Firn
hybrid by Claire McQuerry
I wake to moonlight
paling joined lakes,
peaks rising skyward from tattered shores
towards where my plane crosses鈥
how thin and cold the air.
On looking longer I see: no,
not lakes at all
but snow, spilt like milk
over the ridges.
The boy鈥檚 name was Jason. We鈥檇 walk home after last bell, school bags dragging over lawns, where on hot days I鈥檇 turn cartwheels in long bands of shade鈥
Big-boned and slow, he was never to be mocked. I鈥檇 been admonished. 鈥淭he other children,鈥 his mother said, 鈥渁re so unkind.鈥 Once, I opened my finger on sewing shears. (She鈥檇 let me make doll clothes from scraps of cloth). She held my hand under the faucet, as dark clouds of blood raveled across the bottom of her sink.
Across the airplane aisle a mother
strokes her sleeping son鈥檚 hair. His mouth
rests open slightly. How smooth and unmarked
the faces of the very young鈥攈ow enviable
the lack of trouble, their undisturbed
drifting into rest. The flight attendant
offers water from a plastic carafe,
passing it over the boy鈥檚 head.
Jason鈥檚 father did something mechanical at the power plant. He鈥檇 come through the
door at 6
and then we鈥檇 all know it was time to leave.
I can鈥檛 imagine what he did when he came home that evening, long past childhood, to what we all read about in the news. I can鈥檛 imagine because he was such a silent man I knew almost nothing about him.
The grown son, a perpetual child. The watchful mother.
She鈥檇 shot him once in the back of the head then shot herself.
Glacial lakes are milky
and green, sometimes the blue of aquamarine.
Colored pebbles along a remembered shore,
the mirrored trees, sear of such cold
locking over my feet and ankles.
鈥淩ock flour,鈥 someone tells me, 鈥渋s
what turns the water to milk.鈥
I鈥檝e already understood
what I saw from my window were
not lakes but hollows of firn, invisible
to most鈥攕o remote
and inaccessible those peaks.
Even seeing, the mind deceives, stitching perception to memory.
He and I would scale dirt knolls of the empty lots between houses, sifting sand through our fingers. We played a game of winging stones into troughs鈥攚here workers would soon pour cement. What was empty closed in then, disappeared.
Jason鈥檚 mother kept him home from high school. 鈥淣o one understands him,鈥 she鈥檇 say. 鈥淗e鈥檚 very special and no one, not even his father, understands.鈥
Once, much later, I saw him on a visit home. His large back could have been anyone鈥檚 at first, turned as he was toward the mini mart鈥檚 register. Even as he rang up my purchase, his gaze slid past mine. A fluorescent light washed out the glassed-in room, lending his skin the hue of sour milk. It was unclear when I said hello, whether he knew me.
Now we鈥檝e begun the descent. The child cries
while the mother hefts him to her lap.
鈥淗ush. Hush,鈥 she tells him dreamily. 鈥淪oon
you鈥檒l be back in your own bed.鈥
Even seeing, the mind deceives. Even seeing,
perception stitches.
The mother, who was she, really? Her lumber, the faded cornflowers of her dress, the doughy hands and breasts. She was safe, we thought. The safest. Sometimes she鈥檇 take me to the plant nursery. It pleased her most when people thought I was her daughter.
The car smelt of hot vinyl. It all recedes鈥
Those snow gullies鈥
somewhere I could never locate
again, somewhere vaguely
midway between the coasts鈥
may thaw or
persist for seasons, if never again
to my eyes, at least
then, in the mind of God.
I remember my own mother, teaching me to read beside the sunny window. A cat stretches on the warm cement. Next door, Jason鈥檚 mother plants carrots in neat rows while the son plays indoors.
Seasonless rooms of memory. Rooms of all we think we know.
Shifting, aglow with unreal light.