Thursday, March 31, 2016

Thief, Katy Comber

The Bowling Shoes

The night I experienced the high of small scale kleptomania in the name of “character development research,” something magical was set in motion in my small Chester County town. Something that years later, whenever I tell this story, people shake their heads and wonder if I’m telling one of the tall-tales I generally save for the page. For some, this story just affirms their belief in a higher power, God as Author, writing one hell of a micro-story. For others, it is just another example of how damn small the world truly is and how fortunate my 17 year old self was to have pulled off The Great Bowling Shoe Heist of 2000 during a time when the world wasn't so serious.
The story is set in a local bowling alley called Fraser Lanes. Fraser Lanes had its glory days when the place would be packed with leagues and birthday celebrations and kids who had nothing better to do on a Saturday night. That night in particular, wasn’t one of them. The place was empty. I had been in the middle of writing a short story when my friends talked me into a night out. The story centered around a man named Al whose hands produced a sticky glue-like film whenever he neglected to steal something. Al hated stealing, but he was in love with a girl named Rhonda whose idea of romance was holding hands in the park and sweet pecks on the cheek, and boy his hands needed to be primed and ready for holding Rhonda’s because they were the smoothest and most delicate hands in the universe and Al loved them. I didn't say it was a great story.
That night, my thoughts stuck with Al. I thought about how his hands were cursed by a wiccan librarian because he’d once found stealing pages out of reference books thrilling. The thrill was unfamiliar. How could I write about a thrill I had not experienced for myself? I looked down at my shoes. This was a thrill I would know. I formulated a plan.
Moments later, I walked out of Frazer Lanes with my head held high and falsely confident. The bowling shoes were still on my feet. My converse sneakers were clutched in my right hand as I swept through the door. My friends ran to the car, and before I could go with them, a girl my age cleared her throat behind me.
“Excuse me? Those shoes. You forgot to return your shoes.”
Forgot? “Oh. Right! Ha. I just thought that since it’s such a nice night, I’d change my shoes out here.” That is so stupid. Katy. Come on.
“Oh, okay.” The girl turned back to the door. No way did that work.
“Wait a min-” The girl blushed, and as the lameness of my excuse to get the shoes outside occurred to her, my friend drove his car around to get me and I jumped in before the girl could even finish the word. I stole a quick look back. The girl’s shoulders slumped forward and her mouth gaped as she faded from view. My friends and I laughed in disbelief, and I had a new pair of shoes.


Two years later, the shoes sat in a box in my dorm room and I had become a person who attended a weekly co-ed collegiate Bible study. Regularly. I loved it. It was a small study, so when new people arrived it was easy to introduce them around and get to know them. One night, a newcomer named Susan walked in. Susan had an easy smile and I liked her immediately. When she mentioned that she’d attended my high school’s rival school, we started listing people we knew and common friends and marveled at the smallness of our world. As the night progressed, Susan became more and more familiar to me. Where had I known her? Where had I seen her before? I couldn’t focus. Then, Susan’s posture changed. Her shoulders slumped forward and her mouth opened in response to a story being told across the room. The girl. The bowling shoes.
“Susan?” Susan looked over at me and grinned. “Did you ever work at a bowling alley?”
“Frazer Lanes?” Susan responded. Crap. The shoes.
“That’s the one!” I exclaimed, but could not venture further. The rest of the night, I held my truth in tight. My boyfriend looked over at me on the drive back to my dorm in such a way that the entire story swiftly tumbled out. I cringed until he responded with a laugh. What are the chances, we both wondered out loud.
The following week, I wrapped the shoes and bought them to the study. Before the evening discussions began, I pulled Susan aside and gave her the gift. Her smile wavered a bit as she curiously looked down at a gift given randomly by a girl she’d only met a week ago.
“I’ll explain everything after you open it.” I promised. My heart thumped heavy and quick. The unwrapping was swift, but seemed to take years. When Susan lift the lid and unveiled the pair of bowling shoes I’d stolen years ago, she looked up at me in immediate recognition.
“You!” She stopped. She looked at the shoes. She looked at me. “That was my first day!” She looked back down at the shoes. The silence that followed was broken by my boyfriend’s hushed retelling of the story in the next room and a bout of laughter. I looked at Susan. Susan kept looking at the shoes. When she finally looked up at me, the shock of the moment broke, and she began to laugh.

