Read Letter Composed During a Lull in the Fighting Online
Authors: Kevin Powers
I want the boys at the end of the bar
to know, these Young Republicans
in pink popped-collar shirts, to know
that laughter drives me mad
and if one must be old
before one dies, then we were
old. Nineteen or twenty-three
and we were old and now
as the fan spins and the light
shines off their gelled hair and
nails, I want to rub their clean
bodies in blood. I want my rifle
and I want them to know
how scared I am still, alone
in bars these three years later when
I notice it is gone. I want the boys
at the end of the bar to know
that my rifle weighed eight pounds
when loaded and on my first day
home I made a scene in a bar,
so drunk that I screamed and
wept and begged for someone
to give it back. “How will I return
fire?” I cried. I truly cried.
But no one could give it back
because it was gone and I felt
so old: twenty-four and crying
for my rifle and the boys
at the end of the bar
were laughing.
The burnt pan
I have begun to cook my bacon in
is stripped and smells somehow of lilies,
open white and wide
on the table by the window.
I do not know
why this should or should not be so.
It is just another bafflement
in a world
built out of bafflement.
 Â
Outside it is winter
once again, unseasonably warm.
The air is uniform
and I can hardly even tell
if it is inside or outside of
my body as I breathe it. If I do not
go back to it, the house will burn.
If I do not go back to it,
I will never know
what mattered.
Photographing the Suddenly Dead
Images anesthetize.
âSusan Sontag
Â
Fact: anything invented must someday circle back
to its beginning: one puff of smoke as a lanyard
is let go, which precedes the leaning out
from underneath a hood, adapting
to the newness of the light
after so much time
in the finite darkness
that the hood had made
so carefully, as if it alone
could be the difference
between life and every other form
of composition.
 Â
Know, too, there is a photograph
at the bottom of an abandoned duffel bag
left on purpose underneath
whatever unused items
take up space
in an aging mother's
rarely opened-up garage.
 Â
At night, above it, there are stars.
I've seen them. Any claim of permanence
must kneel before this fact, and kneel too
before the puff of smoke that made
the picture happen.
 Â
What does it mean to say,
I made this
? Must I claim
both the image and the act?
One, the killing
of three young men whose crime
was an unwillingness
to apply the brakes in time
to stop before arriving
at a checkpoint.
 Â
The other, a simple flash
and click, a record of
a broken arm and blood,
a rusted rifle and a shot-up car,
a certain quality of light
as it refracted through the dust
that lingered high above
the wadi where they ended up,
soon to be on fire.
Someone laughed as it was taken.
Everyone wave good-bye,
we said and laughed again
when our relief arrived.
 Â
We no longer have to name
the sins that we are guilty of.
The evidence for every crime
exists. What one
must always answer for
is not what has been done, but
for the weight of what remains
as residueâevery effort
must be made to scrub away
the stain we've made on time.
 Â
Brady, for one, never made a photo
of a battle as it happened. At first,
too much stillness was required
to fix the albumin in place.
In the end the dead, unburied
and left open to the air,
were committed to the light
as it reacted to the mostly
silver nitrate mix. I wonder
if it was someone's job
to check a watch, to time it all,
or what it meant that Brady,
almost blind as war began,
would let himself go bankrupt too,
just to get the process right.
 Â
I found that it was not enough
to leave that day behind
at the bottom of a duffel bag,
or to linger in the backyard
by my mother's pond, trying to replace
what I imagined were its fading edges
with a catalog
of changing leaves in fall,
each shifting color captured
in a frame, one shutter opened
to a drowned and dying oak,
the next, the water
it was drowning in.
Nor would it be enough
to have myself for months secluded
in the dark rooms
of an apartment
I'd wound up paying for up front,
desperate for anything
to keep out light, a sometimes
loaded gun,
and whatever solitude
I needed to survive
the next unraveling,
undocumented instant.
I first realized I was evaporating
when I was twelve, having heard
 Â
for the first time the word
embarcadero,
from some boy leafing through a battered copy
 Â
of a triple A road atlas tucked onto a shelf,
one volume in the series of books of maps
 Â
that had for a long time composed
the section of the library devoted to geography.
 Â
It was a place, but not in any real sense
except the one I'd guessed at, the exotic newness
 Â
of a word that finished with a vowel, and if I,
in the library of a worn-out-already rural school,
 Â
created in my mind a picture that could be called
a fair approximation of the place as it existed,
 Â
the long line of the esplanade falling off
into the distances, perhaps the fine grey of
 Â
the Pacific reaching through the uncertainty of fog,
and then at night, the book of maps now left
 Â
open on a table, I could create the bustle
of a group of stars that never were. I'd be called
 Â
lucky, or just dead wrong, and for a moment,
motionless, I'd be clearly drawn to scale upon the page
 Â
with just the clarity that I had hoped for, not knowing
the fruitlessness of having clarity among one's hopes.
