Authors: Erika Meitner
I
NCONSEQUENTIAL
A
LCHEMY
It's predictable summer again, the sun frosted and glaring like a cheap
Home Depot light fixture when it shines on the garden center
rife with landscaping plants that nobody loves but everyone buys as yard-filler:
pachysandra, rhododendron, euonymus, groundcover along with festive pansies
in black plastic six-packs that die by mid-July. There's no substitute for the figure
of a sunflower on a hill wilting past its stake, head drooped, body crucified.
The neighborâthe pastor's wifeâtried to fill in the barren clay on the ridge
our houses share, but nothing thrives in this soilânot even the guaranteed
grass seed she bought that claims to grow on rock. But she's out watering anyway,
her chemo crew-cut glinting silver and ambiguous. Last season she offloaded
ziplocks of heirloom tulip bulbs from her freezer, told us to put them in our yard
since she was too weak to plant them. We buried them at the requisite depth
but they never came up; instead, a scourge of yellow trefoil entwined with the lawn.
This week she gives me three jars of home-preserved beets from their congregants.
Everyone must be praying for her, so that even those beets glow fuchsia on our counter,
countering the TV's ready-made alchemy. The local news is a strip-mall fire: remains
of an irreplaceable 1950s tricycle from the charred bike shop that had been in the family
for years. The form was recognizable, but the vehicle was literally a shadow
of itself, isometric charcoal, long and difficult. There are disruptions,
and there are disruptions. The news is always brought to us by Oakey's Funeral Home
& Crematory, and then on Sundays paid programming follows: Millennialist
news that trumpets the New World Order. Prophecies of the ages converging.
Specific details of the return, the eternal state of both the saved and the lost.
These exciting last days in which we live.
S
NOWPOCALYPSE
Allegheny Mission, Big Spring Baptist, Community Christian Fellowship:
Saturday night news scrolls every church name in seven counties, services
more than postponed. We don't need the meteorologist to whisper
inclement
,
to warn us to stay indoors. We have a window shaped like a television set.
Tree lights flicker through a scrim of curtain next door where the pastor
of Fieldstone Christian and his wife plot their empty Sunday, sermon abandoned.
No one will hear anything about I am the holiness we are holy we pray for you
and maybe praise his name. The plow blinks yellow, scrapes the darkness,
shivers the drifts on our roofs, the hanging icicle lights. Inside, silence
wafts through the heating ducts. My son is asleep while the heavens
smudge from black to red. Snow sky. Hydrology. In the cul-de-sac,
there's nothing on except a few panes of the neighbor's window-glass
and some tilting FOR SALE signs. There's nothing on except the wind
pulling at our siding, clouds bruising the sky. The news says it was a snow TKO,
one for the history books, and in the morning, between storms, the neighbors shovel,
go out to buy bread. I set my son upright again in the high drifts in our yard.
I'm ok
, he says each time I right him in his bib pants and boots. The pitch and yaw.
Convenience. We drive tenderly to the 7-Eleven. Milk. Maybe a newspaper.
Rock salt. He asks what convenience means. I don't have an answer.
I think holy. I think light. Later I tell him something about comfort. The news
drags in the evening, and with it, more snow. Our driveways retreat again
under the onslaught of white. We rest our weary feet on the ottoman, listen
to the neighbor's dog, who barks at the red sky then stops when she hears
the thin crescent moon wailing. There are truckers stuck on the interstate
who haven't eaten since yesterday. There are families sharing one thin blanket
on a high school floor. The news says stay in your vehicle, don't wander and get
frostbitten, don't spin your wheelsâyou'll only dig in deeper. We are glowing
with televised radiance so nothing can hurt us. The news says
this is an ongoing situation.
T
O
W
HOM
I
T
M
AY
C
ONCERN:
Please excuse me from the meeting.
I'm feeling small and non-combative.
It's below freezing, so we have no daycare.
The cable box is broken. The satellite
is misaligned. To Whom It May Concern:
The salt on the road crunches like teeth
so I can't make the meeting because
I am using my fingernail to rub
a critical note into the ice
on the neighbor's mailbox.
My tires are spinning in ellipses.
To Whom It May Concern:
My acupuncturist says my Qi
is puny, and the last time we met
someone told me to shut the fuck up.
I hate your monogrammed dress cuffs
so please conduct the meeting
without me as I'm suffering
from zipper failure. I'm hopped up
on caffeine and twitching. I'm battery
operated and recalcitrant. To Whom
It May Concern: I'd rather be reading
the story about the elephant crouching
in the corner trying not to be noticed
by the zookeeper's wife in her ruffled
sleep cap to my son. I'd rather be reading
the book to him where the snowman
actually dies in the end. To Whom
It May Concern: I understand
the task is important, but I do not
want to be part of this committee.
I've been buried by ribbons of snow
in a giant frozen dazzling. The universe
is changing to a white cereal bowl
with lots of rivets and I've been told
we live on the frost line. Please excuse me
from this meeting. Dark energy is shoving
the cosmos apart and it's best explored
in the pure environment of Antarctica.
To Whom It May Concern: I've moved
to the most difficult place on earth.
It's impossibly blue and blazing.
O
NE
V
ERSION OF
D
ECEMBER
There's something about the ice today that reminds me of the plastic kerchief my grandmother would wear over her wig and tied under her chin on days it rained, her synthetic hair the texture of spun sugar on a paper cone, a shade lighter than dirt under that translucent tarp. The ice skates across asphalt, deck-wood, slicks railings, shines sideways and crackles. It reaches its sharp hands into the dirt to root. The blank styrofoam head and neck where her wig rested sits empty on her dresser. A lifetime ago there were chickens in someone's front yard, and my grandmother watched over me.
