NICKOLE BROWN


The Dead

Image

It was the ones no one remembered who pulled at me.

—Dorothy Allison

So tell me, who remembers Topa, her daddy, his face marked with smallpox

or his two sisters, one that died one day, the otheren the next?

Who remembers quarantined houses marked with a red card, the brain

fevers and blood fluxes, or the uncle who found a rafter in the tobacco barn

for his neck? And wasn’t there a second cousin

who phoned his brother before making a confetti

of his own brains? Or that other young uncle—a good-looking

son of a bitch—who, face down in the river, took mud

into his handsome lungs? Or the babies—Jesus, always the babies—

drowned in washtubs or bit by brown recluse, or Claire, a girl born

four months early, small enough to crib in a shoebox

and thrived, but her brother—full-term, healthy as a horse

who was sleeping sound on his second day when he

just died?

And who remembers Yael but me, that girl with the name so pretty

I could taste the syllables—Yah Elle

and called her again and again? She was only

seven, her blood a sandstorm of cells, at war with itself.

Or my soft-spoken cousin, that kid

surfer who thought he could crush time-

release painkillers with his teeth and

live? Does anyone remember how impossible

death seemed in Florida, how like a sun-scorched

fern his hands curled, two black fiddleheads, the foam at his mouth

when all his chickenshit friends left him

for dead? On the way to his funeral, Fanny got after us for wearing black:

All you young girls always wearing dark, dark, dark, she said. You need to put on a bright

and purdy color, something that don’t make you look so depressed all the fucking time.

We laughed, reminded her where we were going, but who can say

her fussing was a joke—her amnesia seemed

fender-struck, a switch flipped

off inside a woman who couldn’t take no more.

Later that day we walked to church under mangroves swarmed

with the bright green fluster of wild parakeets.

I can’t say I remember much more than my aunt, how she looked

up into the trees, said, Oh, little birds, don’t you know?

And the birds, briskly chittering back, answered her:

No.

from Cave Wall