her elbows on the table, regarding<lb />which the welcoming call came, and there was Prue her friend with lazy blue eyes and a sardonic smile.<lb />waving at her from a table against the wall beneath a oOnce you hit grad school, you have to become addict-<lb />garish, technicolor print of a Toulouse-Lautrec painting. " ed to coffee, cigarettes or beer, otherwise you donTt get<lb /><lb />t ares a 5 your degree.?<lb />Hey, girl,? Prue drawled, smiling lazily up at Delia as<lb /><lb />she approached the table. oTook you long enough to Delia shook her head and laughed softly. oYouTre hopeless.?<lb /><lb />get here. YouTre walkin slow these days, Del.? ee<lb />Considerin how long weTve known each other, you<lb /><lb />oDidnTt your mama ever tell you not to pick on fat shouldnTt be surprised by this.?<lb /><lb />ladies?? Delia tossed her friend a mock-scowl as she ree ,<lb />God, donTt remind me,? she groaned theatrically,<lb /><lb />carefully lowered herself into the chair on PrueTs left. .<lb />drawing a polite chuckle from the young waiter return-<lb /><lb />oHuh!? Prue scoffed. oShe may have told me, but that ing with their drinks. oYou'll make me feel old,? she<lb />doesnTt mean I /istened.? Suddenly she dropped her added as she dropped the lemon wedge into her tea<lb />disdainful air and patted DeliaTs rounded abdomen ten- __ then sucked the juice off her fingers, wincing at the<lb />derly. oSo howTs the little rugrat-to-be anyway?? sudden tartness.<lb /><lb />oKickin up a storm,? Delia chuckled, smoothing the oWe are old,? Prue declared, taking a pull on the long-<lb />folds of her cotton maternity dress with a gentle caress. necked bottle. oBut I guarantee SuzyTll come slinkin in<lb />Her time was getting close now, and she was looking here not lookin a day over twenty-five. I may throw up.?<lb /><lb />28 LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Ee E RT er EE EON G5<lb /><lb />: « er .<lb />ms Ry ee a ee iter te rae : ee . ,<lb />ee ers oceans ers . ' |<lb />Lad<lb />&gt; " ""_<lb />="="=""""_"_" - . :<lb />&gt; : .<lb />~ «<lb />' :<lb />.<lb />¢<lb />;<lb />7<lb />~~<lb />i<lb /><lb />,<lb />Sy"<lb />Crane OF,<lb />T Pe<lb />- wer<lb />~ ie . Sense Hy<lb />rae<lb /><lb />"&gt;<lb /><lb />WWE<lb /><lb />-<lb />en<lb /><lb />:<lb />T<lb />- ee Oe ae<lb />s a ee oe<lb />"<lb />: ie 5 a<lb />; :<lb /><lb />f<lb />dee<lb /><lb />ms<lb />*<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION KEITH HOBGOOD<lb /><lb />REBEL NINE TY-FOUR 2<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Oe oom eres DER as suttheueiiiatnitisine ends ina ee<lb /><lb />Delia felt a sudden ripple of concern in her stomach;<lb />while PrueTs words may have been joking, her tone had<lb />held an underlying note of seriousness. She knew Prue<lb />had private doubts about this reunion; as usual she had<lb />kept them tightly inside, refusing to share her feelings<lb />no matter how many subtle openings Delia provided.<lb /><lb />oYou didnTt have to come,? she reminded Prue gently.<lb /><lb />oI know, I know.? She tossed her head, an irritated edge<lb /><lb />in her voice. oItTs not a question of want; itTs a question<lb />of need. You should know that.? PrueTs gaze was<lb />accusatory, and Delia stared resolutely at the linen<lb />napkin in her lap.<lb /><lb />oWhy do you think ITm here after what happened?? she<lb /><lb />replied quietly. oITm not expectin the four of us to walk<lb />away friends, you know. ItTs just that when Hope called<lb />and said Suzy would be in town, I thought"?<lb /><lb />oYou thought you could tidy up the past.? She sounded<lb /><lb />almost angry now, her fingers curled tightly around the<lb />lacy iron chair arm.<lb /><lb />oYes,? Delia whispered, meeting PrueTs hot blue gaze,<lb /><lb />her eyes silently pleading for understanding.<lb /><lb />oShit.? Prue threw herself against the back of her chair in<lb /><lb />disgust, and folded her arms across her chest.<lb /><lb />Please, I'm nervous enough as it is.? Delia reached over<lb />and touched PrueTs shoulder, but Prue refused to look<lb />at her. oWe've got to support each other through this.?<lb /><lb />Prue glanced sidelong at her, then sighed and<lb />shrugged, curling her thin fingers around DeliaTs hand<lb />and giving it a reassuring squeeze. oDonTt we always??<lb />HereTs to us then.? She raised her glass of tea and<lb />nudged Prue with her other elbow, trying to coax a smile.<lb />Prue swayed in her seat, looking as if she wanted to<lb /><lb />hold onto her sulk, but after a moment she raised her<lb />bottle. oHereTs to the end of the term,? she said solemnly.<lb /><lb />oHereTs to the end of another year,? Delia, who taught<lb /><lb />third grade, amended.<lb /><lb />oHereTs to no summer school.?<lb /><lb />oTTll drink to that.?<lb /><lb />She clinked her glass against PrueTs bottle, and they<lb />drank, both lapsing into a contemplative silence while<lb />the rest of the cafe hummed with the low murmur of<lb />conversation. She began to sink into daydreams of the<lb />past, of the time when Delia, Prue, Hope and Suzy had<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />WIM AR a Pe DAS RSTHFT SS<lb /><lb />shared an apartment during college, borrowing each<lb />otherTs clothes and make-up, staying up all night shar-<lb />ing deep secrets of who loved whom madly and eating<lb />most of the chocolate chip cookie dough before they<lb />could get the cookies in the oven. But that was all before...<lb /><lb />oShit!?<lb /><lb />Delia jumped, her heart racing at having been so<lb />suddenly startled out of her thoughts.<lb /><lb />oItTs half-past,? Prue complained. oWhere are they??<lb /><lb />oWell, theyTre supposed to come together, and you<lb /><lb />know Suzy.? Delia flicked her fingers dimissingly. oShe<lb />canTt have changed that much... But speaking of<lb />changes.? Her grin turned devilish. oI wonder if sheTs<lb />just as"?<lb /><lb />oHorny?? Prue suggested blandly.<lb />\ Ss<lb /><lb />oThatTs not exactly the word I wouldTve chosen.? She<lb /><lb />gave her friend a reproachful look.<lb /><lb />oI would,? she muttered. oJust pick up any fashion maga-<lb /><lb />zine, and there she is, sprawled on the cover in all her<lb />glory.? She sat up straight then, staring intently at the<lb />door. oWell, well, well,? she drawled, her eyes half-lid-<lb />ded, shielding her emotions as effectively as if sheTd<lb />slammed a door in her head somewhere. oI do believe<lb />the queen has arrived.?<lb /><lb />Delia followed PrueTs gaze"and there Suzy was,<lb />standing in the door, looking as sleek and carefully<lb />groomed as one of the countryTs most photographed<lb />women should.<lb /><lb />Suzy swept her gaze around the room with cool<lb />indifference until it rested on them and, visibly fixing a<lb />smile on her flawless face, she glided over to greet<lb />them. For a brief moment, apprehension which threat-<lb />ened to cross the line to fear clutched DeliaTs stomach;<lb />the last few weeks of their senior year had not been<lb />pleasant, but she wanted to make peace now, to put<lb />the past to rest permanently.<lb /><lb />The sweet floral scent of SuzyTs perfume wafted around<lb />Delia as she felt that powder-cool cheek press ever<lb /><lb />so briefly against her own in a swift air kiss. oDid<lb />people really do that?? she wondered. Apparently so. It<lb />took great will-power for her not to shrill, oKiss-kiss,<lb />darling!? but she had a feeling that Suzy wouldnTt be<lb />terribly amused.<lb /><lb />So much about Suzy had changed; Delia remembered<lb /></p>
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          <lb />the time when Suzy wore her dresses tight and allowed<lb />nas thick auburn hair to cascade down her back with<lb />just a few stray ringlets caressing her face, tempting<lb />men to brush them back just so they could touch the<lb />rest of that curly mass. Now her hair was chopped off<lb />in a pert, trendy bob, and her tight dresses had been<lb />traded for suits with classic, simple lines.<lb /><lb />Delia, Prue, how delicious to see you again.? Suzy<lb />perched in the chair across from Prue. She crossed her<lb />long legs, letting her ivory silk skirt slide up to<lb />mid-thigh, which Delia suspected was all for the benefit<lb />of the bug-eyed, slack-jawed young executives she was<lb />pretending not to have noticed. oHow are you??<lb /><lb />" Fine as Ir a . ~ -<lb />.?? Prue answered for herself and Delia, her tone<lb />7 aT &gt; o<lb />guarded. oAnd how are you, Suzy??<lb /><lb />uzanne,? she corrected.<lb /><lb />Bo l .<lb /><lb />f; th women darted startled glances at her; Prue<lb />rowne laT<lb /><lb />ned, but dull heat burned in DeliaTs cheeks at the<lb />subtle reprimand.<lb /><lb />SuzanneTs voic<lb /><lb />neTs voice was breathy and distant as she glanced<lb /><lb />around, barely registeri is!<lb /><lb />e d, barely registering curiosity. oOh, by the way,<lb />Ope isnTt c 7 :<lb /><lb />F be isnTt coming. She called, said something about a<lb /><lb />ast-minute meeting.?<lb /><lb />ii fea spare deflated at the news; she had count-<lb />pe serving as an objective mediator. Now it<lb />Pao they were on their own. oWell. how is she? I<lb />ah " her in ages.? She felt completely inane,<lb />any neutral topic, no matter how trivial.<lb /><lb />heTs fine. Busy as usual.?<lb /><lb />e Did S &gt;» &gt; ° -<lb />she mention Preston?? She tried to sound casual as<lb />S 1e ASKE &gt; ti ;<lb />isked the question so Prue wouldnTt have to.<lb /><lb />oHer b or?? SuzyT<lb />poy rother?? SuzyTs expression was toO innocent to be<lb />Ca . oRy »? N &gt; e . ti<lb />a Fine.? She cast a sly look at Prue. «Still unmarried.<lb />avbe heTs still carrvi | 3<lb />: o e heTs still carrying a torch for you, Prue. If you re<lb />Still not married, that is.?<lb /><lb />oo &amp; . "<lb />a uzanne,? she replied in the deceptively calm<lb />~Ol ~e ~ 14. - . ; ? ~<lb />ce that Delia knew boded ill. oITm not.<lb /><lb />oReally?? Her f a of<lb />Pi ly?? Her full red lips formed a dramatic oO? of<lb />eione panne oe awry : Y<lb />| eve surprise. oWhat a shame. No luck snaring a<lb />Ps a ee<lb /><lb />ling young professor? Or is there such a thing?<lb /><lb />oLetTs just sav 17T one : ve<lb />S just say ITm selective.? She leaned forward, smiling<lb />dNeasz , &amp; cial oa pape , :<lb />P antly. And what is it for you? Three divorces: Or<lb />IS it four by now??<lb /><lb />oSo.? Her voice came out loude<lb /><lb />oItTs perfection!? she gushed.<lb /><lb />oIf | have to hear one mor<lb /><lb />Suzanne flinched as if she had been struck; if her<lb />n cool before, it was pure ice now.<lb /><lb />expression had bee<lb />was surprised that Prue had clawed<lb /><lb />Delia imagined she<lb />back: acerbity hadnTt been part of her personality when<lb /><lb />they were in college.<lb /><lb />oWell!? Delia exclaimed far more cheerful than the situa-<lb /><lb />o?'m starved. What looks good?? She<lb />pretended to study it, acutely<lb />ence, but helpless to diffuse<lb /><lb />tion warranted.<lb />picked up a menu and<lb />aware of the oppressive sil<lb />the potentially volatile situation.<lb /><lb />The waiter came and went, their orders were taken<lb />and, other than Prue snapping al DeliaTs quiet opposi-<lb />tion to her ordering another beer, no one spoke. Delia<lb />fiddled with her napkin, fretfully crumpling it between<lb />her fingers, feeling more than a little awkward and<lb />foolish. She had been so anxious for them to reunite,<lb /><lb />and now one was absent and the other antagonized.