by Clive Aaron Gill
cola
I loved to dress
up as a princess and parade in front of Dad. But when I was five, he walked out
on my mother and me.
Mom worked in a
bakery during the day and as a waitress at a diner in the evening. She spent
money on gambling and clothes. Everything but the bills. The debt collectors
pestered Mom, warning her they would take our trailer and truck if she didn’t
pay. Somehow, we scraped through the years.
When I was
sixteen, Mom met Ryan, a mechanic who became a regular at the diner. They dated
for three months, the longest time she had dated anyone since Dad abandoned us.
On a beautiful
April morning, Mom said, “Abigail, I’ll be gone all night.”
“Why aren’t you coming home, Mom?” I always found
her in bed in the morning after her nights out.
“I’m going with the
ladies to a show at the casino. Afterward, we’ll play the tables. I’ll sleep
over at a friend’s place.”
“You’ll gamble too
much.”
“I’ll keep to my
limit.”
“Oh, yeah?”
“Yup. After that
break-in at our neighbor’s place, I don’t want you to be alone.”
“I’ll be just fine,
Mom.”
“Would it be okay if
Ryan comes over?”
“Ryan? He’s your
friend, not mine.”
“He said he would
like to spend some time with you.”
I scratched my
head. “Well … I guess.”
Mom drove away
after dinner, and I strolled outside the trailer to gaze at thousands of stars,
pinpricks of light in the jet-black sky.
Ryan, a tall man with a stomach
that pushed against his shirt like a
water-filled balloon, drove up. We
went inside the trailer and sat on the sofa while we watched a movie and ate
popcorn. During the movie, he snaked his thick, hairy arm around my shoulders.
“Did your Mom
explain things to you?”
I shook my head.
Ryan’s pink scar, running
from his ear to the corner of his mouth, reddened. He shocked me by kissing me
on my lips. His breath smelled of beer.
“Just … just go,”
I said.
He stared at me
with dark brown eyes, steady as a hawk’s.
“Please go,” I said,
pushing my elbow against his chest.
*
At five in the
morning, Ryan walked out the door. When I got up, I found a fat, manilla
envelope stuffed with fifty-dollar bills on the kitchen table.
I grabbed my
mother’s dresses out of the closet and threw them into a stinking dumpster.
After loading my
backpack with clothes, toiletries, and the manilla envelope, I left the trailer.
I
never told anyone about Ryan’s visit. I was ashamed and disgusted and scared to go to
the police or a hospital.
Since the day I walked
out on Mom thirty years ago, I haven’t seen or spoken to her.
I live in the
prison of my horrible memory.
About the author
Forty-five stories by Clive Aaron
Gill have appeared in literary journals and in “People of Few Words
Anthology.”
He tells his stories at public and private
gatherings.
Born in Zimbabwe, Clive has lived and worked
in Southern Africa, North America and Europe. He received a degree in Economics
from the University of California, Los Angeles and lives in San
Diego.
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