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All of Me Page 4


  It’s an old, broken-down plant nursery,

  a big gravel parking lot

  with light-pink stones.

  Vines grow wild over old

  wooden fence posts

  and rusting wire.

  This is a place that could be anything.

  We walk in slowly.

  The place is open to the sky in every direction,

  salt and wet air,

  corroded terraces

  covered with cracked plastic sheeting

  and piles of collected driftwood,

  ornamental and smooth.

  A kitchen, bathroom with an old mirror,

  and lots of tiny rooms for planting

  and storage and everything else.

  Space.

  My mother walks to the center of the courtyard

  and spins. She actually spins.

  She does this in moments where things come together.

  This, she says, is ours.

  Ours. I say it to myself.

  We look at each other,

  unsure.

  We can actually hear the waves crashing down the beach,

  the real and the dream, like so much sand and water.

  Inside

  There are shelves in the main room for display,

  an old kitchen,

  several workrooms,

  alcoves, a broken kiln,

  plastic bags of molded soil.

  All the rooms

  face the courtyard

  in a giant horseshoe.

  Dirt everywhere,

  spread across the floors,

  broken wood railings,

  and cracked concrete,

  an old walkway

  between growing things,

  vines reaching

  and flowers sprouting,

  the ground left to its own.

  In the middle of the courtyard

  is a plant graveyard,

  organic matter dried to black.

  A mulch pile, smelly, worm-filled.

  I climb to the top

  and stomp down a conquering foot.

  This is the place

  where my mother will escape,

  reclaim her artist self,

  and take me with her.

  Who am I? I think, Pick’s question

  still burning in my chest.

  This question, like me,

  too big to be asked

  or answered in words.

  Digging in the Dirt

  A marine layer

  sits on top of everything,

  washing the wood.

  More cleaning today.

  Mom moves boxes,

  pedestals, containers,

  and paint.

  I haul boxes of brushes

  from car to studio,

  sponges and rounds,

  filberts and fans,

  mops and riggers,

  horsehair and synthetic

  mixed together.

  Pick and I clear the mulch pile,

  sorting the larger debris,

  random leaves and cuttings.

  The smell is noxious, overwhelming.

  Chemicals release,

  mix with saltwater air,

  organic things,

  beautiful things,

  breaking down.

  Even solid things like buildings can change,

  sometimes corrode when they are not cared for.

  By the time the sun is overhead,

  my arms are sore, tired, scratched,

  my legs chafed red,

  but it feels good.

  We do this for hours,

  slowly at times,

  until the last piece of rot

  is undone and pushed away.

  Trolls

  On Sunday, my mother

  cuts the ends of a clay brick,

  gives me and Pick

  each a half brick,

  a bowl of water,

  wire-threaded sticks,

  and a wooden spoon.

  Use this—she points

  to the edge of some chrome tool—

  for the finer points.

  Pick makes

  simple, definable creatures.

  At first it seems that they’re

  from the game we are creating,

  but soon I can tell they’re

  trolls or gnomes of some kind,

  big as thumbs.

  Some have hats that actually can come off.

  Some have weapons

  or pets.

  I make one,

  green and tall,

  with a long staff,

  and another, its

  belly falling over its waist.

  He fills a tray with the creatures,

  a metal baking sheet

  where the trolls are clamoring

  to make their way off,

  to maybe slip into the dark places

  of the gallery.

  We take them to burn in the round

  kiln in the courtyard.

  When they are finished

  and airing in the sun,

  we paint the trolls

  different colors,

  sloppy at first, but we get better.

  Pick puts tiny

  price tags on their feet,

  then hides them around the gallery.

  Later on, some kids will find

  one and pull it down in wonder,

  carrying it

  two-handed to some

  wandering grown-up.

  When one sells, we call it

  going home.

  We make a clay box the size of a big fist,

  and trolls crawl all over it.

  We put money in the box

  every time

  a troll goes home.

  Sunday Drive

  By the next Sunday,

  my father visits,

  and he puts us

  in the back of the Sunbird.

  The wind is blowing my head off.

  My father drives with the top down.

  Always.

  He wears Porsche sunglasses

  and a long coat

  with a million pockets.