<lb /><lb />r than she intended as<lb />she groped for words. oHowTs your shoot going,<lb />Suzanne?? The photo shoot was, Delia knew, the only<lb />reason Suzy was in New Orleans at all, but asking Suzy<lb />anything about herself had always been the best way to<lb />start her talking. Some things never changed.<lb /><lb />oPhilippe is a brilliant<lb />artiste. He works sheer magic with my face.?<lb /><lb />Delia anticipated Prue on that one and kicked her<lb /><lb />under the table before she could open her mouth.<lb /><lb />Suzanne chattered throughout the meal, while Delia<lb />rue nodded and made interested noises at<lb /><lb />es, feigning absorption in every<lb /><lb />just like the old days.<lb /><lb />e word about Miss Hot<lb />had often shouted, oITm<lb />ately agreed, but Hope<lb /><lb />and P<lb />all the right plac<lb />word to keep the peace,<lb /><lb />PantsT latest conquest,? Prue<lb />goin to throw up!? Delia priv<lb />had always shrugged and smiled as if to say,<lb /><lb />oThatTs just Suzy.?<lb /><lb />oSo. Delia.? Suzy suddenly turned to her, and<lb /><lb />artled at being directly addressed;<lb />she thought Suzy wouldnTt wind down for at least<lb />another ten minutes...and she trusted that paste-on,<lb />as much as she trusted an<lb /><lb />oIs this how Fuller keeps you?<lb />Suzanne continued, her<lb /><lb />as Delia flushed<lb /><lb />Delia glanced up, st<lb /><lb />day-glo smile about<lb />unpinned grenade.<lb />Barefoot and pregnant??<lb />sweetie-pie air never flagging even<lb />scarlet. oPerhaps I should be glad I didnTt marry<lb /><lb />him after all.?<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 31<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />)<lb />As<lb /><lb />?<lb /><lb />~~ . oe De er sii ata a ~~ seein atiaie oe eT ee<lb /><lb />oOh, like you had a choice "!? Prue exclaimed hotly,<lb /><lb />but Delia cut her off with a weary wave of her hand.<lb /><lb />oPrue, Suzy"please.? Her voice was softly pleading.<lb />oNot today. All right??<lb /><lb />oFine.? Suzanne gave a graceful, indifferent one-shoul-<lb /><lb />der shrug. oI was just asking a simple question.?<lb /><lb />oSimple, my sweet ass"?<lb />" Frue.?<lb /><lb />oAll right, all right.? Prue fell back in her seat, staring at<lb /><lb />the far corner.<lb /><lb />oI could have married him, you know.? Suzanne contin-<lb /><lb />ued, her tone as light and conversational as if she were<lb />talking about the weather. oI could have gotten him as<lb />easily as I got Preston.? Delia heard PrueTs sharp intake<lb />of breath but didnTt dare look at her; she was riveted<lb />on Suzy, a thousand conflicting emotions surging<lb />inside her: horror and contempt for SuzyTs casual inflic-<lb />tion of pain, fear of being unable to defend herself<lb />against such a brutal assault, but over-riding all was a<lb />growing anger, slowly seething to the top of her emo-<lb />tional list. oIt would have been no trouble at all to take<lb />him away from you.?<lb /><lb />Delia clenched her hands into fists as she fought off the<lb />instinctive insecurity Suzy had always been able to<lb />invoke. She was trying to intimidate Delia, just as she<lb />had in college, thinking, no doubt, that she was the<lb />same meek, quiet, eager-to-please girl she had been<lb />then. Suzy had always derided her, wrecked her confi-<lb />dence"but no more. Delia had grown up, gained the<lb />inner peace she had lacked then, and instead of being<lb />cowed by SuzyTs remarks, she was furious.<lb /><lb />But she held her wrath in check, and instead, very<lb />calmly, very quietly, she said, oThen why didnTt you??<lb />Suzy hadnTt expected that; her eyes grew round with<lb />surprise, and her mouth fell open as she searched for<lb />an answer.<lb /><lb />oI know you tried, Suzy. But it didnTt work.? She forced<lb /><lb />herself to smile. oRemember??<lb /><lb />Delia looked into SuzyTs eyes and could see that she<lb />too was remembering the time when she had just<lb />seduced"and abandoned"Preston and had begun<lb />on DeliaTs lover. Prue had disappeared for two days<lb />and returned looking pale and ill, and would say only<lb />that she had been osick.? Hope had tried desperately to<lb />keep Delia from discovering SuzyTs machinations in a<lb />futile attempt to prevent their increasingly fragile<lb />friendships from crumbling altogether. But Delia had<lb />found out; she overheard the end of an argument,<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />heard him tell Suzy that she wouldnTt do to him what<lb />she had done to Preston, and Suzy had fled in tears,<lb />perhaps in expectation of him chasing after her. But he<lb />had not"ever.<lb /><lb />oI loved him.? Suzanne switched tactics, playing the<lb /><lb />martyr now, complete with welling tears in her clear<lb />green eyes. oI was trying to make him jealous.?<lb /><lb />oNo.? Delia shook her head slowly, a rising swell of pity<lb /><lb />filling her voice and her eyes.<lb /><lb />oHe was the only man ITve ever truly loved, and you<lb /><lb />kept him from me.?<lb /><lb />oNo"T?<lb /><lb />oHe would have come to me if he hadn't felt so sorry<lb /><lb />for you!?<lb /><lb />oNo, Suzy. It wasnTt like that.?<lb /><lb />oHe should have been mine!? SuzanneTs mask shat-<lb /><lb />tered"completely, horribly"resentment splayed<lb />naked on her ravaged face.<lb /><lb />Delia stared at her, numb. HadnTt she watched this on<lb />As the World Turns last week? Conciliatory words died<lb />half-formed in her throat; there was no balm to soothe<lb />this old wound. She became vaguely aware of stares<lb />from neighboring tables, of the hovering concern of<lb />their waiter, of Prue hunched over, her face buried in<lb />her hands, but she was too focused on Suzy to react.<lb /><lb />oI canTt believe you hate me this much,? Delia said<lb /><lb />brokenly. oThat you blame me for your own failure,<lb />your Own stupid games. You had no reason to be<lb />jealous of me. Why canTt you let it go??<lb /><lb />oNo,? Suzanne murmured, shaking her head as she<lb /><lb />stared at the floor.<lb /><lb />oThatTs what weTre here for"to make peace with our-<lb /><lb />selves and with the past. We were friends once. Why<lb />canTt we be friends again??<lb /><lb />SuzyTs head jerked up as she glared at Delia, fury still<lb />burning in her eyes. oBecause you stole the only bit of<lb />happiness I could ever have had!?<lb /><lb />oAnd you stole mine.? Prue, forgotten by the other<lb /><lb />two, now spoke up, her voice oddly calm. Her blue<lb />eyes were bright with unshed tears, but her expression<lb />was tranquil. oI can never forget what you did, but I<lb />can forgive.?<lb /><lb />oItTs over and done with.? DeliaTs voice was unaccusing-<lb /><lb />ly soft. oLetTs start over.? She held out her hand, offer-<lb />ing her friendship, unconditional and forgiving, praying<lb />Suzy would accept it.<lb /><lb />i<lb /><lb />Se<lb /></p>
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          <lb />S yp » Ara .  ° ? . - -<lb />uzanne stared blankly at Delia, at her out-stretched Of course I am,? she said with a trace of her old cocki-<lb /><lb />h; ~ r a : : ,<lb /><lb />and, at Prue. Then, drawing in a deep, shuddering ness, then<lb />and, fluffing first time in quit<lb />isk fall tonight.?<lb /><lb />dispelled it with a sheepish grin. oFor the<lb />breath, she rubbed her palms on her skirt e a while. Maybe I'll even call Preston<lb />out her hair with her fingertips, she let the m<lb />back in place.<lb /><lb />o{ think you should.? She looked at herself"really<lb />looked at herself"in the mirror, at her swollen,<lb /><lb />Vell, ladies,? she smiled only a little shakily as she rose<lb />and she scrubbed uselessly at them,<lb /><lb />fro &gt; f- . 7 ,<lb />m the table, looking at them vaguely as if they were red-rimmed eyes,<lb />passing acquaintances whose names she couldn't quite then idly tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. oOh,<lb /><lb />re 7 - = Pad rr .9 ry ?<lb />emember. oItTs been lovely. We'll have to get together me. What a mess.<lb /><lb />ag : ei : ~ -<lb />gain sometime. Maybe next time, Hope will come... ya nee<lb />Cline inmnemeicT oYou'll be okay.? Prue tugged her towards the door.<lb />paused, took a breath, brightened her smile. poi ae<lb />NChescasl tie *-alen nal ' Come on. We'd better get back to the table before the<lb />ye,? she said, and then she was gone. as) a<lb />waiter starts thinkin we ran off without so much as<lb /><lb />| elia didnTt watch her leave, excusing herself and flee- leavin a tip.? She tilted her head, a hint of r yguishness<lb />Ing » |e tacT r 4 . ' : o &gt; er » = .<lb />1g to the ladiesT room instead. Once there she began in her smile. oBuy you a beer.? she offered, then hastily<lb /><lb />ishing her hands to divert her attention from her d protest, oa rool beer.<lb /><lb />amended before Delia coul<lb /><lb />rolling emotions, staring at the dingy porcelain sink so . fe ae 3<lb />think ics teresa n'e re . ~ Delia stared at her friend, fighting a losing battle with<lb />she wouldnTt see the mirror. She surprised herself; POG 2<lb />she expected laughter at Prue s earnest concern. oThis ume, she<lb />xpected to be weeping disc ynsolately at this ; ° :<lb />replied, oyou're On.<lb /><lb />01 eves wer<lb />point, but her eyes were hot and dry as she r ycked on<lb /><lb />her heels and scrubbed her hands.<lb /><lb />She had washed them for the fifth time and was begin-<lb />ning on the sixth when Prue opened the door, walked<lb />in and leaned against the sink next to DeliaTs, hands in<lb />her pockets. She said nothing for a long moment, mere-<lb />ly watched DeliaTs frenetic actions.<lb /><lb />wale idnT : i :<lb /><lb />yu didnTt murder the past, you know, she said at last.<lb />o t THO « 7, , oe A * o -<lb />was already dead, so quit playin Lady Macbeth.<lb /><lb />oHow cz , 54 ??<lb />W can you say that?? Delia strangled back a sudden<lb />urge to sob. oThere was a chance"?<lb /><lb />No.? Prue slipped her arms around Delia and rested her<lb />chin on her shoulder, gazing at her in the mirror,<lb /><lb />Today was nothin for me if not a revelation. I've been<lb />blamin Suzy for all my problems just like sheTs been<lb />blamin you, and neither one of us was right. I allowed<lb />her to destroy my relationship with Preston even<lb />though I knew it was all a game to her, and that was<lb />my own pig-headed fault.?<lb /><lb />Delia met her gaze in the mirror, silent tears streaming<lb />chit ies cheeks as she reached up and clutched<lb /><lb />ues comforting hands. oItTs just that I regret,? she<lb />Said. oIt didnTt have to be this way. I wish"! wish"?<lb />She drew in a deep breath and let it out again slowly.<lb /><lb />We were friends, you know??<lb /><lb />Yeah,? Prue said simply, her expression rueful. o1<lb />know, But you canTt always tie everything Up into neat<lb />little packages. Sometimes you have to make do with<lb />the bag it came in.? :<lb /><lb />Delia man:<lb />elia managed a chuckle. oI suppose, NO, | know<lb />you're right.?<lb /><lb />~Y<lb />WN<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />ILLUSTRATION JOHN STILES<lb /><lb />PROSE/EDITORST<lb /><lb />MY FIRST MEMO RIES OF<lb />(my grandmother) come into focus<lb /><lb />PIHEL<lb />around the age of<lb />four when I recollect this frantic woman hustling me into<lb />a new black Packard"for which she had no license to<lb />operate and only the vaguest idea how to drive.<lb /><lb />Because of my DadTs penchant for loose blondes with<lb />no teeth, Mom and I lived briefly with her parents,<lb />Ethel and Bryan, while Dad worked on his priorities,<lb />Each morning, as soon as everyone had left the house.