The years that followed had so many ups and downs. The boyfriend who took me to Bible study became my ex-boyfriend, then friend, then boyfriend again. In fact, one of the only constants seemed to be that if I ever went home to bowl at Frazer Lanes, the shoes would be there, reserved and waiting for me behind the counter. And when the boyfriend became the fiance, Susan was invited to the wedding. Her gift to me? A beautifully wrapped pair of size 10, worn out, red and blue bowling shoes.

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Everyday Heartbreak and Echo, Katy Comber

-st/-end/-ever
By Katy Comber

If there were candles
that once lit
echoed sounds
attune with scent
(Ours would smell of
old textbooks, m&ms;
Trident Original gum),
I could strike a match
to hear our laughter
free and unfettered

Until then, memories are fleeing
from my grasp
and I have lost your number

Three Siblings Unite, Katy Comber

The Dream House Chronicles: Adam, Joe, and The Kid
By Katy Comber

Henrietta sang an old tune
she sang it low like a thorn
in the side…

The song echoed in Billie’s ears as she jolted awake. Was it in her dream? Was it the house? The house. Her ears perked and listened as a bass line thumped softly from downstairs. Billie reached for the softball bat under her bed. She was an attractive, single woman living in the large family homestead alone for the first time in her life. The bat was a gift from her dad. Dad. The graying mustached man with the crinkling eyes flashed in her mind. Crap. What was that? She never thought of her father if she could help it these days. Maybe it was because the bat was a gift from The Great Before.
A clatter, a gruff and muffled curse, and a girly giggle sounded from the direction of the farmhouse’s kitchen. The owner of the giggle was foreign, but the low voice and that particular word belonged to, quite possibly and quite impossibly…
“Adam?” Another curse practically growled downstairs. “Adam? Is that you?”
“Yep. Yeah, Kid. It’s me.”
“Holy crap, Adam. You scared me.”
“You got the softball bat in your hands don’t you?”
“Of course.”
“Well. It’s safe. Are you coming down or what?”
“Are you guys decent?” Billie heard the giggle again, but it was clipped short this time. Billy imagined Adam’s warning look; his latest conquest rolling her eyes. Then Billie heard the rustle of clothes being gathered. A scampering pair of feet. The click of the powder room door lock.
“We will be.”
“Crap. Just crap. Adam. I eat off that counter.”
“Whoa, Kid, that language.” Adam’s voice carried over as Billie padded down the stairs. Patronizing sarcasm coated every syllable, and Billie realized how many years had passed since she’d seen her oldest brother. She looked down at her braless chest covered by an oversized striped t-shirt and stirrup leggings with ripped knees and a waist folded over as it was two sizes too big. Perfect outfit for a family reunion.   
“Are those Mom’s? They’re enormous on you, Kid.” Adam’s greeting was never just hello or how are you. He preferred to greet people with criticisms. The ball forever in someone else’s court. Rejection was easiest when he controlled the reason. Girls like the one in the bathroom were the kind of girls who found verbal abuse refreshing and hilarious until they realized it for what it was.
“Hello, Adam. Yes. They are mom’s. I found them when I moved back in and I like wearing them… obviously. Why are you and some girl here?”
“She has a name.”
“What?”
“Lily. Rose… some flower.”
“Posey.” the girl squeaked in the doorway. Adam rushed at Posey and tossed her onto his back. The action read as affectionate and playful, but Billie knew it was just a distraction for the girl. Posey cackled and grinned over Adam’s shoulder. “We’re here because of the letter.”
As if on cue, headlights shone at the edge of driveway and the sound of a car approaching on the loose gravel announced another arrival. The slam of the car door, triggered something inside Billie. Joe was here.
The footsteps trugged, hesitating and then resolutely pounding, up the front porch that wrapped around to the side kitchen door where the three waited. Two were breathless. One, clueless. Joe. How long had it been? The Great Before.
“Hell-” The booming voice started as the door opened, “oh. H-hey.” Time itself held its breath. Joe, darling, kind, handsome, stood tall and wiry with his feet halfway in and out of the house. His right foot crossed the threshold to meet his left foot. He was inside. Suddenly the ticking of the grandfather clock in the living room was extremely loud. Tick. Joe looked at his siblings and the pretty girl straddling his older brother’s back and neck. Tock. Pushed the wire-rimmed glasses up the bridge of his nose. Tick. And… Tock. Grinned. Tick.
The eruption of Billie and Adam greeting Joe was deafening. Everyone began to speak at once. Adam, perhaps accidentally, dropped Posey to the floor and, with Billie, pounced on Joe with a warm and generous hug. Joe’s scarred arms wrapped around Billie immediately and swept her up as he did when they were kids. In the commotion, Joe and Adam began talking about Dad, a letter, and The Great Before began to stroll around the room like a restless and feral cat waiting to be noticed only to run away as soon as someone attempted to approach it.  
“Alright. Alright.” Billie perched onto the counter. Looked at Adam and Posey, and slid off again. Joe watched. Adam laughed. Posey turned pink. Billie cleared her throat and stared at the floor as she asked her question. “What is this letter you keep talking about?”
“Dad.”
“Dad?”
“He sent us all letters. I have yours. Dad thought if you just saw it in the mailbox, it’d be tossed.” Joe stared at his sister’s bowed head. They all had reasons to hate the man, but no one could hold a grudge like Billie The Kid. The letters were all similar in tone, but had minor differences according to its reader. The gist being: this is where you need to be, this is when you need to be there, this is what you may find when you get there. The minor differences were in the greeting line.

