a beard! You have a great chin! But weâre busy gardening, rooting around in galvanized tubs full of okra and zucchini and purple hull peas. Hot peppers, since the sweet breeds wonât take. The autumn light down here isnât so thin as in New York. I am bare-handed, turning up the soil around the roots, grit up under my fingers and in the web of my hands. I am making life.
But down in the zucchini roots I find a knot of maggots, balled up squirming like theyâve wormed a portal up from maggot hell and come pouring out blind and silent. And I think: I am only growing homes for maggots. Everything is this way. In the end we are only making more homes, better homes, for maggots.
Jacob smiles at me and says, like he did: âIâm just not ready for your life. Itâs too hard. Too many people get hurt.â
I wake up groaning, hangover clotted in my sinuses. Staring up at the vent above my mattress I realize thereâs no heat. Itâs broken again.
The cold is sharp, though. Sterile. It makes me go. I get to the hospital on time and Maryâs waiting for me, smiling, my favorite partner armed with coffee and danishes and an egg sandwich from the enigmatic food truck only she can find. For my hangover, of course. Mary, bless her, knows my schedule.
Later that day we save a manâs life.
He swam out into the river to die. Weâre first on the scene and I am stupid, so stupid: I jump in to save him. The waterâs late-autumn cold, the kind of chill I am afraid will get into my marrow and crystallize there, so that later in life, curled up in the summer sun with a lover, Iâll feel a pang and know that a bead of ice came out of my bone and stuck in my heart. I used to get that kind of chest pain growing up, see. I thought they were ice crystals that formed when we went to see ex-Dad in Colorado, where the world felt high and thin, everything offered up on an altar to the truth behind the indifferent cloth of stars.
Iâm thinking all this as I haul the drowning man back in. I feel so cold and so aware. My mind goes everywhere. Goes to Jacob, of course.
Offered up on an altar. We used to play a sex game like that, Jacob and I. You know, a sexy sacrificeâisnât that the alchemy of sex games? You take something appalling and you make it part of your appetites. Jesus, I used to think it was cute, and now describing it Iâm furiously embarrassed. Jacob was into all kinds of nerd shit. For him I think the fantasy was always kind of Greco-Roman, Andromeda on the rocks, but I always wondered if he dared imagine me as some kind of Aztec princess, which would be too complicatedly racist for him to suggest. Heâs dating a white girl now. It doesnât bother me but Mom just wonât let it go. Sheâs sharp about it, too: she has a theory that Jacob feels heâs now Certified Decent, having passed his qualifying exam, and now heâll go on to be a regular shithead.
And Maryâs pulling me up onto the pier, and Iâm pulling the suicide.
He nearly dies in the ambulance. We swaddle him in heat packs and blankets and Mary, too, swaddles him, smiling and flirting, itâs okay, what a day for a swim, does he know that in extreme situations rescuers are advised to provide skin-to-skin contact?
See, Maryâs saying, see, itâs not so bad here, not so cold. Youâll meet good people. Youâll go on.
Huddled in my own blankets I meet the swimmerâs warm brown eyes and just then the ambulance slams across a pothole. He fibrillates. Alarms shriek. I see him start to go, receding, calm, warm, surrounded by people trying to save him, and I think that if he went now, before his family found out, before he had to go back to whatever drove him into the river, itâd be best.
Oh, God, the hurt canât be undone. Itâd be best.
His eyes open. They peel back like membranes. I see a thin screen, thinner than Colorado sky, and in the vast
Matt Christopher, Stephanie Peters