<lb />Ethel and I would board the Packard and go lurching<lb />down the street toward town. since Ethel never both-<lb />ered to change gears, I'd Stay in the back seat with my<lb />arms wrapped around her neck until the jerking leveled<lb />off and we reached a semi-safe cruising speed. SheTd<lb />sing oShe'll Be Coming Around The Mountain?"loud<lb />and off key, trying to drown-out the grinding of the<lb />suppressed gears.<lb /><lb />The entire day would be spent snaking around town.<lb />Ethel showing me off to all her friends and faithfully<lb />telling each one that I was her favorite grandchild. In the<lb />late afternoon, with the Packard still pitching like a zeal-<lb />ous drunk, weTd head for home. swearing never to tell<lb />anyone about our secret adventures "<lb />came to an abrupt end.<lb /><lb />adventures that<lb /><lb />Dad, having see<lb /><lb />n the light, brought his little dysfunctional<lb /><lb />LITERARY<lb /><lb />AND ARTS<lb /><lb />CORE SR i TERS<lb /><lb />CHOICE<lb /><lb />family back under one roof. After Mom and I left for<lb />home, my grandfather, always a friend to the bottle.<lb />grasped this change as an excuse to obolt off the<lb />wagon.? Consequently, the Packard disappeared; then a<lb />greasy 40-watt efficiency apartment replaced the red<lb />brick home that granddad had built himself, forcing<lb />Ethel to take a job as a sales lady in a floppy department<lb />store in a decaying section of Alexandria. Familiar with<lb />the baggage of an uncharmed life. Ethel once again<lb />made the adjustment.<lb /><lb />Armed with a ready laugh and a defiant sense of<lb />humor, she attacked her dilemma, relying on familiar<lb />affectations to hide the growing hollowness in those<lb />sugar brown eyes. This time. though, the rally was<lb />unsuccessful. My statuesque grandmother was being<lb />replaced by a slumped shouldered. brittle, old woman<lb />whose hair no longer took a youthful rinse,<lb /><lb />appearing<lb />yellow and dull"seemingly resi<lb /><lb />gned to some<lb />unknown, yet expected conclusion.<lb /><lb />As Ethel evaporated, | began to fill-in"thanks to the<lb />inevitable insistence of puberty. My hormones smox thed<lb />the angles, allowing me to finally become comfortable<lb />with my body. Each day, I discovered s« mething new<lb />and lewdly intriguing about my uncharted anatomy. My<lb />peers replaced my family. I could no longer bear the<lb /><lb />thought of spending the night in EthelTs stifling little<lb /><lb />Se ae +<lb />Sas eS<lb /></p>
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          <lb />apartment with its stale smells, watching my grandfather<lb />get drunk, while she fussed over the few leftover memo-<lb />ries from an all-but-forgotten past. My mind no longer<lb />had room to cope with anything that wasnTt new and<lb />exciting and young.<lb /><lb />Christmas vacation °63. My grandfather was celebrating<lb />the holidays with Seagrams"or in his more lucid<lb />moments, a woman named Pansy, leaving my folks to<lb />try and distract Ethel from her loneliness. | managed to<lb />guiltlessly coast through the holiday with friends, mas-<lb />turbation, and idle afternoons spent glued to the radio,<lb />waiting to see if the Supremes would be number one on<lb />this weekTs Top 40 Countdown.<lb /><lb />With only a few precious days left before reality once<lb />again intruded upon my bliss, I went downtown to kill<lb />some time with my friends. God, we thought we were<lb />the coolest things to ever hit the streets of Alexandria.<lb />Moving as one complete unit, we did the usual cruising,<lb />some amateurish shoplifting, and sopped up french fries<lb />and gravy at HOJOTs"worming our way down to the<lb />front of J.C. PennyTs on King Street, where only the truly<lb /><lb />cool gathered.<lb /><lb />Since each of us had a holiday parent curled up on the<lb />couch, leaving all our homes off limits, we decided to<lb />catch the bus and go to D.C. Unfortunately, as the bus<lb />pulled up, who should be the first person off? Ethel. Like<lb />a jammed honing device, she obsessively zoomed<lb />straight for me with that olet me hug your neck. Oh<lb />Honey, itTs been so long since ITve seen you? look in her<lb />eyes. By allowing myself to be absorbed into the flood<lb />of people waiting to board the bus, I side-stepped her<lb />maneuver and pushed away from her impending<lb />embrace. oWhen are you going to come and see me??<lb />she called. oSoon,? I quickly lied, anxious to reach the<lb />safety of the bus.<lb /><lb />Suddenly, from nowhere, sheTs behind me, leaning over<lb />as if to kiss me, completely unaware of a faux pas I was<lb />not going to allow her to make. You donTt kiss a guy in<lb />front of his friends"-No way! I countered the effort by<lb />persistently pushing my way toward the safety of the bus<lb />door. As the bus pulled away from the curb, my mind<lb />abruptly pulled away from Ethel"leaving her in a haze<lb />of exhaust fumes.<lb /><lb />After seeing me downtown, they speculated she must<lb />have gone directly home"Granddad wasnTt there"<lb />once again being in a wayward mood. According to the<lb />medical report, as she bent over to take off her shoes,<lb />she was slammed by a massive brain hemorrhage, dying<lb />almost immediately "alone.<lb /><lb />Her death brought me even more notoriety at school<lb />and a strange sensation that something permanent had<lb />happened. Mom turned it into an academy award<lb />moment, justifying her outrageous behavior with over-<lb />whelming sorrow.<lb /><lb />oYou mean to tell me,? Mom would shriek, refusing to<lb /><lb />be calmed, oafter all your grandmother did for you, as<lb />much as she loved you, youTre telling me you won't go<lb />to the funeral??<lb /><lb />You nailed it, Glenda. ITm not going to watch you wal-<lb />low in your self-pity as they put Ethel in some hole and<lb />throw dirt on her.<lb /><lb />The rare periods when MomTs rage turned into a thick<lb />brooding, seemed to truly, unnerve Dad. Granted, the<lb />silence was eerie but I found it a welcomed respite. Not<lb />Dad. He would reminisce about how good Ethel had<lb />been and how we were all really going to miss her, mak-<lb />ing sure to mention how much she used to care about<lb />me. After about five minutes of this priming, Mom would<lb />crank back up, hitting those decibel levels of a sincere<lb />tragedienne, as she bemoaned my shamelessness and<lb />the added grief it was causing her.<lb /><lb />Mom,<lb />In my own fucked up way, I loved Ethel<lb /><lb />very much. I<lb /><lb />just donTt think I'm ready to admit sheTs really gone. The<lb /><lb />last time I saw her, I wouldn't even kiss her. Why are<lb />you doing this? DonTt make me feel any guiltier than I<lb />already do. ITm hurting too . For Christ sake, Mom, we<lb />never touch. And now you're pissed because I don't<lb />physically comfort you? What is it you want from me?<lb />WHAT! ItTs impossible to know " you keep changing the<lb />rules. It all has to revolve around you. Right?<lb /><lb />She won. There was no way to argue with her. My only<lb />defense being silence, I agreed to go to the funeral<lb />home (what a crazy fucking term"~ofuneral home?).<lb />God, what a mistake. I had no idea what to expect. But<lb />then there was no way to predict what I experienced.<lb /><lb />(The medics found $740 in EthelTs bra when they tried<lb />to resuscitate her"just enough to cover the cost of her<lb />funeral"fortunately they arrived before Granddad.)<lb />Obviously, the word never reached most of the rela-<lb />tives regarding EthelTs depleted finances, or the turnout<lb />would have never been so prodigious. It appeared to<lb />be a carnival for the dead. Ones she hated. Ones that<lb />hated her. Ones that didnTt give a shit either way. The<lb />ones so far removed, you weren't even sure there was<lb />a blood connection. Right up front, headlining the<lb />show, crying crocodile tears, was Granddad, whom<lb />Mom had followed to a pick-up bar the night before,<lb />physically slapping him out into the street where, my<lb />sister and my brother and I watched as she<lb />manhandled him into the back seat of our Chevy sta-<lb />tion wagon, where we sat in complete shock, moving<lb />as far away from him as possible.<lb /><lb />When I actually entered the osanctuary? and laid eyes<lb />on Ethel in that steel gray coffin, it proved too much. |<lb />woke up laid out on the pew nearest the coffin. Jesus,<lb />this wasnTt my grandmother. She didnTt wear her hair<lb />like that, nor did she use that much make-up. And that<lb />peach thing she wore, what bullshit. Even when times<lb />were hard, Ethel knew how to dress. She looked like a<lb />cadaverish clown.<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 35<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />&gt;<lb /><lb />Be<lb /><lb />0<lb /><lb />oYour grandmother looks so natural.?<lb /><lb />oYour grandmother was certainly<lb /><lb />oDoes it seem hot in here to you??<lb /><lb />oAfter everyone leaves, we'll be Stay<lb /><lb />oOh, my God,? I said aloud. without thinking,<lb /><lb />oLook. SheTs not dead. Look, d<lb /><lb />oHe seems flushed.?<lb /><lb />oGranddad is a shit,T<lb /><lb />""" fee te tt<lb />a CCR<lb /><lb />some familiar face<lb />with no name remarked.<lb /><lb />Who the fuck are you? Natural? Since when was Waxy<lb />looking, natural? You stupid, shit. ITm still not convinced<lb />that thing is my grandmother<lb /><lb />But the more I stared. the more the cosmetic injustice<lb />remote thing laid there. the<lb />more I began to recognize Ethel. | couldnTt<lb />eyes off her. Everything<lb /><lb />faded. The more this still.<lb /><lb />take my<lb />around me seemed to fade"<lb />my Only awareness fixated on that thing resembling<lb />my grandmother.<lb /><lb />a good woman.?<lb />The woman who had turned my<lb />grandfather into the<lb /><lb />crowed Anna Lee.<lb /><lb />IRS for not paying taxes.<lb /><lb />[ asked. But Anna Lee<lb /><lb />had no more time for me. nx ving On to a more<lb /><lb />recep-<lb />tive audience.<lb />Oh, God. Here comes Mom, dripping with remorse.<lb />All she needs is a breast beater to complete the<lb />grief ceremony.<lb /><lb />~ing behind to say our<lb />The funeral home director<lb />said we could have the chapel for thirty<lb /><lb />minutes"to be alone with mx ther<lb />more before the burial.?<lb /><lb />final farewells. You stay put.<lb />as a family, once<lb /><lb />A family? We've never been a family. The Cleavers are<lb />a family. We're just passing " going through the<lb />motions so the neighbors will think well of us. If it<lb />werent for the nights you and Dad lock the bedroom<lb />door, I doubt we'd all still live in the same house. And<lb />now, you want Granddad to move in with us, because<lb />he has no where else to 20? That should just about<lb />complete the American Gothic. And where in the hell is<lb />he going to sleep? With me probably. Snoring like a<lb />goddamn gorilla. And how will we ever get to use the<lb />bathroom? He naps while reading on the toilet. One<lb />bathroom for seven people. Great! Now, there really<lb />won't be anyplace to masturbate.<lb /><lb />I went back to my watchful vigil ove<lb /><lb />r Ethel. I canTt<lb />remember being more<lb /><lb />focused. ItTs as if something<lb />wouldn't allow me to blink or look away. Then the<lb />shit hit the fan. Ethel sat Straight up, turning with a<lb />smile toward me, while Slowly lifting out of the<lb />Did the mortician shoot her full of he<lb />formaldehyde?<lb /><lb />coffin.<lb />lium instead of<lb /><lb />osheTs not<lb />really dead.?<lb /><lb />oSheTs not what?? asked crazy Aunt Alice.<lb /><lb />ammit. ItTs a mistake.? |<lb />yelled.