  He was made for this.

  But my insides are a step behind

  each twist and turn.

  He traces the lines

  of the winding roads

  and me and Pick hang on

  until it’s over.

  My father comes on Sundays, sometimes.

  Doesn’t stay long.

  A Talk in the Car

  Mom loves to take drives too,

  in an old yellow four-door truck

  she bought to haul her creations.

  We learn how to handle

  the winding roads.

  I listen to my mother talk

  about a million ideas

  she has for the nursery.

  I think she thinks I’m an adult.

  I learn to listen.

  Somewhere

  between Muir Woods

  and Stinson,

  where the road winds

  and is full of disaster,

  Pick asleep in the back,

  she starts to talk about my father.

  When I met him, you know, he was so handsome.

  And then some details about suits

  and hairstyles, Hawaii, crashing a dune buggy,

  riding horses.

  Today, just before the Bolinas Lagoon

  spills blue from behind the mountain,

  as I am lost in my own thoughts,

  she says,

  He was incredible at lovemaking.

  Her accent suddenly flares,

  almost unrecognizable,

  thrown back into a Bronx summer.

  I don’t look. I just stare at the window.

  I wonder what would happen

  if I opened the door and rolled

  out of the car?

  What about you?

  Do you ever, you know? />
  It feels like she read a book

  or watched a TV show

  that told her to “talk to your kid.”

  I say nothing, look toward the Pacific.

  I grip my seat belt.

  I want to tell her what I’m going through,

  that the changes in my body terrify me,

  that I’m seeing myself in the mirror

  and I feel so much weight,

  that I’m filled up,

  sometimes with sadness,

  sometimes with hate.

  I want to tell her that I lie all the time

  so people will like me.

  I lie to myself about why I’m this way.

  I want to tell her that everything is changing.

  I want to tell her that I don’t understand

  anything I’m going through,

  and that my mind has a mind of its own.

  We roll straight into town,

  turn left into the nursery,

  the quiet crackling of gravel

  beneath slow-moving rubber tires,

  and she waits, looking at me.

  If I could, I would just let her see

  inside my mind because I don’t know

  how to tell her,

  so instead I just say,

  I’m fine.

  Fat at the Beach

  At the beach,

  boogie boards and sand shovels,

  shirts and sandals

  and towels in a heap,

  and everyone runs to the water,

  the sand kicked under heels.

  I feel the way my body flops.

  The freckled girl looks over,

  runs next to me,

  stares, points,

  and says, Fat.

  When I hear them say fat, I feel

  naked

  completely uncomfortable.

  I slip,

  fall back,

  the front

  of my black shirt

  rolls up

  my stomach,

  exposed

  fat,

  the ribs

  tucked inside

  undulating rolls

  of fleshy whale skin.

  Silence lingers

  in the sand.

  It’s the stark,

  sudden loneliness,

  the no-pants dream

  made real.

  It seems to matter more now

  than ever before,

  a weight on my body

  like a friend suddenly cruel,

  like a bad word whispered

  in a library aisle,

  stupid, moron,

  or the first punch

  in my gut where I can’t

  find my breath.

  This new feeling,

  a sudden and irrevocable

  change because of a word

  and a look

  and a lifetime

  of a feeling

  that I never understood

  until now,

  where everyone else is perfect

  and my life is different

  because someone called me fat

  and I am.

  The Game

  Pick and I

  focus a lot on our game.

  We started making it last year,

  a new role-playing game

  about the future:

  charts and dice and drawings,

  giant robots bigger than the Golden Gate

  rise out of the ocean

  to protect San Francisco.

  We script the first aliens ever discovered,

  life-forms, brilliant engineers

  who talk to machines with their minds,

  merge with humans,

  eat radiation.

  We fill walls with graph paper,

  hinge the edges together

  in tape and glue.

  We calculate probabilities and probability curves,

  argue about how-many-sided dice we need.

  We structure character generation,

  attributes, debate

  the importance of charisma,

  invent heroes,

  plot cities and space stations

  and underwater domes,

  storyline after storyline

  between humans, creatures, robots, and monsters.

