Other Lives

Other Lives Read Online Free PDF

Book: Other Lives Read Online Free PDF
Author: Ann Pearlman
cloud under my fingers. I wish she could be back inside me where she’s safe, where we are together and she will not even have to think about being alone, or the separation our very bodies and skins bestow on each of us. She is already her own person. I guess she has been for a long time.
    She waits, but I have no answer. She’s beyond me.
    “I’m glad you remember, ”I tell her, “even the sad times.”
     

     
    “Maybe you will someday, Mommy.” She nods her head encouraging me. “It was nice being best friends with you, before the dog men came.” She touches my cheek, her finger tracing the curve. The warmth of her hand feels like the sun.
    She is off at nursery school when it happens. I don’t know what opens the door. Maybe it’s the play of a leaf that reminds me of things long ago and clouded over. The black walnut filters the sun so the light falls in speckles. Everything is still. The wind blows and the light shivers like broken mirrors to the ground.
    The pictures come.
    I see Leah as she was then, her black skin touched with blue and shining purple under the leaves. Her eyes have not changed, they’re the same darkness that they are now. Around her neck gleams a brass tube and I see the miniature picture of me in her pupils. My black skin glows in the orange sun. The dolls that we love are twigs in our slender fingers wrapped in straw, dusted with sand. I see the clay and twig huts that are our homes.
    My father is the same father I had who is long dead. I smile to see him, and my eyes fill with hot tears from missing him.
     

     
    The wind stops. The light speckles on the bushes again and the picture is gone.
    The next day is hot. I’m damp by the time I finish breakfast. The raisins are clotted in the granola; the curly ridges of walnuts stick to the side of Leah’s bowl before the water dislodges them and flushes them down the disposal. Again I sit on the sofa and want to read to Leah. She replaces the storybook with one from our past.
     

     
    “It was like this Mommy. Hot like this. And I could hear the mosquitoes going awww awww aww aww always, and those little bugs got in my eyes. Daddy was wearing a thing like a tall skirt and a long cane and I wanted to go by the river to catch fish and get cool. Our mommies went with us. We held hands. Carried baskets.”
    She stops to inhale, her arm raised to point at the wall. “See us holding hands, over there?” Her voice filled with excitement at her proof.
    I see. The sun shines through the window and, caught in the beam like a collection of motes, is a wavy picture like you notice sometimes on a hot road. In the shimmering air, I see two girls.
    They hold hands and carry baskets on their heads. I watch their backs as they walk from the village of golden houses. It’s Leah and I, lush green surrounds us. My mother is my mother now, but young and graceful.
    Leah is on my lap as we watch the picture together. The little girls walk down the path to a river with light rippling on the surface. Hippos laze in the water, their noses make soft bubbles. Fish swim and hump their bodies, leaping out of the water and into our nets. We’re naked and cool in the river. The sun is caught by her necklace which flashes like a star at the base of her throat. Leah catches a fish between her hands. She has waited patiently for it to swim between her hands when between her hands and, when it finally does, she clasps it, brings it out of the water, giggling. It’s her same giggle.
     

     
    Drops of water are caught in her hair and I see the rainbows in them.
    “We have rainbows in our hair, Mommy. See?” Leah asks, her voice sure and hopeful. If I cannot see it now, her manner tells me, she’s lost once again.
    “Yes. I see them. And I see the fish and the river and the water in our hair.” Her hand clutches my fingers, hotter even than the rest of her.
    “Remember now?”
    “Yes,” I say afraid of my own voice. We sit together and watch the two girls
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