<lb /><lb />I vaguely heard her say.<lb /><lb />I said, responding to a « omment<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />oYeah, Mom is really showing her ass.<lb /><lb />oThanks. That makes me feel better.?<lb /><lb />for GodTs sake.<lb /><lb />oHurry,?<lb /><lb />oMom. SheTs not there. I saw her le:<lb /><lb />oIf you start with me at a time like<lb /><lb />from the floating Ethel.<lb /><lb />You mustnTt talk about your Granddad that way,? cooed<lb />Aunt Alice, trying to get me under contr: dl,<lb />for assistance,<lb /><lb />as she called<lb />oBetty come over here quick. something<lb />is wrong. I think heTs overheated.?<lb /><lb />But what did you<lb />expect, Ethel. You know she lo\ es an audience,? | said.<lb />unaware of MomTs closeness.<lb /><lb />Before I knew it. ey eryone had been ushered out. Mc m,<lb />Dad, Granddad and I were the Only ones<lb />chapel.<lb /><lb />left in the<lb /><lb />were my final<lb />remarks to Ethel as she floated right past the bare beams<lb />and track lighting, eventually being swallowed by the<lb />darkness beyond. Only then did I hear Mom crying, as if<lb />disappointed in the climax of her passional. Ignoring my<lb />conversation with her dead mother.<lb /><lb />The Director herded us all nearer the coffin and ask that<lb />we hurry. He needed to get home to his family. It was<lb />getting late. First, Granddad stepped up to the body and<lb />bending over, tearfully kissed Ethel good-by.<lb />odd because her lips didnTt seem to give und<lb />sure. Next,<lb /><lb />It was so<lb /><lb />er the pres-<lb />Dad placated Mom by kissing Ethel. I noticed<lb />his AdamTs apple bob, fighting the gag reflex. Then Mom<lb />swooped in clutching, and si »bbing,<lb /><lb />and grabbing the air<lb />for some unseen stabilizer,<lb /><lb />culminating her drama in a<lb /><lb />swoon seen only among the finest actresses,<lb /><lb />After collecting herself. she turned to me, oGo on. Kiss<lb />her good-by.?<lb /><lb />NO! SheTs not there. I saw here leave. This is qa Carcass,<lb />! can't do it. I'll throw up.<lb /><lb />she said. othe Director needs to lock the chapel.?<lb /><lb />My grandmother's dead. Fuck the director. And fuck<lb />you too, Mom. You're just pissed because she didn't treat<lb />you 0 a special good-by matinee. You y ere always jeal-<lb />ous of our special friendship. Something you and I never<lb />had"and never will. Lock the chapel? Against what? Is<lb />somebody going to come in and steal that awful peach<lb />casement you chose for her. What a petty way to try and<lb />Set even. You knew she hated that color. You knew she<lb />didn't want to be buried on some forgotten hill in North<lb />Carolina and you knew she ner er wore bangs and<lb />gaudy make-up"damn you!<lb /><lb />ave. I swear to God.?<lb />trying a jab at sincerity.<lb /><lb />this, I swear to God.?<lb />she promised, with that twistedly sincere look, I'd seen<lb />many times, oyou are going to get it.?<lb /><lb />[ bent over"a (temporarily) defeated twelve year<lb />old"holding my breath, closing my eyes"allowing<lb />my lips to lightly graze a mouth that only days be<lb /><lb />fore |<lb />had refused to kiss.<lb /></p>
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          <lb />f el<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION MICHAEL SHOAF<lb /><lb />C<lb /><lb />oC SORE Bg &gt; ene TEM os<lb /><lb />hildren<lb /><lb />JAMES ?,?E CAs EY<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />brERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />&gt; aay<lb /><lb />i<lb /><lb />FIRST: PLAGE<lb /><lb />a)<lb /><lb />Southeast As<lb /><lb />The elevators landed and the children spilled out.<lb />We were cutting up newspapers at the time.<lb />They filled the halls in silence,<lb /><lb />we didnTt know their names.<lb /><lb />But they looked at us<lb /><lb />with eyes like a thousand tin cans,<lb /><lb />-d and rusting by the highway.<lb /><lb />ed to cut, taking scissors to headlines,<lb />4e words we needed.<lb /><lb />make a list, I thought,<lb /><lb />owly by.<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>ee oo" - . - nat TI Tn . 0 6 wren 68 LEB rs oy _- ee ee ey<lb /><lb />POETRY SECOND PLACE<lb /><lb />Cnarmer<lb /><lb />BY KELLE XAVIAR LAWRENCE<lb /><lb />[ wore you<lb /><lb />like the charms<lb /><lb />dangling at my breast.<lb /><lb />You were the St. Christopher I found<lb />lost and dented in the mall parking lot.<lb />You were the cracked, milky quartz<lb /><lb />a friend passed on to me.<lb /><lb />You were the twisted metal rhinoceros<lb />[ found in my living room<lb /><lb />after the party.<lb /><lb />[ wore you<lb /><lb />until your breath<lb /><lb />stained a dark ring upon my neck,<lb />and the weight bruised my chest.<lb />Flaking green heavy element,<lb /><lb />[ unclasped you<lb /><lb />to stretch myself.<lb /><lb />iE T<lb />ee<lb /><lb />=<lb />7.<lb /><lb />2<lb />ri<lb />ei<lb />4<lb />*<lb />M4<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION LISA LUDWIG<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />~"Rs<lb /><lb />40<lb /><lb />Tne Cor<lb /><lb />: . Meuron<lb />erase, oo Ck TN REN Lot A EER<lb /><lb />BY JOHN MCMANUS<lb /><lb />Not as much the sound<lb /><lb />When six strings are made to blur<lb />As the feel of the guitar<lb /><lb />Against my body.<lb /><lb />The music travels through my hands<lb />As a subtle, silent hum<lb /><lb />That is deeply, deafly<lb /><lb />Tangible.<lb /><lb />And writingTs in the pencil<lb /><lb />When I scratch<lb /><lb />Onto a page<lb /><lb />The constantly swirling spirits of my brain<lb />To make them still.<lb /><lb />These are my appendages:<lb /><lb />The vibration of sound<lb /><lb />The friction of lead or<lb /><lb />The tapping of keys<lb /><lb />And in them I feel my ghosts.<lb /><lb />PEST ERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />rOERTRY<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION SEAN LIVINGSTONE<lb /><lb />THIRD<lb /><lb />Hporeai A<lb /><lb />PLAGE<lb /><lb />epect Gf Ar<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Lae NE BE<lb />ae<lb /><lb />= at i nzak ape eRe?<lb />~  ? 2 oreo wees FPR LM CNA se.<lb />" "_ " 7 eee ee _ "" mIaBiF Pe<lb />net ing? +e eet ee Se ee . ~<lb />CNAs a ant teas ae ae ee ~~<lb /><lb />» nna ti N<lb />POETRY, HONORABLE MENTIO<lb /><lb />3 aA | k 1 ni : Omd { O @?,? S (AlzheimerTs Winter)<lb /><lb />BY WAYNE ROBBINS<lb /><lb />(FIRST LINE BY<lb /><lb />heTs<lb />digging<lb /><lb />in his head<lb />again (the<lb /><lb />fadings<lb /><lb />of his<lb />waters<lb />come to<lb />mind) and<lb /><lb />we can only<lb />watch<lb /><lb />from<lb />Outside<lb />while we listen<lb />we can only<lb />stand behind<lb />his fence<lb /><lb />we<lb /><lb />digging<lb />in his head<lb />again (the<lb /><lb />fadings<lb /><lb />of our<lb /><lb />waters<lb /><lb />come to<lb />mind and<lb /><lb />we can barely<lb />swim) and<lb /><lb />not so<lb /><lb />sure<lb /><lb />whatTs<lb /><lb />in there<lb /><lb />we must<lb />simplify<lb /><lb />just to<lb />begin<lb /><lb />ITm<lb /><lb />digging<lb />in his head<lb />again (why<lb /><lb />does it all<lb />evaporate<lb />(the<lb /><lb />fadings of<lb />all waters)<lb />as it<lb />moves<lb />into the<lb />Wwind?).<lb /><lb />CAMILLE BECK)<lb /><lb />~~ =,<lb />J ~<lb />3 me """ - WAX... .<lb />Pd a . &amp;<lb />sl cha ade Sore Mey<lb />late he<lb /><lb />: : ae ~,<lb />"pee gt sd Pi fs ~ PF ih ,<lb />- rr i ©.<lb /><lb />' ~<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />as ee A me<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION BRIAN WOODUEF<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 41<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />. eR. t<lb /><lb />4)<lb /><lb />Bene ns cern SETS EE ge TE ea a<lb /><lb />POETRY<lb /><lb />Bedtime<lb /><lb />BY JANE C SABATINI<lb /><lb />For a long time |<lb /><lb />buried my mother each<lb />night under my pillow. |<lb />had her trapped in a<lb /><lb />silver frame.<lb /><lb />In my photo, I stand<lb />beside her. She wears<lb />pink and I am in blue and<lb />white with my hair pulled<lb />back. Her arm is around<lb />my waist as we smile<lb /><lb />in the May sun.<lb /><lb />Her disease did not show up<lb /><lb />in the picture.<lb /><lb />When I would go to sleep each night<lb />my motherTs smiling face disappeared<lb />Instead she would be back in the<lb />hospital bed with death beside<lb /><lb />her. The tube down her throat<lb /><lb />made it hard for her to speak. She<lb />tried to say something to me, |<lb />pretended to understand her. But then<lb />she is better and laughs in the May<lb /><lb />sun, holding my hand.<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />HONOR<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION BRIAN WOODLIEF<lb /><lb />A BI<lb /><lb />| :<lb /><lb />ME<lb /><lb />N<lb /><lb />ION<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />POETRY EDITORST CHOICE<lb /><lb />Untitled<lb /><lb />WAYNE ROBBINS<lb /><lb />- . : P in lee " . ee ee .<lb /><lb />eee a. err} oh<lb />rs . me Kae nh tho sons vhs Rat: ; ey) °<lb /><lb />v ~ 7 and a 2 be 5 a 7 % ft . 4 ' . ¥1 ~fo<lb /><lb />ih P give<lb /><lb />he mk a<lb />ad Aye<lb /><lb />me the<lb /><lb />sea in a<lb /><lb />bucket to<lb /><lb />carry around<lb /><lb />like a child<lb /><lb />in sand. I'll<lb /><lb />help you to gather<lb /><lb />it all from the corners<lb /><lb />of blue (we can see fish<lb /><lb />that flop in the sun till<lb /><lb />they die (we can laugh as the<lb /><lb />seals dive headfirst into rocks<lb /><lb />(we can walk up to whales feeding<lb />them with the plankton we've found by<lb />our feet (we can hike to vienna and<lb />drive to calcutta (we can dance<lb /><lb />in the mud with the airstricken<lb />kelp or drink vintage champagne<lb />on the famous titanic (we'll<lb />discover atlantis)))))) and<lb /><lb />when we are done with our<lb />bucket of fun we can dump<lb /><lb />it back into the nile<lb /><lb />and watch as it fills<lb /><lb />up the sea like the<lb /><lb />bathtub it is. |<lb /><lb />can just go home<lb /><lb />eat seafood and<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION LEE MISENHEIMER<lb /><lb />watch the tv<lb />till I fall<lb />deep asleep<lb />on the<lb />couch.<lb /><lb />REBEL NINET Y-FOUR 43<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />OPIS: -- See pga Bet ha!<lb /><lb />Tonya: On the Power of<lb /><lb />SOTETTE<lb /><lb />Every other<lb /><lb />Thursday<lb /><lb />Daddy says,<lb />oTonyaTs got stomach cramps.?<lb /><lb />so I miss the bus<lb /><lb />I miss school breakfast<lb /><lb />then catch a ride to the Suds-N-Fold<lb />(warm from fifty-cent-dryersT heat)<lb />and do his laundry<lb /><lb />colored-clothes tumble,<lb /><lb />like teachersT words<lb /><lb />too fast to catch,<lb /><lb />but I watch<lb /><lb />stomp my foot, loud<lb /><lb />when red patches fall by<lb />count the stomps<lb /><lb />in my head, not on my fingers<lb />and I wait<lb /><lb />for lunch<lb /><lb />11:00 oTclock<lb /><lb />12:00 or 2:00<lb /><lb />Daddy comes<lb /><lb />blows the horn<lb /><lb />[ stack clothes<lb /><lb />(stained ones on bottom)<lb />between Daddy and me<lb />clothes on hangers<lb /><lb />I seat belt across my lap<lb />across my chest<lb /><lb />He brings one<lb />tomato sandwich<lb />[ eat fast,<lb /><lb />six bites<lb /><lb />44 LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />eOITORST CHOICE<lb /><lb />gone before<lb /><lb />we get to the house<lb /><lb />oThank you Daddy.?<lb /><lb />In the front room<lb /><lb />He says, oGet ready girl.?<lb />[ take off my jeans<lb /><lb />my underwear<lb /><lb />pull my red T-shirt<lb />under my arms<lb /><lb />grind the hem<lb /><lb />between my teeth<lb /><lb />count goose bumps<lb />wait, wonder<lb /><lb />if stacked clothes have fallen<lb />if stains will show<lb /><lb />DaddyTs match strikes<lb /><lb />the kerosene heater to life<lb />thick fumes pound in my head<lb />flames hiss across its metal mouth<lb />too fast to catch<lb /><lb />but, I watch<lb /><lb />they lick up, down<lb /><lb />in time with Daddy<lb /><lb />and I stomp my foot, loud<lb />when red flame-faces dart by<lb />count the stomps<lb /><lb />in my head, not on my fingers<lb /><lb />And I wait<lb /><lb />for supper<lb /><lb />and red things to count<lb />reasons to stomp<lb /><lb />loud<lb /><lb />red<lb /><lb />Counting Red<lb /></p>
