Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Happy Holidays!
Redux will be on hiatus until mid-January, when we look forward to resuming publication with a wonderful selection of fiction, poetry, and creative non-fiction. Happy holidays, and happy new year!
Monday, December 14, 2015
#189: Our Lady of Guazá by Sara Schaff
~This story previously appeared in Inkwell (2010).
~Selected by Kenneth A. Fleming, Assistant Editor
After the funeral, Abuela tells
Marcela and Valentina to sort through their mother's belongings in the living
room, which they do, wordlessly and tensely, each putting aside trinkets until
they spy something both of them want: a pair of jeans their mother liked to
wear out dancing.
"I remember seeing her in them,"
Marcela says. "I don't know when that was."
"Too small for you,"
Valentina says. "Perfect for me. Besides, you don't dance in the United
States. Remember Tia Mercedes' Independence Day party in Miami?—all her fat
gringo husband's fat relatives, sitting around in plastic chairs like at a
meeting, drunk and boring."
Marcela can only stare, affronted
and helpless. Honestly, she does not miss her mother, but she would rather not
be condescended to by her younger, half-sister. And, inexplicably, she desperately
wants these jeans with the swirls of glitter on the back pockets.
Valentina slings the jeans over her
shoulder and puts aside other objects: a purse, a silver tube of lipstick,
plastic hair clips.
Marcela sits on the couch.
"They won't fit you either," she says. "Our mother was
tiny."
"I'll show you tiny,"
Valentina says. She strips down to her cotton underwear and tube socks, then
pulls on their mother's jeans with visible effort. She has to leave the top
button undone. "You see? Perfect fit!"
"You think you should have
everything you want."
Valentina flops next to Marcela on
the couch and scrunches uncomfortably close, her breath hot on Marcela's neck.
"And you are one cool cucumber,"
she whispers in unsteady English. "One
smooth operator."
Marcela almost laughs, but Valentina
pokes her arm and hisses. "I deserve these jeans because I lived with our
mother for the entire fourteen years I've been alive. I had to identify her
dead body. What have you had to do?"
She has had to move back and forth
between this world and her own, that's what. She is the one their mother left
behind in Boston. But Marcela doesn't say this, because no, she did not have to
identify their mother's body, crushed by metal from her car and from the rock
of a washed-out road. Marcela can't
imagine what that was like and is afraid to ask. Valentina turns on the
television and begins to flip through the channels mindlessly.
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
#188: "Leaving in a Beechcraft" by Anne Harding Woodworth
~This poem was
previously published in Connecticut
Review (2009).
Leaving in a
Beechcraft
Still night, the tarmac dawn.
The propeller drone begins to slant me
up from the dark ground,
where I was a daughter again,
and the urge to flee rushed back to me.
My mother told me not to wear pearls before evening
and reproved my pronunciation of the word cupola.
Corrections are entrenched in her memory,
and yet she confused her mastectomy
with her childhood appendectomy,
and I was adolescently
sullen—all over again.
Now, lifting on through the dark into the cloud cover—
with that black emptiness outside the window—
the plane moves slowly, heavily, noisily, diagonally,
and finally it breaks into space, where,
Orange sun, you seem to be expecting me.
*****
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