Page 13 of War Dances


  When Sherwin filled in the last blank, he sighed with satisfaction, folded the paper in half, and slid it into the seat pocket in front of him. Then he looked back at the man behind him and smiled. The man gave him a thumbs-up. It was such an eager and innocent gesture that Sherwin felt guilty for his deception. But then he laughed at himself, at his gift for lying.

  I am a lying genius, Sherwin thought. And what is lying but a form of storytelling? Sherwin realized that he’d told a story, the first story he’d told in public for any kind of audience since he left Hollywood. But wait, did this really count as storytelling? Well, he’d entertained one man, right? And then Sherwin realized what he’d truly just done. And he roared with laughter and startled a few of his fellow passengers with the volume of his joy.

  Sherwin realized that, for years, he’d been running away from a wildfire, an all-consuming inferno that had turned his words into cinder and ash, but he’d just now set an escape fire; he’d told a lie, a story, that convinced him he might be capable of putting a story on the page. Or was this all delusion? Sherwin knew there was a pen in his left inside coat pocket. He could feel it there. And there was paper everywhere on this airplane. He had ink; he could get paper. Oh, he wondered, oh, do I have the strength to begin again? Do I have the courage to step into a dark theater, hold hands with a beautiful woman, and fall back in love with my innocence?

  Ode to Mix Tapes

  These days, it’s too easy to make mix tapes.

  CD burners, iPods, and iTunes

  Have taken the place

  Of vinyl and cassette. And, soon

  Enough, clever introverts will create

  Quicker point-and-click ways to declare

  One’s love, lust, friendship, and favor.

  But I miss the labor

  Of making old-school mix tapes—the midair

  Acrobatics of recording one song

  At a time. It sometimes took days

  To play, choose, pause,

  Ponder, record, replay, erase,

  And replace. But there was no magic wand.

  It was blue-collar work. A great mix tape

  Was sculpture designed to seduce

  And let the hounds loose.

  A great mix tape was a three-chord parade

  Led by the first song, something bold and brave,

  A heat-seeker like Prince with “Cream,”

  Or “Let’s Get It On,” by Marvin Gaye.

  The next song was always Patsy Cline’s “Sweet Dreams,”

  or something by Hank. But O, the last track

  Was the vessel that contained

  The most devotion and pain

  And made promises that you couldn’t take back.

  Roman Catholic Haiku

  Humans

  In 1985, while attending Gonzaga University—a Jesuit institution—students shared the dining hall with fifty or sixty nuns who lived in a dormitory-turned-convent. We students didn’t think positively or negatively about this situation. We barely had any interaction with the holy women, though a few of us took to shouting, “Get thee to a nunnery!” at one another—but never at the nuns—after we took a Shakespeare class. I’m sure the nuns must have heard us shouting Hamlet’s curse at one another, but being a rather scholarly bunch, they were probably more amused than insulted.

  Nature

  The brown recluse spider is not an aggressive spider and attacks only when hurt or threatened. Its bite, however, contains a very aggressive poison that can form a necrotizing ulcer that destroys soft tissue and sometimes bone. So this six-eyed spider is passive and dangerous. And it’s strangely beautiful. It often has markings on its stomach and back that resemble violins. Yes, this spider could be thought of as a tattooed musician.

  Collision

  While waiting in the lunch line behind a nun, I noticed a brown recluse spider perched on her shoulder. I reflexively slapped the arachnid to the floor. The nun must have thought I’d slapped her in jest or cruelty because she turned and glared at me. But then I pointed at the brown recluse spider scuttling across the floor away from us. At first, the nun stepped back, but then she took two huge steps forward and crushed the spider underfoot. The nun gasped; I gasped. Mortified, she looked at me and said, “I’m sorry.” And then she looked down at the mutilated spider and said, “You, too.”

