Covering the Moon
by Myra King
In the
distance we hear a noise like tapping. I stop some feet short of the entrance
to the graveyard, my brother Ben snuggled up on my back, his head buried in my
parka hood.
“Look Ben,” I say, “it’s not the dead you have to be scared of.”
Our mother tells us this all the time. We live close to the cemetery,
actually only a glance away through our front door. Not that we knew instinctively
to be frightened, but our friends soon let us know that it wasn’t a normal
thing. Aren’t you afraid the ghosts will get you? How can you sleep? Stuff like
that. But it’s not the dead that do bad things. It’s the living. Like Dad, he
left us soon after Ben was born. And Ben, well he was a rape baby. Everyone
knows this, even Ben, although he doesn’t know what it means. And even though
everyone always says, “Poor Mrs Anderson”, that’s our mother, I always think: Poor
Ben. It’s a lot worse for him.
Yeah,
the dead can’t hurt you, but that doesn’t stop us from being scared.
We have done this: visit the graveyard at midnight on every Friday
the 13th since Ben turned three. It was a dare set up by my friend
Anica. After the first time she chickened out, but we kept it up like a
tradition. This is our fourth year. I’m eleven now and Ben is seven but it’s a
good thing he’s such a scrawny kid, he doesn’t weigh much. I guess the rapist
must have been a small guy ‘cause our mother is nearly five foot eleven and
built like a rugby player. Sometimes I wonder how he managed it. There’s this
Australian spider called an Orb weaver. She’s so much bigger than her mate who
shares her web that he has to be very careful when mating. I think maybe the
rapist would’ve had to be careful with Mum. I’ve seen her temper and how hard
she uses the strap, especially on Ben, when she’s been drinking. But maybe the rapist had a knife or a gun. Mum’s
never told me the details, and you can’t ask about things like that, can you? I
mean I’m not supposed to know, but my cousin, Daniela, heard her mum, my aunty,
telling a neighbour. Daniela told me and then Ben heard me telling Anica. But
we all haven’t told Mum we know.
The
tapping noise is getting louder. It sounds like someone with high heels but the
paths are all gravel and sand so that can’t be right. I don’t know if it’s
coming closer to us, or if we are moving closer to it. The dare is to reach the
middle, where the little buildings are. The mini-mansions I call them. They
glow sort of in the night but I can’t see that yet, we’re still a way away.
I jump
at Ben’s voice, muffled by my parka. “I gotta pee, Sis. Now.”
I lower him down and he goes behind a bush, even though we can’t see
anyone and the tapping is still ahead of us.
When he comes out he offers me his hand, which I take with outstretched
fingers until I’m sure it’s dry. Then we both walk on in silence. The tapping
noise seems to be coming from where we are heading. But I still can’t see the
mini-mansions.
Ben pulls on my hand. “Sis,” he says, “what does a rape baby look
like?”
My mind can’t find the words to answer him straight away. So he tugs
at my hand again, almost pulling me sideways.
Up ahead is an angel statue, I’ve never seen her before, she’s
sitting in the centre of a huge plot divided into four, two at the front and
two at the back. She looks like she’s about to take off. For a moment I wish I
could fly away too.
There’s an iron seat across the path from her. I lead Ben across to it
and sit down. He brushes leaves off the seat. He really is a tidy kid,
especially for a boy. I have no idea where we are. Which way is home.
I’m gathering my thoughts like someone rounding up sparrows. They
keep scattering.
“Well Ben,” I say, “a rape baby isn’t the baby’s fault. It’s still a
baby, like any other.”
I can feel Ben’s eyes on me, staring, and when a cloud passes and the
moon and stars light up his face, I see he’s been crying.
“Oh, Ben, you’re not that
scared are you?”
Ben shakes his head and looks at the angel. “It’s just that Jack
said rape is a bad thing and that I was a bad thing, and that’s why Mum hates
me. And I was wondering, Sis… Will I go to hell?”
I can’t answer him this time. The trouble is I don’t know exactly
how rape works. I know Jack is right, it’s something bad and I know that it’s
something to do with mating. And also the
girl doesn’t want it. But does that mean the roosters are raping the hens? I
see that all the time, the hens running away and the roosters jumping on them
and pushing them into the dust. The hens certainly don’t want it. The baby
chickens are cute though.
Ben is sucking his thumb and leaning against me. Me and him against
the odds.
I realise I can’t hear the tapping anymore and I wonder when it actually
stopped, how I missed the moment. I look around, back the way we came, and at the
way I think we should be going. I don’t know if I can find the strength to
carry Ben much further.
The clouds are covering the moon again. I didn’t think it was
possible to get lost in a place we are both so familiar with. But everything looks
so different in the dark.
* * * * *
"Covering
the Moon" was first published in Fast
Forward Press (US). It is also part of Myra King's 2017 collection Uneasy
Castles.
Myra King lives along the coast of South
Australia with her writer husband, David, and their greyhound, Sparky. Her
poems and short stories, some of which have won awards, have been published in
the UK, USA, Ireland and Australia in many literary magazines, books and
anthologies. Myra has another short story collection, City Paddock, and two YA
novels: The Journey of Velvet Brown, and The Diaries of Velvet Brown, all
published by Ginninderra Press, Adelaide, Australia. Her novel, Cyber Rules,
was published by Certys UK.
No comments:
Post a Comment