Banshee. Rachel DewoskinЧитать онлайн книгу.
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Published in 2019 by Dottir Press
33 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10003
Copyright © 2019 by Rachel DeWoskin
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, used, or stored in any transformation retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission from Dottir Press, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
The excerpt from the poem “Acts of God” by Heather McHugh first appeared in Hinge & Sign: Selected Poems (Wesleyan University Press, 2011) and is used with the permission of the author.
First printing June 2019
Design and Production by Drew Stevens
Trade Distribution through Consortium Book Sales and Distribution, www.cbsd.com.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available for this title.
ISBN 978-1-948340-10-6 (hardcover)
ISBN 978-1-948340-11-3 (paperback)
ISBN 978-1-948340-12-0 (ebook)
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead) or actual events is purely coincidental.
For Zayd,who understands everythingfrom the most granular to the most profound,including the wildest reaches of fiction.
CONTENTS
Also available from Dottir Press
CHAPTER ONE
THE FLESH BLEW OFF HER BONES underground. That’s how the waxy anchorman put it; you could feel his lips loving to make the shape of the word blew. The reason they knew? They’d had to exhume her. He sighed, going for horror, but conveying pleasure, maybe not accidentally.
I was sitting in front of the TV that afternoon—three days ago—on an orange chair in the waiting room of a clinic for breasts, so I happened to be turning questions of tissue over in my mind anyway. In some chambers, the idea of this poor dead girl’s body exploding and being dug back up seemed like more than I could stand, the last click in a game of thought roulette. I waited for the release of a bullet that might knock me flat. But in other chambers, it felt acceptable, predictable, a revelation that I, as a sane adult, should be able to tolerate.
I imagined the anchorman, that plastic action figure, digging her up with bare hands himself, a spray of dirt and decay blowing into his open mouth. My husband had dated the now-wife of the anchorman in college (a coincidence), and so I imagined her, too, married to the salacious half-rhymer of blew and exhume. She had to listen to his voice and watch his face stretch into approximations of human expressions every night at dinner. Did graphics run underneath him as he brushed his blinding teeth? Did she suspect him of the perversions I did? Or know his actual ones? Maybe she shared them.
It wouldn’t have surprised me. One disappointing aspect of middle age was how few perversions remained shocking. I did feel a jolt, though, at learning that in addition to dying and liquefying, we also explode after being buried.
A NURSE CALLED my name, “Samantha Baxter,” and I leapt up, nodding like a doll on a dashboard, and followed obediently. A light-green hall became a light-green room on the right. The nurse weighed me, then stunned my arm with a pressure cuff and said, with her eyes cast down sorrowfully, that my blood pressure was elevated.
“I’m not surprised,” I told her.
“No,” she said, staring as if trying to determine whether I was slow, joking, or both. “I mean, it’s significant. The doctor will have to retake it later.”
She handed me the usual life-sized paper towel I was to wrap around my waist with a plastic ribbon and turned to go.
“Please put this on, open to the front.”
I shed my jeans and shirt, folding them into a miniature stack on the light-green chair before placing my bra and socks in my purse. I lined my ankle boots up, not wanting to appear unruly. I learned when my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer twenty years ago that I shared the gene that predisposed us to particular cancerous outcomes. It had letters but no name, and sounded to me like bric-a-brac, some country kitchen pattern on a quilt. I had been diligent about climbing into magnetic tubes for MRIs and making my breasts go horizontal in mammogram machines. From the moment I learned about the gene, someone had his or her hands up my shirt constantly. Meanwhile,