You will be blessed
, she always implied, with her hands. It is winter and I return there. Sad girl with an unyielding triangle. Sad girl with a styrofoam head. Sad girl with nostalgia. We leave our attachments in a landscape (deeply felt, uneventful). The eternal city is not the hereafter but a cheap plastic copy with a crocheted ocean wrapped in blandness and littered with shiny cars. My grandmother's styrofoam head ripples with laughter and confusion, my grandmother in her white sun hat, her white turban, the ever more ancient man she hired annually in his white captain's hat to pick my sister and I up from the Fort Lauderdale airport in his Lincoln Continental. The one time I tried to drive myself in a rental I got so lost I had to stop at the Lucky Boy Motel for directions. It was night. There was bulletproof glass and the Vacancy signs lining US-1 shined pink, turquoise, the colors most opposite of ice. Her eyeless head, her head that would float on the Intracoastal, bob like a buoy then get swept out to sea, that won't nod anymore as if she were listening to us complain about the sun, the heat, “Feliz Navidad” playing on the slow drive from the airport each December, our faces tilted to the windshield.
W
AL
M
ART
S
UPERCENTER
God Bless America says the bumper sticker on the racer-red
Rascal scooter that accidentally cuts me off in the Walmart parking lot
after a guy in a tricked-out jeep with rims like chrome pinwheels tries
to pick me up by honking, all before I make it past the automatic doors
waiting to accept my unwashed hair, my flip-flops, my lounge pants.
The old man on the scooter waves, sports a straw boater banded in blue & white,
and may or may not be the official greeter, but everyone here sure is friendlyâ
even the faces of plastic bags, which wink yellow and crinkle with kindness,
sound like applause when they brush the legs of shoppers carrying them
to their cars. In Port Charlotte, a woman's body was found in a Jetta
in a Walmart parking lot. In a Walmart parking lot in Springfield,
a macaque monkey named Charlie attacked an eight-year-old girl.
I am a Walmart shopper, a tract-house dwellerâthe developments
you can see clearly from every highway in America that's not jammed up
on farmland or pinned in by mountains. I park my car at a slant in the lot,
hugged tight by my neighbors' pickups. I drive my enormous cart
through the aisles and fill it with Pampers, tube socks, juice boxes, fruit.
In the parking lot of the McAllen Walmart, a woman tried to sell six
Bengal tiger cubs to a group of Mexican day laborers. A man carjacked
a woman in the parking lot of the West Mifflin Walmart, then ran
under a bridge and disappeared. Which is to say that the world
we expect to see looks hewn from wood, is maybe two lanes wide,
has readily identifiable produce, and the one we've got has jackknifed itself
on the side of the interstate and keeps skidding. The one we've got has clouds
traveling so fast across the sky it's like they're tied to an electric current.
But electricity is the same for everybody. It comes in the top of your head
and goes out your shoes, which will walk through these automatic doors.
In the Corbin Walmart parking lot a woman with a small amount of cash
was arrested for getting in and out of trucks. A man stepped out of his car
in the Columbus Walmart parking lot, and shot himself. I get in the checkout line
behind a lighted number on a pole. The man in front of me jangles coins
in his pocket, rocks back and forth on his heels. The girl in front of him
carefully peels four moist dimes from her palm to pay for a small container
of honey-mustard dipping sauce. In the parking lot of the LaFayette Walmart,
grandparents left their disabled two-year-old grandson sitting in a shopping cart
and drove away. Employees in the parking lot at the La Grange Walmart
found a box containing seven abandoned kittens. I am not a Christian or
prone to idioms, but when the cashier says she is grateful for small mercies,
I nod in assent.
Kyrie eleison, Christe eleison.
The Latin root of mercy
means price paid, wages, merchandise, though now we use it as
compassion shown to a person in a position of powerlessness,
and sometimes forgiveness towards a person with no right
to claim it. God is merciful and gracious, but not just.
In the Walmart parking lot in Stockton, a man considered armed
and dangerous attacked his wife, beating her unconscious.
A couple tried to sell their six-month-old for twenty-five bucks
to buy meth in the Salinas Walmart parking lot. We who are in danger,
remember: mercy has a human heart. Mercy with her tender mitigations,
slow to anger and great in loving-kindness, with her blue employee's smock
emblazoned with
How may I help you?
Someone in this place have mercy on us.
Y
OU RETURN THE
T
ORAH TO THE ARK
and I think of the distant past
eins tsvey dray fir
now thirty years
since I was a child and used to count
men's hats in my grandparents'
synagogue the moment everyone
rose up but not the ladiesâ
they stood and I didn't count them
finf zeks zibn akht
as instead of hats
they wore latticed doilies
pinned to their wigs, scraps
of lace flat as an outstretched hand
conferring a webbed blessing
or folded like wings about
to take flight
nayn tsen elf tsvelf
before whom did we stand?
the male Rabbi, the male Cantor
and his
oyoyoys draytsn fertsn
fuftsn zekhtsn
the ark shuts
in a flash of white an arm
crossing the heart the chest
a house for the body is rending
of garmentsâa curtain's pull
zibetsn akhtsn nayntsn tsvantsik
Zichron Moshe, Adath Israel,
Ward Avenue Shul and who knows
what shteebles are demolished are
churches now this second post-war
shtetl of ladies and gentlemen the Bronx
is burning is burned the congregation
sighs into their seats and I think of
cousin Freddy's story about the Rabbi
(name long forgotten) who would call out
Yankees scores during high holiday
davening
ein un tsvantsik tsvey un tsvantsik
everyone could hear the ballpark crowd
cheering through the open doors