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        <p>eer<lb /><lb />Hoe<lb /><lb />»<lb /><lb />20 88 JOM RASS DMF: A S87<lb /><lb />ono Ty bere oon<lb /><lb />snk ROR AALS Ie<lb /><lb />eee Ae eS<lb /><lb />Se LPF<lb /><lb />iD. pet pe<lb /><lb />*e<lb /><lb />.<lb /><lb />~<lb />5 meer A<lb /><lb />7<lb />7<lb />.<lb /><lb />_ a es, a<lb />Fs ~<lb /><lb />Cnn ~<lb /><lb />jes<lb /><lb />YOVENIVLS LISI NOUVaLSAT<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>ee eee en<lb /><lb />PUETRY/SEDITORSG CHOICE<lb /><lb />Leather<lb /><lb />CHANDRA SPEIGH<lb /><lb />At ten, I decided<lb /><lb />of all the people<lb />| did not like<lb /><lb />this car had driven<lb />leather or church or God to and from cemeteries<lb /><lb />all the tears, saliva, and mucus<lb /><lb />seeping from faces<lb /><lb />how leather had sucked it all in<lb /><lb />as it was now gulping down my sweat<lb /><lb />| wondered if there had been any others like me<lb />dry eyed girls traveling away from death<lb /><lb />sitting on gloved palms<lb /><lb />trying to protect themselves<lb /><lb />every part of themselves<lb /><lb />from the sucking mouth<lb /><lb />of the ravished<lb /><lb />black leather<lb /><lb />oLittle girls<lb /><lb />do not wear black?<lb /><lb />Mother said zipping<lb /><lb />my Easter dress<lb /><lb />the fuchsia flowered one<lb /><lb />scratchy crinoline underneath<lb />fabric stiff and warm from ironing<lb />| pulled on white gloves<lb />buttoned petite pearl buttons<lb /><lb />she fussed with my floppy dotted hat<lb />pulled elastic tight under my chin<lb /><lb />Besides the flowers<lb /><lb />I was the only color at the funeral<lb />The clothes were black<lb /><lb />The coffin was black<lb /><lb />The Bible was bound with black leather<lb />I wanted to blend in<lb /><lb />but the pearls on my gloves<lb />stuttering in summer sun<lb /><lb />giggled<lb /><lb />When it was over<lb /><lb />the black clothes<lb /><lb />tramped away<lb /><lb />escaping to multicolored<lb /><lb />air conditioned prisons<lb /><lb />not free, but safe<lb /><lb />from this death<lb /><lb />MotherTs heels sunk in mud<lb />as I walked behind her<lb /><lb />my legs itching<lb /><lb />and chin irritated<lb /><lb />I climbed into the big car<lb />and listened to her sobs<lb /><lb />a man in a black hat<lb /><lb />and black leather gloves<lb />carried us away<lb /><lb />the backs of my legs<lb />sweated themselves<lb /><lb />to the black leather<lb /><lb />of the car seat<lb /><lb />[ remember thinking<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION DAVID ROSE<lb /><lb />40 LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />|<lb />;<lb />)<lb />i<lb />i<lb />i<lb /><lb />GALLERY<lb /><lb />ART<lb /></p>
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        <p>ee oe Ls oe eed<lb /><lb />CS<lb /><lb />wom He SSB RR * ..<lb /><lb />PSS<lb /><lb />Sa<lb />[a4<lb /><lb />ART G<lb /><lb />. 41S<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Se rR te<lb /><lb />50<lb /><lb />Ray Kay<lb />Basket Form #6<lb />Ceramics<lb /><lb />First Place<lb /><lb />Or (te »p lett)<lb /><lb />Jamie Kirkpatrick (top right)<lb />Interterence Pattern #4<lb />Ceramics<lb /><lb />Second Place<lb /><lb />Jerr y Jack son<lb /><lb />3 Stages of a Traveling Foot Washing<lb />Ceram Ics<lb /><lb />Third Place<lb /><lb />Aat. GALLASF<lb /><lb />nn NEES 0<lb /><lb />o~ a RS ye oes a<lb /><lb />stacy aa agi<lb /><lb />my,<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Ray Kaylor (top left)<lb />Lidded Vessel #5<lb />Ceramics<lb /><lb />Honorable Mention<lb /><lb />David Grahek (top right)<lb />Untitled<lb />Ceramics<lb /><lb />Honorable Mention<lb /><lb />Jeannette Stevenson<lb />Unity<lb />Ceramics<lb /><lb />Honorable Mention<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 51<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>paint " Saber te Fe ie 4 a tS "s<lb /><lb />Cer tet i et Ls<lb /><lb />Sele pgims THA<lb /><lb />.<lb />-<lb />~<lb />_<lb />=<lb />&gt;<lb />~<lb />-<lb /><lb />Selt Identity Cubes top)<lb />Pro duction &amp; f ISS 1993<lb />Communication Arts<lb /><lb />First Place<lb /><lb />Darlene Pelliccio (lett)<lb />2 2 Go<lb />Communication Arts<lb /><lb />Third Place<lb /><lb />Darlene Pelliccio (ri<lb />New Ac Je Gaelic<lb />Communication Arts<lb /><lb />Honor able Mer ition<lb /><lb />is ART: GALCER Y<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Pes es PVRS Ge DUE<lb /><lb />a0). eRe a<lb /><lb />=<lb />Ww<lb /><lb />pring<lb /><lb />"<lb />PCLT iM<lb /><lb />S<lb /><lb />rite ot<lb /><lb />The ]<lb /><lb />~<lb /><lb />temp<lb /><lb />nN<lb /><lb />re du ,<lb /><lb />"<lb /><lb />ac<lb /><lb />"_<lb />.<lb /><lb />Le<lb /><lb />oan<lb /><lb />BEL NIN! Y OUR<lb /><lb />R |<lb /></p>
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          <lb />: - i ical mpeg ad ee tee = pl Bes ates . mi<lb />&gt; gest See o 552 Se Se CEL SAP<lb /><lb />54<lb /><lb />ARI<lb /><lb />GALLERY<lb /><lb />&gt; @-s. 5<lb /><lb />a? le<lb /><lb />oy as SI Sl ara picnics eee To RES In CNS GIS A LI III TE RENE et ee _"<lb />+ " - a * +. ee me a Nee fas a ee , 2 ou were - : oa os ~<lb /><lb />.4<lb /><lb />oe<lb />eee<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />IIE Oe a<lb /><lb />IPR, aS hen EY ELISE<lb /><lb />4<lb />i<lb />wed<lb /><lb />a - =<lb />A aan . ee, "<lb /><lb />IT OR ee ee<lb /><lb />A et EN REI Bea nn neo<lb /><lb />Se OY RES<lb />aes ASS<lb />oe<lb />Ms. &gt; =T oN -<lb /><lb />. -<lb /><lb />hl, *, §, pot*<lb />, a 7 . ;<lb />Secisi$<lb /><lb />a &gt; aoa aa ep a ht Af = ee<lb />PR CORE<lb />. s nm T ~ :<lb /><lb />~~"<lb /><lb />eM<lb /><lb />eee EONS Sen r<lb /><lb />7 em FE See PAe OGG ne SMR G DRT AMR SST OT ts<lb /><lb />REBEL<lb /><lb />Sean Livingstone<lb />Untitled #1<lb />Drawing<lb />Honorable Mention<lb /><lb />NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb />"_<lb /><lb />&gt;<lb /><lb />ans eect ok ADULTE<lb /><lb />5<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Be,<lb /><lb />&gt;<lb /><lb />be<lb />&gt;!<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb />me mee<lb /><lb />ss<lb /><lb />aaa es oe<lb /><lb />Fon t5,<lb /><lb />7 Para :<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>se<lb />_<lb /><lb />ee ee<lb /><lb />SABE Oyge 4- + Lesa eal? 5S aps tn See snes us - ,<lb />SMES oe Ow : i - a ~~ sa, ae MNS SOS Tt ER SO EIST nnn ce NIRS RG Cie nae EEN I = oe 4<lb />- Wns Shih ss ° , 0) ? : i Sie he. 2 =. i rere ne oe " oN PER ct "e a eae<lb />o - . °. _"" " camiaiai ~ ° a ~ oes - .<lb /><lb />Fr 5 | reve<lb />,<lb />rPaAINning<lb />. |<lb />|<lb />na KIM<lb />; ;<lb />} vir<lb />,<lb />AA<lb />r rows<lb />~<lb />ron? |<lb />J ~<lb />; ; T<lb />/ J<lb /><lb />SS ART GALLER<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />od MEME RS HK OD<lb /><lb />John Bateman (top)<lb />Beth with a Hat<lb />Painting<lb /><lb />Honorable Mention<lb /><lb />Keith Hobgood<lb />Untitled<lb />Painting<lb /><lb />Honorable Mention<lb /><lb />REBE<lb /><lb />NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb />59<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />60<lb /><lb />ART<lb /><lb />aa a al ee So ES<lb /><lb />GALLERY<lb /><lb />+ tote ele oe, Se a is Ta<lb /><lb />. 6 mes Abe P Jip<lb />. &gt; $ a es o Aah<lb /><lb />&gt;<lb /><lb />$3,<lb /><lb />roe? Oe eo) a<lb />3 mes Wa aie<lb /><lb />LENG I<lb /><lb />ee " - ""<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Se ae<lb /><lb />St rd tee) be ed be<lb />abe hahs bakale bntchel oleT<lb /><lb />First Place<lb /><lb />iV \e | 1K<lb /><lb />nd Place<lb /><lb />Melia Elliott<lb /><lb />VECO<lb /><lb />C<lb /><lb />. _, a «&gt;<lb /><lb />The Turning<lb /><lb />ei<lb /><lb />Place<lb /><lb />Wd<lb /><lb />Ol<lb /><lb />R<lb /><lb />y<lb /><lb />NINE<lb /><lb />BEL<lb /><lb />RE<lb /></p>
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          <lb />62<lb /><lb />ART<lb /><lb />« ne a<lb />ar<lb /><lb />ank (b ttom lett)<lb />Fred Webb<lb />Printmaking<lb /><lb />First Place<lb /><lb />Marcia Sanders (top right)<lb />H shy Ry stl TS<lb />Printmaking<lb /><lb />»é CC nd Pi ICe<lb /><lb />Todd Robert (bottom right)<lb />Iwisting Souls<lb />Printmaking<lb /><lb />Third Place<lb /><lb />ol ANT rE Seo<lb /><lb />Grain Elevators<lb /><lb />y -"<lb />eg) ot woe onoo a te<lb />a<lb /><lb />GALLER<lb /><lb />one ee? 5 TaN the<lb /><lb />Ak COTM Tn Se<lb /><lb />ian, -<lb /><lb />cs soa<lb /><lb />Ve an aS ye<lb /><lb />et<lb /><lb />Dea pias<lb /><lb />ieee et a ae<lb /><lb />me ra<lb /><lb />Ne inns Ay<lb />Nv fini<lb /><lb />ee,<lb />Bugterenn<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />rte &gt;, o bis tuaetsTE; ~ = a lat he MAAS SIE PTET . o . 9 NRE ENON : 2 tera lamers e -BoKs kv MIRAI TMOM # AES én 0 - Oh MRP OED Te,<lb /><lb />f<lb /><lb />Ray Kaylor (top lett)<lb /><lb />1<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Higawari, Piece of Many Colors<lb />Sculpture<lb /><lb />First Place<lb /><lb />»D jean JawRunner (right)<lb />Kinetic trom the Twin Series<lb />Sculpture<lb /><lb />Second Place<lb /><lb />|. K. Dowdee (bottom left)<lb />Restore<lb /><lb />Sculpture<lb /><lb />Third Place<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 63<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />oe<lb /><lb />so deen rsa eee? SE SEARS SSS Sete ae RRR SR URIS oS oR RNR REN AN RN ~ nee<lb /><lb />WARE EEATS Lith<lb />o12 ats gis. Ae<lb />ey ae Ses<lb /><lb />ae |<lb /><lb />&gt;<lb /><lb />604 ART GALLERY<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />CHILDRENTS<lb /><lb />LITERATURE<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>CHILDRENTS LITERATURE/FICTION/FIRST PLACE<lb /><lb />BY ELIZABETH MCDAVID<lb /><lb />PoCOUnreringes<lb /><lb />oMOM, COME LOOK,? NATALIE CALLED<lb /><lb />oFor me. ITm curious too.?<lb />through the open screen door. oThat crazy Fran across<lb /><lb />tee Mas oOkay, but ITm not staying. I'll just ask her and come<lb />the street is doing it again. Kass, yin , , r<lb />right back. I donTt want her weirdness rubbing off<lb />NatalieTs Mom came out and sat on the front steps on me.?<lb />beside Natalie. oHoney, you shouldn't call people crazy. . ; :<lb />ene a aes Natalie plunged her hands into the pockets of her jeans<lb />It isnTt polite. Besides, Fran seemed like a nice girl<lb />a and marched across the street. Fran was stretched out<lb />when she came over last week to invite you to go to<lb />ge on her back in the grass, eyes closed, breathing heavily.<lb />the pool. And you wouldn't go.? She brushed a strand pare ie "aaa CRED :<lb />LES oe 5 She made no indication of noticing NatalieTs approach.<lb />of damp brown hair from NatalieTs forehead. oYou pes rep, ;<lb />+r ; Natalie shot an oI told you so? glance at Mom, still seat-<lb />ought to make some effort to get to know the children es ~ si<lb />oa iy 2 ed on the porch. She stood silently over Fran, waiting<lb />in the neighborhood. You need to make some friends.