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My neighbor’s purchased an authentic der Fuhrer drawing. Gardening in the dirt pocked with puddles and opening holes, my hands submerged in gloves, I listen to her circling her house, shouting out to the neighborhood that she’s obtained a “Hitler original." Of course curiosity killed the Stegosaurus who ventured too close to Tyrannosaurus Rex. And I know Sally Minton is under-lit, peculiar, strange, the crone rumored to drop poisoned walnuts in the trick-or-treating kiddies’ bags, the one some whispered laced her late husband’s tea with arsenic. But this morning I woke to no commotion whatsoever, craving drama in a life gone flat as my daughter’s Rice Crispies, the milk-sodden cereal delicately popping. And when I woke up, depressed, borderline obsessive-compulsive, I whispered, “Please, Buddha or God, bring me an interesting incident I can emote over, relish; pump up my dim, dull existence with excitement, make it as bloody, even, as the Andersen fairy tale where Karen lost both her feet and danced ecstasy-driven on stumps." And the good Lord always delivers.
The sun glittered like a stretched white blister in the sky when I sauntered over. Sally had “problems," the neighbors said, collected trash bags inside her house, took out the black Hefties twenty at a time, propped them up in her boyfriend’s battered green pickup, drove them to the dump. As I knocked, I imagined an entire landfill crammed with Sally’s trash bags, glittering green-black in the sun, glorious as ravens’ wings. And then she let me in. I tried not to attend to the stench: rotting oranges, cakes gone rancid, spilled Cokes wiped up with Scott towels, the bags piled up to the ceiling. Her hands were dirty; she wiped them on her apron. “You’re here to see the Hitler?" she asked. Shyly, I nodded. “Let’s drink Sanka while we look at it," Sally said. She laid two sunflower-yellow mugs on the plastic tablecloth, dropped the Sanka into hot water. Patiently we sat while our weak java brewed. Then Sally said, “It’s in my little boy’s room."
She brought it downstairs, secreted behind her back. Whipped it out, grinning, her stained dentures winking. I stopped drinking Sanka. It all fit, somehow: the gigantic landscape of rock and stone and brick dwarfing two tiny stick figures, all elongated torsos and limbs, and I thought-- Adolf and Eva? Yes. I reached out to touch it, my finger wavering mid-air. It was a pastel drawing on paper. I wasn’t certain, but it looked authentic. “Thanks for the Sanka," I said, and returned home before she could ask me back.
Since that day I’ve dreamed about it, listened to the whispers trailing Sally Minton down the street; it’s rumored the drawing’s a fake. Strange what inhabits the brain in midlife: three trembling leaves wind-tossed on an elm; a memory of an autumn when, twenty, I stole my roommate’s boots, never told her about my crime. And now, this drawing. I see it each morning when I gaze into my daughter’s dark eyes-- the buildings large enough to crush anyone, the uninhabited square two stick-figures saunter across, the silence that hangs over the buildings, figures alive and portentous as breath.
Terri Brown-Davidson is on the poetry and fiction faculty at Gotham Writers' Workshop and holds the Ph.D., M.F.A., and M.A. in English and creative writing. Her poetry has appeared in numerous publications, including Triquarterly, The Literary Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and Denver Quarterly.
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