 Â
When the librarian called my name my name
was made into a kind of spell, dispersing everything
 Â
I could identify or claim as being part
of one certain, undisputed me, the long walk
 Â
down the hall as she held my hand, deferring
every question I might ask until a later time,
 Â
and I remember the bright red dust of dried-up clay
that swung in liquid-looking rivulets as I sat
 Â
in the parking lot and waited for my father's Chevy to appear,
knowing only that someone was dying, thinking only
 Â
of the word
embarcadero,
any place other than the place
I was forced to occupy in time and space, any name
 Â
of any town whose weight could be abandoned
with enough repeating, and giving up at last, the last
 Â
of the other children gone, hearing in my father's voice
his philosophy of living, always buy a Chevy, son,
 Â
those goddamn Fords are designed for obsolescence,
the plan, see, is in five years it'll break down
 Â
and you'll have to buy another, and I asked if it was like
the broken bicycle he'd bought for me that we'd repaired
 Â
one piece at a time until it worked, how when
we screwed the last bolt onto the new sprocket
 Â
the old bike was no longer there, everything replaced,
the broken pieces set aside and what did it mean,
 Â
and his face, which I remember over everything, lined
with a map-like certainty of shame because he had no answer,
 Â
offered none, and then the tracks of the Chevy's tires
turned up the dust again, the pine trees bright and luminous
 Â
with their late spring blanketing of pollen underneath
the unreal quality of light in which we lived, until I climbed
 Â
into the seat beside him, that rag he had
by then begun to cough into
already resting on his knee.
Whoever picks up the last of the thrown jacks
while the ball still bounces off the pavement
and hangs suspended in the kicked-up playground dust
must also retrieve the history of the ground
where it will land. There are rules. Tell us,
boy, called out on eenie, if you
have guessed them yet. Before there was
brushed nickel there was iron, before
Tommy Dunlap was pushed idly from the bus
into that busy intersection, there was
a plenitude of grief already. Measured
against all that, a single incident recedes
into no biggie, just a memory that will help
to make his fourth-grade classmates cautious,
for a time at least, until they can no longer take
the weight of that third and fourth look down the street
when crossing into any kind of danger.
It doesn't matter, can't, and even if the impact
of that moment could be measured, we cannot say
with any certainty that Sara Albertson,
ten years after, could have resisted
making dainty track marks in the crook
of her elbow, between her toes, and I have heard,
when it was at its worst, into her eyes.
 Â
Who could have known, of the children
gathered in a circle, picking for a game of jacks,
that the ground on which they walked
had once been furrowed by a group of,
well, you-know-whos. Who among them
could have known? Well, really, any,
had they been even half-aware in class,
had they opened up their textbooks once,
had they heard their fathers say,
If them
niggers keep comin' we're leavin'
.
 Â
Without the plans for the school, now buried
in the county zoning office basement,
or some historical artifact that would give
the layout of the old plantation, it would be difficult
to say for sure if the fence they crawled under to escape
had been over by the baseball field
or by the lower meadow where the kindergarteners
played that game in gym with a parachute and tennis ball,
the children's arms just barely strong enough
to send it lofting into the blue sky, and them too young
to know not to look directly at it, yellow and hanging
as if by magic, blinding as it reached the apex
of its flight. By Christmas break they would perfect
their method, the whole game now brought indoors,
the children trained to never look again.
You might say they failed to learn the only lesson
any one of them would have ever needed since: that if
anything on earth has earned the right to be observed
it is a thing of beauty while in flight.
You might say. You might say. You might.
There he is in the blue trunks in the corner. Eyes all aflutter. His face above the blue mat and the nose not gently folded over has the crowd all saying, “Thank God for cartilage and bone,” while feeling along those parts of their bodies that are as yet intact, the way people often do when confronted with disfigurement. The broken nose has earned him ten thousand dollars. Not the nose exactly, but the willingness to have it broken in the undercard fight of a second-rate tough-man show held three times a year in the Bluefield High School Gymnasium. But we did not wonder at the nose. We wondered at the disappearance of the four state semifinal football banners on the wall when the lights went out, and at the PA crackling with guitar riffs and a voice saying, “Bluefield, West Virginia! Are you ready?” How it put everybody in every shellacked timber bleacher bench into a frenzy. When the woman three rows down leaned in to her friend, flipped out her bangs knowingly and said, “The whole to-do comes from Roanoke,” we thought we were observers of some holy pilgrimage out of the east. Still, we did not wonder at the nose, for even in Bluefield doctors set broken bones. They come out of the mines all the time, out of the old railroad junction, sometimes out of the bars when boys from the Virginia side and boys from the West Virginia side start hollering into the streets on account of someone taking the name West by God Virginia in vain. And this boy, lying in the blue trunks in the corner, is no stranger to being broken. If we'd seen his face before the fight, if it had not been obscured by the flash of cheap carnival strobes, we would have seen the nose sitting on top of his face all askew like a shoal sticking out of the New River in the dry season. After the fight, the fine lights shipped in from Roanoke rest before the headline bout. The gym is illuminated only by its local splendor and the janitor in that yellow pall pushes a dry broom through the blood, the lines rough and straight across the mat like some misplaced Zen garden. And if we look at him in the corner, eyes still fluttering, we might also notice a tremor running from foot to ankle to knee. We might notice a few teeth dotting the dry-broomed blood beside him on the mat. We might look again at his eyes fluttering now, and because wonder is by no means married to consciousness, we might think of his sister waiting at the Travel America on Interstate 81, how she does not need ten thousand, only ten or twenty, because she has worked her way from OxyContin to meth. We might see her eyes fall on their father's shaving strop, the shine dulling both love and luster from the father's eyes before he raises up his hand with it. We might lastly stare out at this boy in the blue trunks in the corner as they carry him off with his nose broken and a little of his blood spilled out before hearing the announcer say, “Ladies and gentlemen, a hand for the loser, fighting out of West Virginia.” And it will be no great wonder to us that he smiles.