<lb /><lb />for Fran to acknowledge her. Nothing. Finally she<lb /><lb />oI donTt want to get to know that Fran. SheTs too weird. clenched her teeth and spoke out.<lb /><lb />The other kids all gather at her house "I guess theyTre ~<lb />oHello,? she said.<lb />as weird as she is. And I have friends"lots of them"<lb /><lb />back in New Jersey.? FranTs eyes blinked open. oHey,? she said, apparently<lb /><lb />ice Seem ; as Spa unfazed by NatalieTs sudden appearance. oITm still a lit-<lb />oBut we live in Georgia now. This is our home. I know ; hgh<lb />i ys tle winded. Hold on a minute.? She pushed herself up<lb />it's been rough on you, leaving your friends...and<lb />we ~ T on her elbows, leaned back, and raised her face to the<lb />your dad.<lb /><lb />dusky sky.<lb />Natalie swatted at a wreath of gnats hanging in her<lb /><lb />. oi oWhy do you do that?? Natalie blurted out. She knew it<lb />face, and tried to swallow the rising lump in her it<lb />was rude to be so abrupt, but she didnTt want to stay<lb />throat. MomTs arm on her shoulder helped some"but<lb />around Fran any longer than necessary.<lb />not much.<lb />oe oIts easier to catch my breath this way,? said Fran.<lb />oNatalie, youTve been through a lot of changes this past aoe EOS,<lb />talaga Expands the lungs, you know.? She drew a deep breath<lb />year. The divorce. My new job. Now the move down i<lb />: aE as if to demonstrate.<lb />South,? Mom said. oThe best thing you can do, though,<lb /><lb />is jump in and make some new friends. You could start<lb />with Fran. Think how nice it would be having a friend<lb />your own age right across the street.?<lb /><lb />Natalie was exasperated. oWhy do you run around your<lb />house every night, then flop down on the ground, like<lb />you're doing now??<lb /><lb />oNo way. Look at her, Mom. Running around her house<lb />over and over again. Every evening, after the other kids<lb />go home, she does the same thing. SheTs probably Se : ; one<lb />i . ages, : Natalie felt herself blush. oOh, you waved? I didnTt<lb />obsessive or compulsive, or something like that. I donTt ae '<lb /><lb />; notice.? That was a lie; she had noticed, but she hadn't<lb />want to have anything to do with her.<lb />wanted to encourage crazy Fran to come over and talk.<lb /><lb />Fran sat up Indian-style and grinned. oYeah, ITve seen<lb />you watching me. I waved but you never waved back.?<lb /><lb />oOh, Natalie. How do you know she doesnTt have a per- ase "<lb />he a Fran shrugged. oThatTs okay. I figured youTd warm up<lb />fectly good reason for what she does? a raha a8 a<lb /><lb />st when you were ready. Sit.? She gestured toward a<lb />spot on the ground as if she were offering Natalie<lb /><lb />an easy chair. Natalie didnTt want to, but she found<lb /><lb />oCome on, Mom. A good reason for dashing around her<lb />house every night??<lb /><lb />ay herself obeying.<lb />oWhy donTt you just go over there and ask her?? Mom "<lb /><lb />had a resolute look on her face. oLook. SheTs stopped<lb /><lb />oEncountering,? Fran said matter-of-factly. oThatTs what I<lb />now. Go on over there.?<lb /><lb />call it.?<lb /><lb />oMom.? oYou call it what?? Either Fran was the weirdest kid in<lb /><lb />66 LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Georgia, or Georgia was full of weird kids.<lb /><lb />oEncountering. My sister says it all the time. Like itTs her<lb />word, y'know?? Fran looked thoughtful. oI think it<lb />means meeting, experiencing something. ThatTs how |<lb /><lb />use it anyway.?<lb />oI don't get it.?<lb /><lb />Fran sighed. Natalie got the impression Fran thought she<lb />was being very patient with her. oItTs like this,? said<lb />Fran. oSummers down here get really hot. Scorchers. So<lb />muggy some days you can hardly breathe. You don't<lb />wanna do anything but lay around.?<lb /><lb />oYou're telling me.? NatalieTs sentiments exactly.<lb /><lb />oBut when the sun goes down,? Fran went on, oit takes<lb />the heat with it. Makes the air crisp. Feels like biting into<lb />a juicy watermelon.?<lb /><lb />Natalie nodded. Fran wasnTt sounding so crazy<lb />anymore.<lb /><lb />oItTs like the coolness gets into my blood,? said Fran. o1<lb />canTt sit still. I gotta run. By that time, itTs getting too<lb />dark to run to anywhere. So, I run around the house.?<lb /><lb />oI donTt see what encountering has to do with any<lb />of this.?<lb /><lb />oITm getting to that.? Funny how FranTs eyes sparkled<lb />even in the twilight. oRunning, yTknow, just gets you all<lb />hot and sweaty again.?<lb /><lb />oYeah. ThatTs why I hate running,? Natalie broke in.<lb /><lb />oBecause you donTt know how to encounter it. Like I<lb />said, encountering.?<lb /><lb />Natalie waited for Fran to explain. This had better<lb />be good.<lb /><lb />oYou pull around the house for the last time. The bloodTs<lb />pounding through your body. HeatTs pulsing from your<lb />face. Your breathTs coming hard. Your legs feel weak.<lb />You think you'll never be able to take another step, but<lb />somehow you do.?<lb /><lb />Yes! Natalie knew just what that was like. She dreaded<lb />running laps at the end of gym class, felt torment in<lb />every leaden step. More than once she had faked<lb /><lb />a pulled muscle or a cramp to avoid that tortuous<lb /><lb />final lap.<lb /><lb />oAnd when you finally make it,? said Fran, oyou get your<lb />reward.?<lb /><lb />oReward?? Just as Natalie was starting to understand Fran,<lb />to actually agree with her, here she went getting weird<lb />again.<lb /><lb />oSure. Encountering is the reward. You throw yourself<lb />down on the ground and give yourself up to the<lb />experience.?<lb /><lb />Natalie shook her head. There was simply no hope<lb /><lb />for Fran.<lb /><lb />Tie nee ee ee en ee eee<lb /><lb />Fran ignored NatalieTs reaction.<lb /><lb />You can feel your body working your heart, lungs, cir-<lb />culation, the pores of your skin. Stuff you usually take<lb />for granted. A breeze blows across your face. The tree<lb />frogs and crickets start to sing. The lightning bugs come<lb />out. You can feel the coolness of the grass next to your<lb />skin. You can smell it too.?<lb /><lb />Then Natalie felt it. A soothing chill seeping through<lb />denim to her skin. The coolness of the grass, she<lb />thought, and she closed her eyes for a minute to savor<lb />the sensation.<lb /><lb />Fran continued. oSometimes I even want to taste it, so |<lb />break off a blade of grass and chew it. Or cut a slit in it<lb />and make a whistle. Then the moon rises, and if ]<lb /><lb />look real hard, I can see the faintest glimmer of the first<lb />star.? Fran lay back again on the grass. Natalie<lb />supposed she was straining to see that first star. oRight<lb />about then Mama calls me in, and thatTs the end of<lb />encountering for the day.?<lb /><lb />She fixed her gaze on Natalie. oSo, what do you think of<lb />me now, Natalie from New Jersey?? A grin spread over<lb />her face.<lb /><lb />Natalie found herself smiling back. oI think you're cool.<lb /><lb />«And I think I might like to encounter with you some<lb /><lb />time.? She couldn't believe she had really said that.<lb /><lb />Great. Come over tomorrow. WeTre getting together a<lb />game of kickball after supper.?<lb /><lb />Natalie left, feeling the happiest sheTd been since the<lb />move. For the first time, she was actually looking for-<lb />ward to the next day. And she owed it all to encounter-<lb />ing"encountering a new friend.<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb />67<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>R55 Ee EE SS TES<lb /><lb />at<lb /><lb />~~. o*<lb /><lb />. S 40." te A ~ _ ae<lb /><lb />or or rm ai Sr a ai IIe = a atk I ee ~~<lb />-- - - &gt; oe ao z ~ &gt; -<lb /><lb />a =. in 2. - ur<lb /><lb />ya eit, Hee RY, Ags<lb /><lb />ae ie 4<lb /><lb />~ ENG<lb />a Wiis he ue Ban i, ee<lb /><lb />ao<lb />Zz<lb /><lb />"<lb />w<lb />pm |<lb />ac<lb />~<lb />a<lb />a<lb />o)<lb />z<lb />Q<lb /><lb />ac<lb />"<lb />w<lb />=<lb /><lb />OS LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />bs ot ba OST, rm - athe REAR PID SMT Pt . a ti ee : 2 eter mars PKs kx SPARTA M + AEs<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS LITeRAtT ARE TITC TIONS] TFHIRD PLAC<lb /><lb />Rhinoceros Ate the Moon<lb /><lb />BY LAURA MCKAY<lb /><lb />ONE NIGHT ON THE AFRICAN PLAIN Little Cricket said.<lb />old Rhinoceros couldnTt get to sleep. He grumbled . Pa en<lb /><lb />oMaybe we could tickle Moon out of him,<lb />and moaned, and tossed and turned, but couldn't ;<lb />: Monkey said.<lb />fall asleep. '<lb /><lb />. are ; . ae oRhinoceros is not ticklish,? Bird said.<lb />Rhinoceros said, oItTs the light from Moon shining down<lb /><lb />that is keeping me awake!? So he stomped to the top of | oWe could pull on his ears until he gave her back,?<lb />a tall hill, stretched up on his hind legs and with one Lioness offered.<lb />big gulp, he swallowed Moon. Swallowed her whole!<lb /><lb />nf geen She was never very fond of Rhinoceros and the thought<lb />Glump! Then he ambled back to his thicket-den and : ,<lb />. . of tweaking his ears made her happy.<lb />went to sleep, quite content with himself.<lb />oNo, that would just make him all the more cranky,?<lb />Soon, the other animals who lived on the plain began ial ace stir<lb />: itn : Bee cRSA Gazelle said. oRhinoceros has a short temper!<lb />to stir and sniff and wake up. Something is different,<lb />they thought. It is so dark. oI know!? Little Cricket said. oWe can wait until he<lb /># yawns and when his jaws are stretched open wide, I'll<lb />oIt's Moon!? Monkey cried.<lb />hop in and grab hold of Moon. All of you grab hold of<lb /><lb />oWe canTt see!? complained Bird. me, and we can pull her out of his mouth together.?<lb />oWhere is Moon?? cried Gazelle.<lb />oI know,? Little Cricket chirped. oIt was Rhinoceros.<lb /><lb />| saw him swallow Moon in one big gulp.<lb />Glump!?<lb /><lb />oRhinoceros?? Lioness said. oWe'll just see about this!?<lb />And in the dark, all the animals stumbled over to his<lb />thicket-den.<lb /><lb />oRhinoceros!? they called. oOoohoo Rhinoceros!?<lb />oWhat is it?? came a grumpy reply. oCanTt you see ITm<lb />trying to sleep??<lb /><lb />oNo, we canTt see anything because you swallowed<lb />Moon.?<lb /><lb />oOh I did, did I?? the tricky rhinoceros asked.<lb /><lb />oYes, you did!? chirped Little Cricket. oI saw you swallow<lb />her in one big gulp.?<lb /><lb />oWell, maybe I did,? sniffed the old rhinoceros. oMaybe<lb />she was keeping me awake, maybe she was shining too<lb />brightly and maybe I ate her and maybe I won't give<lb />her back, ever. Now go away.?<lb /><lb />oBut Rhinoceros,? Little Cricket sang, ohow will Sun<lb />know when to come up in the morning without Moon<lb />there to tell her? SheTll never come up and it will be<lb />dark all the time!?<lb /><lb />oAll the better,? grumbled Rhinoceros. oThen I can get<lb />some more sleep.?<lb /><lb />The animals walked away stumbling over each other in<lb /><lb />the dark. oHe certainly is a stubborn old rhinoceros!?<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 69<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />70<lb /><lb />Line o1 SS ete 2 rer RENE<lb /><lb />The other animals liked Little CricketTs plan. It was the<lb />best one they had. It was the only one they had. So<lb />they felt their way back to RhinocerosT thicket-den.<lb /><lb />oOh Rhinoceros!? they called.<lb /><lb />oYes,? Rhinoceros sleepily answered as he rolled over<lb /><lb />and yawned.<lb /><lb />Lickety-split, Litthe Cricket hopped into RhinocerosT<lb />mouth and grabbed the edge of Moon.<lb /><lb />oI've got her!? he called. oHelp me, help me pull Moon<lb /><lb />out!?