The Crooked Tree

Johann Thorsson

 

As we carry our father’s body through the swamp, inside a rolled-up carpet, I notice a tree in front of us, suddenly caught in my brother’s flashlight beam. The tree grows outwards, away from those around it. It seems to be reaching up to the stars, almost within reach now that it has left the view-covering canopy of its family. As the tree sinks back into darkness and the flashlight looks elsewhere, my mind goes to the day our father brought the carpet home.

He was drunk. He worked as an insurance salesman for a short time, before, and still wore a suit everyday though he no longer had a job. He smiled as he stood and admired the carpet and told our mother that he “got the thing at half price from that Ay-rab store in the strip-mall.” It was colorful but thin, one of those fancy Persian rugs with a repeating geometrical pattern sewn in. He took a swig from a beer can and winked at us. Other fathers might wink at occasions like this as a sign of affection; that we were in on the joke. But our father’s wink was just to let us know our place.

Our mother said something and he beat her and the blood-stain ruined the pattern in the carpet.

Night lives in swamps, daytime is just a visitor. Night gets comfortable among the fauna, envelopes each plant in dark warmth and caresses away the damage done by the cruel sun. Night eases into a slow sleep as the insects sing and dance and drink. My feet sink up to the knee in the soggy ground and insects bite my arms.

“Keep your end up!” My brother holds the front end and leads the way. So it has always been. Somehow he learned to not love, and I think our mother did too, at the end. A peculiar talent that I never picked up. I don’t think I would, given a choice. Even now, even after moving away and getting what my psychiatrist calls “emotional distance”.

It was me our father turned to when he felt that it was somehow him that was wronged when he struck Steve or our mother. My brother is a good fifty pounds heavier than me, at least, and yet I sink deeper into the swamp as we walk. And I think I know why; I’m carrying the heavier burden.

“I jus’, you know, get so angry because I love you all so much,” he would say. “You know?

I always “knew”. And I enjoyed being the one he confided in. I loved him for it. These were the only times he was tender, or showed affection to any members of the family. I longed for those moments, secretly, quietly, even knowing what must precede them.

By accepting my father’s excuses and explanations I allowed him to abuse the rest of the family. He made them crooked but I made him straight, after. I think of the tree again.

A sudden flash of enlightenment at the birth of my own child made me realize what I had done. The mother, sweaty and bone-tired from a long delivery; the child in my arms, small and feeble and new to the world. I cried out of love that day, and I cried for all the times my father patted me on the back after unloading his guilt for beating up my mother. Or my brother. Or both.

Now I follow my brother as we hold our father’s body in our arms and sweat, bone-tired. The world has been reduced to this swamp and the still-warm gun sticking out of my brother’s pants.

My brother shot him in the stomach from three feet away.

In hating our father all those years he had turned into him, as I knew he would, and in a rage of clarity Steve had driven, drunk, to our childhood home and pulled the gun on our father and shot him with a tear in his eye and curses in his mouth.

“I need you now brother,” he said on the phone, after. His voice told me most of what I needed to know and that this was one of those times you did not say no. So I left my new world of books and civil discussions at dinner parties and went back.

I sink knee-deep into the swamp and I stop.

“Dale! Don’t fuckin’ drag behind,” Steve says without turning around.

“I keep sinking. I’m not wearing the shoes for this,” I say and feel stupid. I never knew what to say to him. Could never talk my way out of the guilt.

“You and your fuckin’ shoes.”

I got a degree and got away and married a nice girl. Bought nice shoes.

The carpet moves then and I scream and drop it and my brother curses. The swamp immediately tries to take it away from us. Steve turns and shouts at me.

“What the fuck, Dale? It’s jus’ a few more yards.”

I almost don’t hear him. Just stare at the carpet.

“It moved,” I say and don’t believe myself. “He’s … he’s not dead.”

There are noises in a swamp, but all we hear is the pathetic moan from inside the carpet. From our father.

“Fuck!” Steve inherited our father’s vocabulary.

He pulls the gun out from his pants and tosses it to me. I almost drop it but then hold it like it’s a large insect trying to escape from my hands.

“Ok Dale, I’m going to unroll it now and you gotta shoot ‘im, right?”

Steve grabs the end of the “Ay-rab” rug and pulls. I want to protest but no words come. The carpet unrolls and I see my father. His skin is pale, like the underside of a swamp-creature, and looks clammy. Blood all over the belly of his shirt. His eyes are open but do not see anything and his hands are splayed out. He isn’t moving.

Forever passes by in a few breaths. We stare at the body of our father and we think back to the days we shared at home. We are not thinking of the same things, we do not have the same memories. Father broke Steve with his fists, and he broke me with a subtle guilt. He broke our mother by introducing her to a white powder that made her feel better and then took her away.

I break the silence. “Maybe he -” and then he moves. Twitches and coughs and I point the gun and shoot.

The body now has another hole, right there between the lungs, in that organ my father had that beat but never loved.

Steve rolls the carpet up again and takes the gun away from me. He smiles. I see that he’s proud of me, of what I just did, and I will forever hate him for it.

We dump the body into a deep secret place in the swamp. The water and the fauna in the night take him and hide him for us.

On the way back I see that tree again, and I notice the way it seems to be trying to get away from the others, the way it reaches up into the sky. The way it tries to distance itself from the trees around it. But the roots are deep, in there with the rest of them.

1 Comment

  1. Sandra Lang October 11, 2024

    I read this, then went back and read it again. The first sentence really hooked me, and the imagery of the last paragraph really summed up the tone of the whole story. Cudos and thanks!

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