My Dear and sweet Wilhemena,
Please don’t toss this anyway before reading it. I’m sorry…

Hey Joe,
Please make sure Billie gets her letter. It’s important that both of you…

Adam
Hope you’re staying out of trouble…

“Ugh. If he wanted me to read the thing, why’d he start out by calling me Wilhemena? I’ve always hated it.” Billie stared at the envelope, blue and slightly crumpled, and sighed at the return address. “So he’s getting out?”
“Three days.”
“Good behavior.”
“Does Mom know?”
“Adam and I tried contacting her, but--”
“I hate calling that place too.”
“He wants the house back.”
“I know.” Billie sighed for the third time. This was it. They hadn’t talked about Mom and Dad, The Incident, and The Great Before in years. They stayed away from each other for this very reason. Talking about these things seemed to give power to them. Even thinking about The Incident stirred something in the house. The windows opened slightly. The smell of honeysuckle wafted in and the sound of the porch swing’s gentle creak and sway in the summer breeze caused Billie’s heart to pound. The house was waking up.  

BONE FRAGMENTS OF MISSING MEN FOUND IN SINCLAIR HOUSE
….According to testimony, on August 14, 1975, two men followed Wilhemena Sinclair home from school. The men attempted to abduct the girl…”The house. It just swallowed them right up…”
“We didn’t do anything. It was the house....” A townsperson who wishes to remain anonymous states that Joe Sinclair has been committed to Lockend Asylum… “He had scars up and down his arms. Kid must’ve seen something. Overheard him crying about something about a whale made of wood.”

PARENTS CHARGED FOR SMITH BROTHERS MURDER
Clyde and Sandy Sinclair received their sentencing today… Possibility of parole… testimony stricken from record…  Pleas of Insanity not considered by jury…

WILHEMENA SINCLAIR RETURNS
... When asked why she chose to come back to the house after her college graduation, Miss. Sinclair offered no comment...

The floor vibrated for a moment. A gentle purring. The children were home. The occupants gentle and good of heart. For the moment, the house was satisfied.