<lb /><lb />All the animals grabbed Little CricketTs feet, and togeth-<lb />er they pulled and pulled and pulled.<lb /><lb />First, a tiny edge of Moon shone out, then more and<lb />more until Cricket was out of RhinocerosT mouth and<lb />half of Moon was out too.<lb /><lb />Rhinoceros did not at all like what was happening. He<lb />finished his yawn with a hard clamp of his jaws and bit<lb />off half of Moon.<lb /><lb />Little Cricket and the other animals fell backwards,<lb />jumped up, grabbed Moon and scurried off into the<lb />night. They ran to the top of the high hill and happily<lb />hung Moon back up in the sky.<lb /><lb />Just enough light shone down so the animals could see<lb /><lb />in the dark. In the morning, Moon told Sun just the<lb />right time to come up, and it was day.<lb /><lb />The next night, Moon got a little bigger and each night<lb />she grew a little more until she was full again.<lb /><lb />On full-moon nights, Rhinoceros would toss and turn<lb /><lb />LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />6 EAS<lb /><lb />~ 4s, Fie "*<lb /><lb />and grumble. Moon would hear Rhinoceros and get<lb />smaller and smaller letting off less and less light until<lb />she all but disappeared.<lb /><lb />Then Moon would grow larger and larger so all the ani-<lb />mals could see and then smaller and smaller so<lb />Rhinoceros wouldnTt eat her again.<lb /><lb />Rhinoceros didnTt want to eat Moon again because she<lb />wasn't very tasty the first time. So he just tossed and<lb />turned on the full-moon nights and slept soundly on<lb />other nights.<lb /><lb />All the plainTs animals were content. Little Cricket<lb />chirpped happily because he had been brave enough to<lb />jump into RhinocerosT jaws and free Moon. He sang at<lb />night, pleased with himself.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />CHILDRENTS LITERATURE/POETRY/FIRST PLACE<lb /><lb />Winter isi<lb /><lb />SY BOAVIGP SGT AS OR<lb /><lb />searching for the perfect rock<lb />my playful hands crept along the creekbed<lb />freezing cold water rushed<lb />over my tiny fingertips<lb /><lb />i searched for the perfect rock<lb />leaned out<lb />pinched off an icicle from the far bank<lb />and thought i'd keep it forever<lb />but it turned to water in my pocket<lb /><lb />searching for the perfect rock<lb />i splashed in wintery solitude<lb />water soaked my toughskins<lb />but not my feet<lb />~cause i had my big green boots tied<lb />in double knots<lb /><lb />searching for the perfect rock<lb />my careful eyes swept up and down<lb />four feet from me i saw<lb />my perfect rock of gold and crimson<lb />reached down and picked it up<lb />and thought as i tossed it back<lb />if i kept it<lb />what would i do tomorrow?<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />¢<lb /><lb />a = y<lb />. lf la . , :<lb />: oF ff ea<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />;<lb /><lb />Bb eid<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION ERIC MANNING<lb /><lb />REBEL<lb /><lb />NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb />7<lb />/<lb /><lb />1<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Sa So A RE SO ~~ a St.<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS LITERATURE/POETRY/SECOND PLACE<lb /><lb />POY Bitty<lb /><lb />WAYNE ROBBINS<lb /><lb />I<lb /><lb />heard<lb /><lb />them say<lb /><lb />that you<lb /><lb />donTt have<lb /><lb />a soul and<lb /><lb />that (divine<lb /><lb />the rules) we<lb />people full of<lb />perfume do and<lb /><lb />if itTs true ]<lb />hereby (here in<lb />spite of all the<lb />suns that rise<lb />to shed their<lb /><lb />light) give<lb /><lb />mine and<lb /><lb />all its Y<lb />joyous z<lb />hopes 3<lb />=<lb />to 3<lb />you. =<lb /><lb />je LAT ERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />CHILDREN'S LITERATURE /POLTET/ THIRD PLACE<lb /><lb />rye.<lb /><lb />BY ERIC HONEYCUTT<lb /><lb />Oh come mighty wind;<lb />come and cool my hand.<lb />Stay with your flag<lb />Always...<lb /><lb />Men stand your ground<lb />We shall abound<lb />Sound of the drum<lb />Stand by your gun<lb /><lb />A cry shakes the land,<lb />With a command<lb />Ears ring<lb /><lb />Lead sings<lb /><lb />One by one<lb />Death begins, today...<lb /><lb />~<lb /><lb />Sere ®<lb />Hy .<lb /><lb />Oh, the blood and the fire screens my world,<lb />But will give me the strength of my life<lb /><lb />From thirteen stars our freedom has burned<lb />With immortal and true inner light<lb /><lb />x<lb /><lb />i Re a ee<lb />+ ~ &gt;.<lb /><lb />Clawing the earth the vanity bleeds;<lb />And the enemy falls in our hands<lb />Colors of red on the cold winter leaves<lb />And Guilford is claiming the land<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION PAUL RUSTAND<lb /><lb />Victory smiles as we stand<lb />In 1781...<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 7<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>BLE r SS So Re ES andthe es : ae ER Rey Se ae<lb /><lb />CHILDREN'S LITERATURE/POETRY/EDITORST<lb /><lb />CHOICE<lb /><lb />Time<lb /><lb />DARLENE retusa. GSS<lb /><lb />ror Bed<lb /><lb />Alex fell asleep at 8:15.<lb /><lb />NickyTs in his room practicing his guitar.<lb />JoeyTs running around teasing the dog.<lb /><lb />It's 9:00.<lb />Dad says, oItTs time for bed.?<lb /><lb />| call from the bannister, oMom come upstairs.?<lb />And she does.<lb /><lb />First stop, my room.<lb /><lb />She sits at my bedside and listens while | pray.<lb />Then a kiss, a smile, an oI love you? and<lb />oyou forgot your Marmalade Maybear.?<lb /><lb />She tucks my teddy in with me,<lb /><lb />leaves the door open a crack, the hall light on.<lb /><lb />Next, Joey and AlexTs room.<lb />Last stop, NickyTs.<lb /><lb />SheTs halfway down the stairs and I ask.<lb />oMom, can you bring kitty up??<lb /><lb />And she does.<lb /><lb />Now, ITm not eight<lb /><lb />and SheTs in Heaven<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION DAVID ROSE<lb /><lb />so I say my prayers to Marmalade Maybear.<lb /><lb />. BEE EBRARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />CHILDRENTS. LITERATURE<lb /><lb />Rabbit Whispers<lb /><lb />BOVEFTE<lb /><lb />Fox hunted rabbit<lb />sits motionless :<lb /><lb />POETRY<lb /><lb />fur bristles stiff ry &amp; Seth<lb /><lb />against the breeze<lb />long ears listen<lb />and instincts whisper<lb />oWait, be quiet!?<lb />Across the meadow<lb />Fox approaches<lb /><lb />RabbitTs heart<lb />ignores instinct-whispers<lb />and shouts<lb />to feet bred<lb />for speed<lb />oRun! Now!?<lb />Fear mixes,<lb />whispers<lb />turn to shouts<lb />oWait, Run!?<lb />Confused,<lb />Rabbit twitches<lb />Fox<lb />catches the movement<lb />and approaches<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATION DARLENE PELLICCIO<lb /><lb />on whisper-padded feet<lb /><lb />.<lb />nett<lb /><lb />EDITORST<lb /><lb />CHOICE<lb /><lb />REBEL<lb /><lb />NINETY-FOUR<lb /><lb />75<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>H5393aD ViNvd NOUVALSNTI<lb /><lb />= a<lb /><lb />a<lb /><lb />senate Sa a rare ee ik de<lb />" s - * 5 -"" :<lb /><lb />eine astern &gt;. ieee es<lb /><lb />SS<lb /><lb />_"<lb /><lb />"<lb /><lb />ARis<lb /><lb />AND<lb /><lb />RARY<lb /><lb />» Sao 2 eae SPT<lb />Nee oe<lb /><lb />o~<lb />ee<lb /><lb />LITE<lb /><lb />zs aba SaTES<lb /><lb />ott<lb />"6<lb /><lb />ini react<lb /><lb />, WS:<lb /><lb />Feo" bs ane slate pt beter Se ba 626° ?,?2 8 Oe<lb />ae orl TPE ee SIs ta ee ey oe BF Pe Date Bd oe Saree 1.2 8 «2 Ba oe<lb /><lb />PLT od 24d ea) ba a SDT Bos Be ds fe Bs ha ha}<lb />Sate ee Gsea ee ear e ease iret Pe tLe eared ed oo oad od od oe Pe OT Cr et o7 od PC eee ee tees tees 2 Pier oe Fe ioe Part ea bd te or De ba oe Pe hd bs Pea Te PERE a La ge oe Ea OE ES ee Ot Boar Pe Ee Lea Ea eae Le Era a ea eee ai ee ee eee<lb /></p>
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        <p>Qu<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS LITERATURE/NON-FICTION/SECOND PLACE<lb /><lb />¢ das<lb /><lb />BY ELIZABETH MCDAVID<lb /><lb />LAGOS, THE CITY OF LAKES, IS SAMMY<lb />NzewiTs first taste of Nigeria, his parentsT homeland.<lb />Rams tethered on the sidewalks! Throngs of people<lb />everywhere! Vendors hawking goods carried on<lb /><lb />their heads! Mudwalled houses and tin-topped<lb />shanties! Skyscrapers! Bicycles and buses, motorcycles<lb />and cars"no traffic lights! Congested streets and<lb />open-air markets!<lb /><lb />Can any American city compare?<lb /><lb />Never! ThatTs why Sammy hates to leave. But tomorrow<lb />in the village, festivities begin for the wedding of his<lb />nda (aunt), and he canTt wait to meet his Nigerian<lb />relatives for the first time. Sammy suggests they travel<lb />on a brightly painted truck called a omammy wagonT;<lb />his parents tell him heTll have to settle for a luxury<lb /><lb />bus ride.<lb /><lb />The bus rumbles and bumps along winding dirt roads,<lb />through evergreen forests, where monkeys swing in<lb />the branches of towering iroko trees. His mother points<lb />to a sunbird which swoops across the road. Finally,<lb />their destination: prosperous little Aba, where most of<lb />the houses are brick. In poorer villages, dwellings are<lb />fashioned from wattle (twigs woven together) or mud,<lb />with thatched roofs.<lb /><lb />In the obi of the family compound, Sammy and his lit-<lb />tle sister Ogechi get a big hug from their grandparents,<lb /><lb />onne-nne? and onne-nna.? An 067 is like a parlor<lb /><lb />detached from the house, used for entertaining guests<lb />and holding family meetings. Within the compound are<lb />clustered all the houses of his fatherTs relatives.<lb />Traditionally, every family maintains a house in the<lb />home village, no matter where else they may live.<lb />SammyTs parents plan also to build a house here,<lb />though they will continue living in America.<lb /><lb />,<lb /><lb />The evening brings the obride price? ceremony, similar<lb /><lb />to an engagement party. The groom presents the<lb /><lb />Wedding?<lb /><lb />brideTs family with a dowry or token. Perhaps it will be<lb />money, perhaps a goat or cow. Sammy feels very<lb />grown up, dressed like the men, in his agbada, a long,<lb />full shirt with pants underneath, a cape, and matching<lb />hat"so grown up that he thinks he should be allowed<lb />to join the adults in drinking omai ngwo? (wine made<lb />from the raffia palm) and bestowing blessings on the<lb />bridal couple. oNot a chance,? says his mother. oWatch<lb />the dancing instead.?<lb /><lb />Sammy rises early on the day of the wedding. He will<lb />be a ringbearer, one of many children in the wedding<lb />party. Ogechi is too young, but there will be several<lb />flower girls, bridesmaids, page boys, and a miniature<lb />bride. Christian weddings in Nigeria are usually huge,<lb />and more formal than western ceremonies. The entire<lb />community attends.<lb /><lb />A lavish reception follows. All the excitement has made<lb />Sammy hungry. His mouth waters as he eyes the ohigh<lb />table? spread with a hodgepodge of western and<lb />African food, from goatTs meat and rice to chin-chin<lb />(fried pastries). When will the speeches end and the<lb />eating begin? At last, heTs allowed to dig in, and he<lb />tries everything; his least favorite is the bitter kola nuts.<lb />The best part of the reception? Drinking Fanta soda<lb />with Ogechi, while the orchestra plays and the<lb />grownups dance, every now and then slipping money<lb />to the bride and groom.<lb /><lb />The day concludes with a party at the groomTs family<lb />home, with still more food, this time, strictly African:<lb />ofofu,? cassava, yams, and Nigerian dishes made with<lb />fish and ramTs meat. Here Sammy has a chance to play<lb />with his Nigerian cousins, but thereTs one problem; the<lb />cousins speak only Ibo, the tribal language, and Pidgin<lb />English. They manage, though, to get through to<lb />Sammy. oCome chop,? they tell him, which means,<lb />oCome eat.? And Sammy, though his belly feels stuffed<lb />already, somehow manages to comply.<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR /7/7<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>SO APL IIE oe Swe re o3 -<lb />7 et Seen SE ES. wee Rat TSIEN 9 os ~~~ a eo 2 ae<lb />. ca . 9 t% caper &gt; r a. - ae - * 0a tee tebe ISS. x - " " = "<lb />. ; m . . . Sena ren ata on TEE SINT 6<lb /><lb />ea WANTED<lb /><lb />FE AS YOUNG SKINNY WIRY FELLOWS<lb />not overeightcen. Must be expert<lb />riders wes (0 risk, death dajly.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />?"? week<lb /><lb />. = °y 2<lb />PRY | Cettval Overland Ex<lb />~a<lb /><lb />, Manigomnery St<lb /><lb />Mata<lb />ape Pgh ORE<lb /><lb />ILLUSTRATIONS PAUL RUSTAND<lb /><lb />78 LITERARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />\ \<lb /></p>