  We place a Dungeon Master’s Guide

  in the center of wherever we work,

  our inspiration, a shrine to Gary Gygax

  one of the creators of the original

  Dungeons & Dragons.

  In school

  we learned

  to make a plan,

  write it down,

  so the work is real.

  We linger in twilight

  before the sun rises,

  two boys with the world

  in front of them,

  making a choice

  to be like brothers.

  Pizza

  Friday evening,

  the lights in the town come on

  in a slow flicker.

  Families walk here to there for dinner,

  and we watch the world happen

  from behind the nursery fence,

  rusted wire and rotted wood.

  Pick and I notice

  how many kids there are,

  girls our age.

  Near the nursery

  there is a pizza place like a barn,

  and we convince my mother to take us

  the one hundred steps and buy us dinner.

  Inside, the room is stuffed

  like a breath being held,

  the air is basil and pesto and bread.

  We order an extra-large,

  laugh about the day.

  At the table,

  we pull clay from our pockets

  and sculpt tiny trolls.

  Each one holds

  the Parmesan or the red pepper,

  a fork like a pike, a spoon

  as a tiny bed.

  When the pizza comes,

  it’s perfect.

  Pizza is made of magic.

  Perfect cheese, perfect sauce,

  and perfect crust, perfect smell,

  perfect.

  I down my first piece before

  anyone else’s second bite.

  I feel myself eyeing the slices,

  counting them,

  worried that I won’t get enough.

  I need to make sure I do, so I eat fast.

  Another. And more like this, until

  I find that I have eaten half the pie.

  Slow

  down, my mother says sharply.

  She shakes her head at me.

  She’s seen this too many times.

  I want to,

  but I don’t.

  Once, my aunt Cookie told me

  I should wait for my mind

  to catch up with my stomach.

  The moon is out now.

  The waves crash and disappear

  in the distance.

  We play around,

  running from car to car,

  ducking in and out,

  some tag or battle game.

  We decide to launch

  a race for the last fifty steps

  back to the gallery.

  Pick blows past me

  and through groups of people

  walking around the town.

  Then, out of nowhere,

  I hear the sudden voice

  of some young man,

  a group just passing by,

  as my heavy legs reach Pick’s dust cloud

  swirling in the moonlight

  You’ll get ’em next time, Fatboy,

  and then laughter in the dark

  from somewhere in the space

  I just ran past.

  Pick is in the nursery now,

  already putting his pizza troll

  on the shelf.

  When You Are Fat …

  there are

  long stretch
es

  when you don’t

  think about

  the way your body presses

  against your clothes,

  when you don’t feel tired

  when you run in the sun

  like everyone else.

  There are times

  when you eat dinner

  and nobody

  looks at you funny,

  like you might eat

  way more than your share.

  There are times

  that you can just be

  who you are.

  There are also times

  when your body betrays you.

  There are times

  when you feel

  like you can’t stop eating,

  because eating

  is the only way

  you know

  how to

  feel

  right

  again.

  Something Finally Happened

  That night, we sleep

  on our old camping mats

  in the planting room,

  our sleeping bags

  zipped over our heads.

  Outside, the cold marine layer

  settles over the town,

  the buildings submerged

  in wet summer fog.

  I half dream all night

  about voices in the dark

  like a choir singing out

  a million mean names

  through my life,

  piling on top of me

  like old blankets.

  When my eyes finally open,

  I feel the weight still on me.

  My hands move to my belly.

  Too soft, I think.

  Too much.

  I remember a doctor’s visit in fifth grade.

  The doctor talked about salad,

  told me to try Italian dressing.

  It makes the green stuff good.

  Once a day, he said. A salad.

  I tiptoe through

  the nursery,

  across the creaking wood,

  trying not to wake everyone.

  The door to the nursery bathroom

  is a barn door that locks.

  I lay a piece of wood into

  the brackets, but the wood

  is loose and spaced.

  I hang a towel on the door

  for more privacy.

  I stand in the bathroom

  in front of the old brass mirror.

  It’s warped across the center,

  creates illusions,

  widens anyone in its frame.

  I’m certain that they can hear me looking at myself.

  I stare in the mirror,