  Looking Glass

  On October 5, 1877, in Montana’s Bear Paw Mountains, the starved and exhausted Nez Perce ended their two-thousand-mile flight and surrendered to General Oliver Howard and his Ninth Cavalry. When the legendary Nez Perce leader, Chief Joseph, stood and said, “My heart is sick

  And

  Sad.

  From

  Where

  The

  Sun

  Now

  Stands,

  I

  Will

  Fight

  No

  More

  Forever”

  he thought they were his final words. He had no idea that he would live for another twenty-seven years. First, he watched hundreds of his people die of exile in Oklahoma. Then Joseph and his fellow survivors were allowed to move back to the Pacific Northwest but were forced to live on the Colville Indian Reservation, hundreds of miles away from their tribe’s ancestral home in Oregon’s Wallowa Valley. Exiled twice, Joseph still led his tribe into the twentieth century, though he eventually died of depression. But my grandmother, who was born on the Colville Indian Reservation, always said she remembered Joseph as a kind and peaceful man. She always said that Chief Joseph was her favorite babysitter.

  Yes,

  He

  Would

  Sit

  In

  His

  Rocking

  Chair

  And

  Braid

  My

  Grandmother’s

  Epic

  Hair.

  Salt

  I WROTE THE OBITUARY for the OBITUARIES editor. Her name was Lois Andrews. Breast cancer. She was only forty-five. One in eight women get breast cancer, an epidemic. Lois’s parents had died years earlier. Dad’s cigarettes kept their promises. Mom’s Parkinson’s shook her into the ground. Lois had no siblings and had never been married. No kids. No significant other at present. No significant others in recent memory. Nobody remembered meeting one of her others. Some wondered if there had been any others. Perhaps Lois had been that rarest of holy people, the secular and chaste nun. So, yes, her sexuality was a mystery often discussed but never solved. She had many friends. All of them worked at the paper.

  I wasn’t her friend, not really. I was only eighteen, a summer intern at the newspaper, moving from department to department as need and boredom required, and had only spent a few days working with Lois. But she’d left a note, a handwritten will and testament, with the editor in chief, and she’d named me as the person she wanted to write her obituary.

  “Why me?” I asked the chief. He was a bucket of pizza and beer tied to a broomstick.

  “I don’t know,” he said. “It’s what she wanted.”

  “I didn’t even know her.”

  “She was a strange duck,” he said.

  I wanted to ask him how to tell the difference between strange and typical ducks. But he was a humorless white man with power, and I was a reservation Indian boy intern. I was to be admired for my ethnic tenacity but barely tolerated because of my callow youth.

  “I’ve never written an obituary by myself,” I said. During my hours at her desk, Lois had carefully supervised my work.

  “It may seem bureaucratic and formal,” she’d said. “But we have to be perfect. This is a sacred thing. We have to do this perfectly.”

  “Come on,” the chief said. “What did you do when you were working with her? She taught you how to write one, didn’t she?”

  “Well, yeah, but—”

  “Just do your best,” he said and handed me her note. It was short, rather brutal, and witty. She didn’t want any ceremony. She didn
’t want a moment of silence. Or a moment of indistinct noise, either. And she didn’t want anybody to gather at a local bar and tell drunken stories about her because those stories would inevitably be romantic and false. And she’d rather be forgotten than inaccurately remembered. And she wanted me to write the obituary.

  It was an honor, I guess. It would have been difficult, maybe impossible, to write a good obituary about a woman I didn’t know. But she made it easy. She insisted in her letter that I use the standard fill-in-the-blanks form.

  “If it was good enough for others,” she’d written, “it is good enough for me.”

  A pragmatic and lonely woman, sure. And serious about her work. But, trust me, she was able to tell jokes without insulting the dead. At least, not directly.

  That June, a few days before she went on the medical leave that she’d never return from, Lois had typed surveyed instead of survived in the obituary for a locally famous banker. That error made it past the copy editors and was printed: Mr. X is surveyed by his family and friends.

  Mr. X’s widow called Lois to ask about the odd word choice.

