Here’s
another in my series of short-short story experiments. I hope you enjoy it!
Four
Ways to Prepare A Fish
Lemon
and Garlic
The waiter delivers me on a
fancy plate, covered with what I think they call a cloche—that shiny dome you
see in old movies where people have servants. Chef Reginald Erlach steamed me
himself, with a little lemon and a mild garlic sauce. The place is nice, and
the man picked a good table, one isolated enough so that the other patrons
aren’t going to notice when his girlfriend starts to cry. It’s a
classic—another woman. A fellow lawyer. Tall, slim, Ivy-league educated,
although he isn’t going to mention that. He’s going to play the “grown apart”
card. I know, because I see it. I always see it ahead of time, just before I
reincarnate. The vision comes either as I’m dying, yanked from the water with a
brief but horrible burn in my lungs, or it comes as I am born, in a glorious
salty rush of new life. Either way, I always see my future, indelibly bound up with
the next doomed couple. I’m the break-up meal. I can’t comprehend what karma
has led my soul to this fate, but I have long come to accept it.
The crying starts, then the
yelling. She’s making a scene to embarrass him, but also because she’s hurt.
She considers throwing her water in his face, but decides he’s not worth that level
of drama. Also, a part of her is secretly relieved. She met another man a few
weeks ago, a scruffy, curly-haired potter with glasses and a sprawling laugh.
She felt fully at ease with him, natural, herself. She sees herself laughing
with him, throwing off the mask of pretention she’s so carefully maintained for
this man.
Cedar
Grilled
The woman is an avid outdoorsy
type, bare-faced, what they call nowadays “crunchy”. They’re camping. The man hates
camping, but he loves her. At least he thinks he does; he’s never been in love
before but he figures this is what it feels like: Amiable attraction. There’s
been something heavy and unspoken between them for a while now. The tension has
been growing on this trip. She’s been uncharacteristically irritable and
stand-offish. He’s been spending a lot of time on his own at the lake, drinking
cheap canned beer. She grills me on a cedar wood plank with a dash of dill and
black pepper, and divides me up carefully between two biodegradable paper
plates. He finishes me in two big bites, and she yells at him for being an unconscious
consumer, thoughtless, deadened to the natural world, an automaton obsessed
with filling his spiritual void with useless material goods. He suspects this
is about the car. Last week, he bought an acid-yellow Porsche Turbo S new off the
lot and drove up to her llama farm, honking proudly. He was puzzled by her
disgusted look and refusal to jump in and go on a joyride with him. He drove
home and spent the evening alone, polishing the car in his driveway.
She vanishes into the tent and
thrashes around for a little while. When she emerges, she has a full pack on
her back and the LED lantern in her hand. She throws him the keys to her truck.
She’s going to hike back to town and call her friend Ellie to pick her up. He
can finish the trip without her. She hopes he will take advantage of this time
alone to think about his life choices and reconsider his values. She doesn’t
kiss him or hug him before clambering down the hill into the deepening dusk. He
eats the rest of me from her plate and settles into the tent to listen to the
game in peace.
Baked
and Breaded
She breads me and bakes me in a
shallow casserole dish with a mushroom cream sauce. Her mother’s recipe. Over
the years, she’s become an expert at timing meals to coincide with his arrival
home at 6:20 on the dot. This is one of the last meals she’ll have to time. She
sets me on the table just as he enters, and carefully moves the envelope of
papers away from where it might get soiled with food. She lets him get halfway
through the meal before handing him the papers. She wants him to know there’s
no shame in this, no failure. The kids are on their own now, and they’ve had
nothing between them for a long time. They did what they were supposed to do—married
young, bought a house, built a good life for their children. She can’t face one
more meal eaten in glum silence, one more weekend of politely ignoring each
other. She doesn’t want anything but her fair share, enough to get a condo, a
car, and a little to live on as she reinvents herself at the age of sixty-seven.
His face is pale and immobile, but he doesn’t argue. They finish me
efficiently, and she clears the plates. As she sets the dishes in the sink, he
comes up behind her and touches her, for the first time in years, gently on the
back.
Three weeks later, she is in a
nice first-floor townhouse with a garden patch and a picture window. He’s
fixing the house up to sell, and considering a hiatus to travel. He’s never
been to Europe.
Broiled
with a Honey Glaze
He broils me with a honey
glaze, because his man loves a good coating of sweetness on everything, as
evidenced by the soft paunch of his once-slim belly. A little sugar to soften
the blow, he figures. He packs it in an insulated carry bag along with a bottle
of mead, and meets his boyfriend in the park at “their” spot. He’s struck in
the chest with sharp blow of pain, knowing that this is the last time they’ll
meet here, but it’s short lived. He sets a strict timeline on all of his relationships:
Exactly eleven months from start to finish. It’s eleven months to the day since
they became official. Time to nip this thing in the bud, before needless
complications set in, and talks turn to moving in together and “deepening their
commitment”. He warned him, he warns all of his lovers, but they never believe
him. They think they’ll be the one to change his mind. This one is no
exception. He never even eats me. He throws me on the grass in a rage and
stomps on me, takes the mead, and stalks off to get day-drunk by the river. I
hate it when my flesh is wasted, but that’s the way it goes.
As for myself, I will never
have a lover to break up with, a spouse to leave. It is for me to spawn and
respawn, to rise up on the water, to be plucked from the cold depths over and
over, to live with these visions, these memories. The sweetest moments are the
ones in which I am considered, and thrown back.
--Kristen McHenry
1 comment:
I love the last paragraph. Reminds me of Tennyson's words: "Ours not to reason why, ours but to do and die". But isnt that the sweetest moment for all of us, when the pattern is changed, when we are considered.
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