
The French Child. Unadulterated, a French child looks up at me. He, child, I, adult. His eyes large, serious with the wisdom of the unspoiled. His mouth round, sensuous with the fullness of youth. The nose molten within his cherubic face; only an appendage, as if he needed no air in his narcissistic self-sustenance. The child reflects his own being within dark pupils quietly scanning my soul. He takes my whole self within the realm of his senses and, though no word passes between us, I feel a tacit conspiracy of cognizance; a still bond, eerie in the silence. He, the child, innately relying on his natural grace; I, the adult, uneasy in the nakedness of discovery. I feel strangely divested of pretense, rendered impotent amid habit, denuded of mannerism. Within the silent face, bare. I become the thwarted girl in the rigid cloth of precocious honesty, frozen into futile social quality, cut from the sensual cord, frigid; dismayed by the curve of a child’s lip - that vestigial remnant of continuum that disappears with need into the grown up years, shrunken by shame, atrophied by reason. The child has no want for all I’ve learned. He stands confident in the chaste ego, expecting nothing but sensual equality. I am within the existential moment that very child: sexless, timeless; myself and all mankind. Almost sad, almost hopeful, but fully present in beauteous omniscience. continued...
Heat Heat – I pant. No sweat on my brow, but a trickle descends upon my chest and tickles as I follow this only sign of life at the moment, I live. Heat – The sand, disturbed by cattle, shifts in ground wind and mounts in little dunes against the dry cakes of manure; the only signs of other life at the moment, I breathe. Heat – I walk toward the windmill, tower of galvanized steel in a canyon, boulder-oven, a sudden zephyr brushes the blades above the zinc trough and I taste anticipation within, a last illusion below. Heat – I stagger. my feet burn in sandals, tears have become salt on dry cheeks, itchy reminders of irrelevant pain. I slump in moist dirt, digging, to feel yet another sign of life among other necessities that must suffice – water, now. Heat – I don’t care about mankind, there are lizards to play with my children in the sand, there are snakes to fear underfoot, and coyotes to sing along with us on slow nights: sounds of the wild to shiver by, together. Alone. Heat – thick, tongue swelling, thoughts blurring into hot hills around me, reality fades behind creosote; bushes-spectres of hyper-truth, relativity tainted with imagination, mingled with fear of man, with apprehension; I don’t care anymore, tremble. Heat – I want to see the children, to look by way of the sun, to fade in our day without end, to tell them of my search for food, about the jackrabbit that darted by, tripping me in mutual confusion, animal and prey not knowing which way; then all we’ll have to eat will be the yucca seed and a handful of grain to boil away again, to survive. Heat – I will love, but I won’t tell about their father who left in search of a bottle behind a job. I won’t tell why I cried, why my left arm doesn’t move; but I’ll love them fiercely, my reason, my vision, my only sanity now, out of focus I see the small trailer, three little forms on sand, I laugh a crackly roar, They offer a dusty jug of tepid water kept for me to return . . . Heat – No matter!
Suppertime Every day thirty minutes before dusk, I waited by the porch and held my children still. Eyes riveted to the west, we breathed in unison; neither moving, nor smelling, we became as invisible as rocks on a hillside. Precisely as expected, the coyote would appear, two pointy ears bouncing above bunch grass at a trot, then, he would cautiously hesitate at the edge of sand, galloping, neither eager nor foolish, toward the offering, a stack of rabbit skin and entrails of a freshly denuded animal. He would sniff the air with sharp nose held upward and little white teeth showing through open snout, pointed straight at us with feigned aloofness. We would then bow to the food, turn back, and repeat his trotty steps, back to the dry beyond. We would wait until tail and ears melted in the parched weeds, and then one more minute; walk carefully to the stash and observe it was still there, drying and rotting in the Sun. The next day would be the same, ants and black beetles crawling about the party. On the third day we would wash up and become rocks in the crepuscule hour, eyes searching the horizon. The coyote would come to the planned rendez-vous with a nervous stance; eyes darting above silent smile. He would hesitate just an instant at the dead olive tree, then run a few bounds to the now putrid viscera. His teeth would crush live maggots, the fur sliding with the guts down his ugly throat, at a gulp. Then- he would turn to us, look, directly, at us; a long, long stare, lower his head, just once, then turn away, nose to the breeze. We would return to the shack in pensive silence, and eat rabbit meat tortillas, feeling complete. Nadine Sellers is an intrepid French writer; this papivore has been known to consume reams in one setting, like ice-cream and whole dandelions. She lives in the belly of the Beast, rural Missouri, close to the bull's eye of the Midwest; After Death Valley, tornado alley looks deceptively inviting. Having evaporated a lifetime of scattered lectures and performances in Europe and U.S., she finds solace in facelessness. Spotty publication in French anthologies and a smattering of readings and commentaries on radio have spread her spoken word and music to uncomfortable stretches. Nadine has trodden the weedy path of career neglect in the pursuit of nomadic sustenance. Close to bone in lean times and deep in flesh through abundance, she tells of abandonned ancestors and adoptive lands. She translates the imigrant into the ordinary, mapping universal feelings across humanity. Now reclusive, Nadine is currently at work on a compilation of stories. She can hear the words hurling down the road. You can contact Nadine by
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or at her MySpace profile. Last update : 09-01-2008 11:13
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