Kalliope 2015 | Page 115

fence and lumbered over to help. Together, they wrestled Mr. Brown’s weight and started toward the faded blue house where Edith would begin the process of mourning, of adjusting to life without a husband and all that entailed. