Note: the following is a fictional short story. Playing around with voice here. A shortened, edited
version of this piece originally appeared in Cincinnati's 'CityBeat
Magazine'. Peace out, C.A.
Snappers and Painters
by C.A. MacConnell
Man,
all the time, I have to yank up my strapless shirt so my boobs aren’t
showing, because it’s embarrassing. I don’t really have boobs like
Mom’s, which are watermelons, but I still don’t need to be showing them
to the world. Okay, so mine are so small they look like lightning bugs
with no lights.
I kick off my clogs. Last year, Mom
and I found the shoes in my cousin Debbie’s hand-me-down pile, which had
tons of stuff, even for Debbie. That was my present for my eleventh
birthday. Now I’m twelve, in case you can’t do Math.
I
wear this one-piece outfit thing every day, even when it’s cold, which
it’s not. Duh, it’s summer. Sometimes, I put my purple jeans on top of
the shorts part, which is “bulky-looking,” Mom says, but I don’t care.
It used to have a belt, and there are still these loops there, but I
lost the belt part the first time Conner and I went turtle hunting.
Conner tried real hard to find it in the bottom of the lake, but after
about three hundred hours of looking, when I thought Conner was dead, he
gave up.
My hair’s kinda like sand, but Conner has
black curls. I always put my hand on his head and scrunch up his curls
between my fingers. One time, I cut his hair, which was a bad idea. I
knew it wasn’t too straight, because we were trying to count the minnows
in our bucket at the same time. Conner’s Mom said she might cut my
braids off. When she said that, Conner was smiling on the inside. I
could tell.
My purple jeans are the best, but when Mom
sees those pants, her mouth droops all funny like she’s gonna drool.
Conner’s jeans droop on his hips. Conner jokes at me all the time that I
have on my own uniform. Uniforms stink, for real. I know ‘cause I’ll be
wearing one when school starts. They’re itchy ones, and they leave red
marks on my tummy like I just got wrapped up in a rubber band. Nuns are
in charge where I go to school. Speaking of rubber bands, nuns put them
around the top of my socks to keep them up to my knees, which is stupid
because I just push them back down anyhow.
I’m thinking about stinking nuns when Conner yells, “Peanut, hand me the net, it’s a snapper!”
Conner scrambles back in the boat all wet. Oh my God, P.U.
“I see the snapper, dork, but you know I want a baby painter,” I say, swatting a dragonfly.
I
like the painted babies that fit in the palm of my hand. The snappers
don’t scare me or anything, but I just wonder why they have to do all of
that snapping when all they do is swim all day. I sure wouldn’t snap if
all I had to do was swim all day. Mom does though. She stretches her
neck and snaps right at me, which doesn’t really scare me either, but I
act like it does.
“Would you just hand me the net
before I tip the boat and pop you one?” Conner gets this look in his
eyes. It’s the same look he gets when he puts his hand on my forehead,
and he thinks he's all tough the way he holds me back when I try to
punch him. His eyes get all huge and his face gets a frown that looks
like a smile might bust out any second. Sometimes, I think his cheeks
might explode. Gross.
“All right, here, geez.” I put the stinking net right on Conner’s head. That snapper slides away into the water like they do.
“I’m gonna catch you, now.” Conner comes at me with the net, making the boat rock, which is trouble.
I’m sick of fighting him, so I make the boat tip. It’s not hard. Dad calls Grampie’s Boston Whaler a “one-man ride.”
We
splash around and Conner tries to freak me out by telling me the story
of a monster fish that lives in the lake. He’s not making this up, but I
know it’s not around anymore. Once, Grampie told me that he was having a
beach picnic lunch with Grammie, and they saw that monster going “over
the water and under the water.” Grampie threw a chicken bone at the
thing, and the bone happened to land in its throat. So it choked and
died and now everyone can relax.
Conner laughs and
dives down in the shallow water of the cove. He presses his stomach to
the bottom of the lake like a catfish. I go down there too, and I watch
him wave his arms up to keep himself on the bottom. Reminds me of the
way Father Brugger moves his arms at school, right when he wants
everybody to stand up. I can’t figure out why they make us stand up and
sit down so many times. Just when I think I have it right, I’m all ready
to sit, and everyone around me is on their knees. I don’t get religion.
Sitting on the mushy bottom, we hold hands and mouth
words, trying to figure out what we’re saying to each other. I think
about how the turtles are probably out getting suntans while we’re
fooling around.
Conner never gets mad at me. But I get
mad at him when he tries to scare me by holding his breath forever
while he sits on the lake bottom too long, which is what he’s doing. I
am waiting, treading water, and he’s really starting to bug me.
Then
he comes up puffing and says, “Now, you ready to catch a REAL turtle?”
But by the time we get back to the cottage, I have a baby painted turtle
in my hand, and Conner just has the net full of lily pads and muck,
which is the way it always goes.
I love Bear Lake,
even if I get a bloodsucker on my stomach every now and then. Bear
Lake’s pretty clean most of the time, but this year, there are less
ducks and more dead rotting fish on the beach. I heard it's because of
those boys down the road who drive their trucks all crazy and throw beer
cans out the windows, and the cans end up in the water which is not a
"dumping ground," Dad says.
Conner and I can’t drive
yet, and beer is gross. So we comb the beach at night. Conner sees
things a lot better than me because he’s a whole year older. But he
always lets me pick everything up so he can make up stories about the
junk. He says the stones I find are fossils and Indian arrowheads. One
time, I found a comb with a few missing teeth. He said it would turn my
hair green if I used it. I told him he was nuts, but I didn’t ever comb
my hair with it, just in case.
Our cottage is small; a
two-lane road is the only thing you have to cross to get to the beach.
Mildred lives on the right. Her face looks like a shoe, and Conner keeps
telling me there are rats in her house. I don’t talk to her much, but
Grammie keeps sending me over to her cottage with some homemade bread.
Grammie
makes everything herself, even hamburger buns. When she makes ginger
cookies, I sit against a tree that’s white with the bark peeling, and I
peek through Grampie’s blueberry patches to watch Mildred in her tomato
garden. I get bored waiting to hear Grammie yell from the cottage,
“Peanut, they’re done!” She talks to her cookies too. Probably because
Grampie’s always in his garden or writing sermons.
Mom
frowns a lot. She tells Grammie, “Mother, stop fiddling around. You
never stop moving.” Mom does the same thing, though. When I try to show
her my turtles, she keeps on stringing green beans.
Aunt
Patty lives on the left. Me and Conner have to scramble through
Grampie’s gardens to get there. One time, we found a garter snake hiding
in the pea pods, and I picked it up right behind the neck, the way my
cousin Bryan taught me back when I was ten. Bryan has a boa constrictor,
which I love. I like touching it. Aunt Patty doesn’t like it too much
’cause one time it got loose, and there it was, resting on the shower
curtain rod, staring down at Aunt Patty while she was peeing.
But
a week after we found the garter, Conner and I saw it smashed on the
road. Nothing left but a sad, smashed greenish brown “S” on the road. It
turned black after people kept running over it. From that day on,
Conner and I decided that snake would protect us from getting smashed,
so we made up a saying. Every time we cross, we hold hands and say,
“Garter snake, save us from cars and scars.”
I’m
sorry, but I pick my scabs. Mom always says, “Stop picking, Peanut,
you’re going to get scars.” I guess Mom worries I’ll end up with dents
in my face, like people do when they get chicken pox. I had ‘em once.
Conner had ‘em at the same time, which was fun being sick together and
lying around doing nothing.
I don’t have any scars
really. My face is as smooth as the beach in the morning. At least
that’s what Conner tells me, because he’s a lot older and he knows how
to say things sometimes.
Let me tell you I
met Conner the summer I was nine. I was digging my toes in the ground to
make the beach swing go higher. It was sunny, and my eyes hurt, but I
saw him walking down the road barefoot, wearing some cut-off jean
shorts. He had a fishing pole leaning on his shoulder, and a poor, dead,
small perch was hanging from the hook. I asked him if he was gonna eat
it.
“Yup. Fry it up and swallow it down whole.” He
waved the fish in my face, trying to make me sick or something, but I
liked the smell. Reminded me of sitting in Grampie’s garden while Dad
skinned our supper, and how he fried it just right, so it didn’t taste
“too fishy,” like Mom always says.
Anyway. So Conner
finally sat down on the swing with me, and he started pumping his legs
crazy, and for a second I wondered if he’d pump them right off. We
waited until it was at its highest point in the air, sat on the edge,
then jumped over the beach wall into the sand.
Then we
took Grampie’s boat out and went to the Cove to search for peepers,
which are baby toads if you don’t know. Right then and there, he was my
new best friend.
I hate to break the news,
but this is our last summer at Bear Lake. Grammie’s selling the cottage.
So Conner and I are sitting on the swing, and it’s dark, and I think we
both want to cry, but we don't. But since I'm holding all that in, my
heart feels fat. I tell Conner how scared I am, and how I still haven’t
kissed anything. Well, I did kiss some boy named Ethan at my friend
Margaret’s birthday party. But that doesn’t count.
“Hey, Peanut, I could kiss you,” Conner says. He turns into a raspberry.
I
laugh.“No way, Con.” All I can think about is how he looks after he
comes up from the bottom of the lake with plants hanging from his head.
“Will you cut my hair?” he asks, just because neither one of us knows what we’re talking about or doing, and we’re all sad.
His curls are drooping over his ears, but I’m kind of glad because Conner’s ears are usually full of wax.
I go back to the cottage, stopping at the road to do the snake chant, and I come back with the scissors.
Then he goes and starts looking like red things again.
When
I sit down, the swing squeaks. The chain on one side breaks, sliding
Conner into my lap. Our noses bump, and he kisses me. Conner doesn’t
kiss like my stuffed animals. Conner is wet, soft, kinda sloppy, and I
feel like he’s using the same air as me for a second.
Then
Mom opens the cottage door so fast, the hinges might bust. “Peanut, get
in here. We’re leaving at the crack of dawn tomorrow.” She taps her
foot on the welcome mat.
It makes me want to taste Conner again. He sure tastes better than Grampie’s coffee.
“Meet me in the morning, okay?” I whisper. I almost throw up.
“No, I want to say bye now. Not in the morning. Hey, peanut, you know what?” He tilts his head down.
I
drop the scissors.“What?” I’m ready for something big, because Conner
always starts with a question when he’s gonna say something big.
“I think I like you better than anyone or anything,” he says.
It’s
so dark that it could be talking driftwood next to me on the swing, and
I wouldn’t know. “You like me even better than snappers?” I ask him.
“Yeah. Better than anything," he says like an adult person.
“Will I see you again?” I ask him.
“I
think maybe in a long time. Just do this. Every time you go swimming,
go to the bottom, and act like I’m right there, sinking with you.” He
gives me a thumbs up.
“Let’s go, Peanut!” Mom yells, ruining the whole thing.
I
look at him for the last time. Half of Conner’s face is lit. I put my
hand on the light cheek, kiss the dark one, then tiptoe inside. At the
door, I duck under Mom’s arm.
That night, I bury my
head under the covers, which is something I don’t usually do, because
it’s hard to breathe like that. For some reason, I don’t want to
breathe so badly any more, unless I’m breathing with Conner.