  “I’m sorry,” Lois said. She was mortified. It was the only serious typo of her career. “It was my error. It’s entirely my fault. I apologize. I will correct it for tomorrow’s issue.”

  “Oh, no, please don’t,” the widow said. “My husband would have loved it. He was a poet. Never published or anything like that. But he loved poems. And that word, survey—well, it might be accidental, but it’s poetry, I think. I mean, my husband would have been delighted to know that his family and friends were surveying him at the funeral.”

  And so a surprised and delighted Lois spent the rest of the day thinking of verbs that more accurately reflected our interactions with the dead.

  Mr. X is assailed by his family and friends.

  Mr. X is superseded by his family and friends.

  Mr. X is superimposed by his family and friends.

  Mr. X is sensationalized by his family and friends.

  Mr. X is shadowboxed by his family and friends.

  Lois laughed as she composed her imaginary obituaries. I’d never seen her laugh that much, and I suspected that very few people had seen her react that strongly to anything. She wasn’t remote or strained, she was just private. And so her laughter—her public joy—was frankly erotic. Though I’d always thought of her as a sexy librarian—with her wire-rimmed glasses and curly brown hair and serious panty hose and suits—I’d never really thought of going to bed with her. Not to any serious degree. I was eighteen, so I fantasized about having sex with nearly every woman I saw, but I hadn’t obsessed about Lois. Not really. I’d certainly noticed that her calves were a miracle of muscle—her best feature—but I’d only occasionally thought of kissing my way up and down her legs. But at that moment, as she laughed about death, I had to shift my legs to hide my erection.

  “Hey, kid,” she said, “when you die, how do you want your friends and family to remember you?”

  “Jeez,” I said. “I don’t want to think about that stuff. I’m eighteen.”

  “Oh, so young,” she said. “So young and handsome. You’re going to be very popular with the college girls.”

  I almost whimpered. But I froze, knowing that the slightest movement, the softest brush of my pants against my skin, would cause me to orgasm.

  Forgive me, I was only a kid.

  “Ah, look at you,” Lois said. “You’re blushing.”

  And so I grabbed a random file off her desk and ran. I made my escape. But, oh, I was in love with the obituaries editor. And she—well, she taught me how to write an obituary.

  And so this is how I wrote hers:

  Lois Andrews, age 45, of Spokane, died Friday, August 24, 1985, at Sacred Heart Hospital. There will be no funeral service. She donated her body to Washington State University. An only child, Lois Anne Andrews was born January 16, 1940, at Sacred Heart Hospital, to Martin and Betsy (Harrison) Andrews. She never married. She was the obituaries editor at the Spokesman-Review for twenty-two years. She is survived by her friends and colleagues at the newspaper.

  Yes, that was the story of her death. It was not enough. I felt morally compelled to write a few more sentences, as if those extra words would somehow compensate for what had been a brief and solitary life.

  I was also bothered that Lois had donated her body to science. Of course, her skin and organs would become training tools for doctors and scientists, and that was absolutely vital, but the whole process still felt disrespectful to me. I thought of her, dead and naked, lying on a gurney while dozens of students stuck their hands inside of her. It seemed—well, pornographic. But I also knew that my distaste was cultural.

  Indians respect dead bodies even more than the live ones.

  Of course, I never said anything. I was young and frightened and craved respect and its ugly cousin, approval, so I did as I was told. And that’s why, five days after Lois’s death and a few minutes after the editor in chief had told me I would be writing the obituaries until they found “somebody official,” I found myself sitting at her desk.

  “What am I supposed to do first?” I asked the chief.

  “Well, she must have unfiled files and unwritten obits and unmailed letters.”

  “Okay, but where?”

  “I don’t know. It was her desk.”

  This was in the paper days, and Lois kept five tall filing cabinets stuffed with her job.

  “I don’t know what to do,” I said, panicked.