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        <p>CHILDRENTS LITERATURE<lb /><lb />Pony<lb /><lb />o Wanted: young, skinny, wiry fellows not over age 18.<lb />Must be expert riders, willing to risk death daily.?<lb /><lb />This ad appeared in frontier newspapers in 1800. Reply,<lb />and you became a rider for the Pony Express, rushing<lb />mail on horseback from Missouri to California and back,<lb />across 2000 miles of deserts and treacherous mountain<lb />trails, braving blizzards, sleet, mud, rain...and sometimes<lb />angry Indians.<lb /><lb />Before the Pony Express, letters lumbering by stage-<lb />coach across the West took a month or more to reach<lb />the booming new state of California. Since the discov-<lb />ery of gold there in 1848, settlers had flocked to<lb />California like hawks to a henhouse. Every last one<lb />pined for news from back East. And with the country<lb />on the brink of civil war, they wanted news fast. What<lb />~f the war should begin and end without their knowing<lb />the first shot had been fired?<lb /><lb />A man named William Russell believed mail could be<lb />hustled west in just ten days, by boys as young as 14,<lb />astride speeding horses. Scrawny boys"so a pony could<lb />run its fastest. Boys like Robert oPony Bob? Haslam, still<lb />in his teens, and weighing barely a hundred pounds.<lb /><lb />When Pony Bob pledged on with the Pony Express at<lb />its beginning in April 1860, he recognized the dangers<lb />he would face in carrying out its unwritten creed: mail<lb />first, horse second, self last. He didnTt figure on such<lb />devilment as an Indian war.<lb /><lb />The Paiute Indians of Nevada were enraged by white<lb />settlers encroaching on their land. All the antelopes had<lb />been slaughtered, water holes polluted, and the pinon<lb />trees, whose winter nuts kept the Paiutes from starving,<lb />had been razed for firewood. Young braves retaliated<lb />with attacks on the Pony Express"burning relay sta-<lb />tions, stealing ponies, and ambushing riders.<lb /><lb />NON-FICTION<lb /><lb />PIRST PLACES<lb /><lb />Mail<lb /><lb />BY ELIZABETH MCDAVID<lb /><lb />An ambush"thatTs what worried Bob now. His<lb />Mexican compadre, Bart Riles, was late getting in from<lb />his orun.? Bob pushed up the rim of his Stetson hat, and<lb />fastened his eyes on the glaring desert flats.<lb /><lb />oReckon Bart ran into Paiute trouble?? asked the<lb /><lb />station keeper, as he led BobTs saddled mustang out of<lb />the corral.<lb /><lb />oMaybe,? Bob said, grinning. oBut it didnTt stop him.? He<lb /><lb />pointed to a dust cloud rising in the distance.<lb /><lb />In no time flat, BartTs lather-soaked pony was pounding<lb />up to the adobe swing station. Dust swirled around its<lb />hooves, burying even BartTs company issue red shirt and<lb />blue pants.<lb /><lb />Little time for Pony Bob to voice relief at the safe arrival<lb />of his friend. Only two minutes allowed for switching<lb />riders. He yanked from BartTs saddle a square leather<lb />sheet, the mochila, and fit it over the saddlehorn and<lb />cantle of his own fresh mount. Cantinas, locked leather<lb />boxes sewn to each corner of the mochila, held the<lb />mail. It was BobTs job to safeguard the tissue-thin letters<lb />and news dispatches in those cantinas, and deliver them<lb />to his home station, 50 miles distant, where another<lb />rider would be waiting.<lb /><lb />Pony Bob spurred his mustang and thundered out into<lb />the deepening shadows of late afternoon. He traded<lb />horses at each of the first three relay stations; when he<lb />galloped into Reese River station, no fresh mount stood<lb />waiting to relieve his tired pony.<lb /><lb />Two blasts on the horn tucked into BobTs belt brought<lb />the station keeper running from the stone hut. oSorry,<lb />Bob.? he said. oAn army patrol took every horse we<lb />had. Claimed you couldn't get past them warring<lb />Paiutes no how.?<lb /><lb />REBEL NINETY-FOUR 7/9<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />SO<lb /><lb />PPL RISE ee a<lb /><lb />Siptetienit t,t<lb /><lb />Bob knew he had to try, at whatever pace his weary ani-<lb />mal could hold. He pressed on.<lb /><lb />But more bad luck awaited at the next stop, his home<lb />station, where he had counted on a hot meal and a bed.<lb />BobTs relief rider, a substitute, was spooked by the<lb />Indian hostilities. He refused to make the run.<lb /><lb />Bob squeezed the back of his own neck, trying to wring<lb />the fatigue from his aching muscles. Three more quick<lb />changes, and heTd be at SmithTs Creek. oI'll take the<lb />mochila on myself,? he said.<lb /><lb />The sun had long since dropped below the sandy<lb />Nevada hills, and the alkali bottoms were washed in<lb />inky blackness. Bob strained to keep watch on his<lb />ponyTs ears; a pony could sense danger lurking nearby.<lb /><lb />Sure enough, while racing through a shallow bow] car-<lb />peted with sage, the ponyTs ears flipped up. Arrows sang<lb />through the night; rifles flashed and roared. Paiutes! Bob<lb />crouched low, holding his Colt revolver ready, and<lb /><lb />LITER<lb /><lb />ARY AND ARTS<lb /><lb />a . ee<lb /><lb />urged his horse to greater speed. A grain fed Pony<lb />Express mount could usually outrun the IndiansT grass<lb />fed mustangs. BobTs pony tore through the brush, leav-<lb />ing the Paiutes and their ambush far behind.<lb /><lb />He handed over the mochila at SmithTs Creek station,<lb />and sank into bed, but his nap was not to be. The rider<lb />heading east came in with a broken leg, barely able to<lb />sit the saddle. Would the mochila be delayed? No! Pony<lb />Bob would ride again! When he finally dragged in to<lb />his home station, young Bob Haslam had ridden 370<lb />miles in 36 hours; the longest single haul in Pony<lb />Express history.<lb /><lb />And alas, a short history it was. On October 26, 1861,<lb />western newspapers reported, oThe Pony Express will<lb />be discontinued from this date.? Pony mail couldnTt com-<lb />pete with the newly completed transcontinental tele-<lb />graph. Ponies pounding across the West would carry<lb />mail no more, but the legends created by the boy heroes<lb />of the Pony Express would be carried on.<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>%<lb /><lb />epee<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Be»<lb />oe<lb /><lb />eS<lb /><lb />~<lb /><lb />wom Re? Serie" a<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>~es fk oe Fe tee ee eS ee<lb /><lb />AUTHORS<lb />Donnie Anderson Jr.<lb />Ginger L. Ausband<lb />Angela Bagri<lb /><lb />Lisa D. Bannister<lb />Camille R. Beck<lb /><lb />J.E. Boyette<lb />Christopher L. Brannen<lb />Mark F. Brett<lb /><lb />Paula Brothers<lb /><lb />Brian Buchanan<lb />Heather McClean Burt<lb />James E. Casey<lb />Clifford J. Coffey<lb />James H. Culpepper<lb />William R. Doar<lb />Joseph Elchehabi<lb /><lb />Kay Getsinger<lb /><lb />Amy R. Gidley<lb />Matthew C. Gill<lb />Timothy C. Hampton<lb />Cindy Hawkins<lb /><lb />John Herron<lb /><lb />Kris B. Hoffler<lb /><lb />Eric Honeycutt<lb /><lb />Jason Horton<lb />Christian Infinito<lb />Davin W. Jackson<lb />Preston Lashley<lb /><lb />Kelle Xaviar Lawrence<lb />David Scott Lemon<lb />Christopher T. McCaffrey<lb />Heather E. McClean<lb />Elizabeth McDavid<lb />Laura E. McKay<lb /><lb />J. Mark McKeown<lb />John McManus<lb /><lb />John Marte<lb /><lb />Patrick J. Matthews<lb />Angela Marie Moss<lb />Amelia K. Mustard<lb />John Winslow Nicklas<lb />Nikki Outland<lb /><lb />Robert E. Owens<lb /><lb />Paul Pagliughi<lb />Darlene Pelliccio<lb />Traci Leigh Perry<lb />Gary D. Potts<lb /><lb />Steve Randolph<lb />Angela Raper<lb />Matthew Readling<lb />Lois Redmond<lb /><lb />Angela Bacon Reid<lb />Wayne Robbins<lb />Kimberly A. Roberts<lb />Jane C. Sabatini<lb /><lb />ALL CONTRIBUTING<lb /><lb />Heather Seanor<lb /><lb />Jeffrey T. Smith<lb /><lb />Mary Anna Smith<lb />Chandra Speight<lb />April L. Surratt<lb />Larry Justain Sykes<lb /><lb />Jason Tilley<lb /><lb />Robert Todd<lb /><lb />Sarah Wahlert<lb />Michael W. Walker<lb />Cynthia J. Watkins<lb /><lb />Joshua H. White<lb /><lb />Michael Jason Williams<lb />Dale Williamson<lb />Bradley J. Williford<lb />Amy E. Wirtz<lb /><lb />Laura L. Wiser<lb /><lb />Brian E. Wright<lb /><lb />Laura Wright<lb /><lb />ARTISTS<lb />Sophia J. Allison<lb />Bess M. Andrews<lb />Stormy P. Averitte<lb />Irene F. Bailey<lb />Angela Bagri<lb />Kristen Barber<lb />Brian Barker<lb /><lb />Matt Bassett<lb /><lb />John F. Bateman<lb /><lb />Fabrizio Bianchi<lb /><lb />Jeanne Brady<lb />Johnathan W. Byrd<lb /><lb />Tina C. Catoe<lb />William Chadwick<lb />Dwayne Clark<lb />Clifford J. Coffey<lb />Steven Cozart<lb />Christine L. Cranford<lb /><lb />James H. Culpepper<lb />Jack Curry<lb /><lb />Adrienne S. Dellinger<lb />Bill Dermody<lb /><lb />J.K. Dowdee<lb /><lb />Katherine Dymond<lb />Melia Elliott<lb /><lb />Robert A. Ellis<lb />Kevin Allen Evans<lb />Stacy Evans<lb />Tamara B. Fedder<lb /><lb />Joyce Gardner<lb /><lb />Hanna Kaltenbrunner Gilham<lb />Erica Gimson<lb />David R. Grahek<lb /><lb />Jamie Griffin<lb /><lb />AUTHORS AND ARTISTS<lb /><lb />Melissa E. Griffin<lb /><lb />Joseph A. Grimes<lb />John Harrell<lb /><lb />W. Keith Hobgood<lb />Mary V. Hollingsworth<lb />Aileen A. Hynes<lb />Christian Infinito<lb /><lb />Jerry Jackson<lb /><lb />DTjean JawRunner<lb />Cheryl H. Johnson<lb />Ray Kaylor<lb /><lb />Jennifer Green Kidd<lb /><lb />Tom Kim<lb /><lb />Jamie W. Kirkpatrick<lb /><lb />Naphavady Ladara<lb />Kathleen M. Lamb<lb /><lb />Joshua P. Lesniack<lb /><lb />Scott Lewis<lb />Andrew P. Linton<lb />Sean Livingstone<lb />Lisa Marie Ludwig<lb />Sheri Maffiore<lb />Eric Manning<lb /><lb />Javier Marquez F.<lb /><lb />Dietrich Maune<lb /><lb />Justus Mercer<lb /><lb />Ranie E. Morgan<lb />Eric Osborne<lb />Kimberly A. Payne<lb />Darlene Pelliccio<lb />Carrie Ann Plank<lb />Gary Potts<lb />Rebecca Putze<lb />Matthew J. Reynolds<lb />Todd M. Robert<lb />Michele D. Roberts<lb />David K. Rose<lb />Caroline Rust<lb />Marcia Sanders<lb />Gregory A. Scott<lb />Beth Ann Senger<lb />Laura Sharar<lb /><lb />Brian K. Simpson<lb />Brad Smith<lb /><lb />Kristi Stainback<lb /><lb />Jeannette A. Stevenson<lb />John K. Stiles<lb /><lb />Scott Stroud<lb />Alice Swart<lb /><lb />Jennifer L. Tedder<lb /><lb />Lori A. Twardowski<lb />Linda Wertwein<lb />Lanier Williams<lb /><lb />Joseph Winter<lb /><lb />Brian Woodlief<lb /><lb /></p>
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