  “Jesus, boy,” the editor in chief said. “If you want to be a journalist, you’ll have to work under pressure. Jesus. And this is hardly any pressure at all. All these people are dead. The dead will not pressure you.”

  I stared at him. I couldn’t believe what he was saying. He seemed so cruel. He was a cruel duck, that’s what he was.

  “Jesus,” he said yet again, and grabbed a folder off the top of the pile. “Start with this one.”

  He handed me the file and walked away. I wanted to shout at him that he’d said Jesus three times in less than fifteen seconds. I wasn’t a Christian and didn’t know much about the definition of blasphemy, but it seemed like he’d committed some kind of sin.

  But I kept my peace, opened the file, and read the handwritten letter inside. A woman had lost her husband. Heart attack. And she wanted to write the obituary and run his picture. She included her phone number. I figured it was okay to call her. So I did.

  “Hello?” she said. Her name was Mona.

  “Oh, hi,” I said. “I’m calling from the Spokesman-Review. About your—uh, late husband?”

  “Oh. Oh, did you get my letter? I’m so happy you called. I wasn’t sure if anybody down there would pay attention to me.”

  “This is sacred,” I said, remembering Lois’s lessons. “We take this very seriously.”

  “Oh, well, that’s good—that’s great—and, well, do you think it will be okay for me to write the obituary? I’m a good writer. And I’d love to run my husband’s photo—his name was Dean—I’d love to run his photo with the—with his—with my remembrance of him.”

  I had no idea if it was okay for her to write the obituary. And I believed that the newspaper generally ran only the photographs of famous dead people. But then I looked at the desktop and noticed Lois’s neatly written notes trapped beneath the glass. I gave praise for her organizational skills.

  “Okay, okay,” I said, scanning the notes. “Yes. Yes, it’s okay if you want to write the obituary yourself.”

  I paused and then read aloud the official response to such a request.

  “Because we understand, in your time of grieving, that you want your loved one to be honored with the perfect words—”

  “Oh, that’s lovely.”

  “—but, and we’re truly sorry about this, it will cost you extra,” I said.

  “Oh,” she said. “Oh, I didn’t know that. How much extra?”

  “Fifty dollars.”

  “Wow, t
hat’s a lot of money.”

  “Yes,” I said. It was one-fifth of my monthly rent.

  “And how about running the photograph?” Mona asked. “How much extra does that cost?”

  “It depends on the size of the photo.”

  “How much is the smallest size?”

  “Fifty dollars, as well.”

  “So it will be one hundred dollars to do this for my husband?”

  “Yes.”

  “I don’t know if I can afford it. I’m a retired schoolteacher on a fixed income.”

  “What did you teach?” I asked.

  “I taught elementary school—mostly second grade—at Meadow Hills for forty-five years. I taught three generations.” She was proud, even boastful. “I’ll have you know that I taught the grandchildren of three of my original students.”

  “Well, listen,” I said, making an immediate and inappropriate decision to fuck the duck in chief. “We have a special rate for—uh, retired public employees. So the rate for your own obituary and your husband’s photograph is—uh, let’s say twenty dollars. Does that sound okay?”

  “Twenty dollars? Twenty dollars? I can do twenty dollars. Yes, that’s lovely. Oh, thank you, thank you.”

  “You’re welcome, ma’am. So—uh, tell me, when do you want this to run?”

  “Well, I told my daughters and sons that it would run tomorrow.”

  “Tomorrow?”

  “Yes, the funeral is tomorrow. I really want this to run on the same day. Is that okay? Will that be possible?”

  I had no idea if it was possible. “Let me talk to the boys down in the print room,” I said, as if I knew them. “And I’ll call you back in a few minutes, okay?”

  “Oh, yes, yes, I’ll be waiting by the phone.”

  We said our good-byes and I slumped in my chair. In Lois’s chair. What had I done? I’d made a promise I could not keep. I counted to one hundred, trying to find a cool center, and walked over to the chief’s office.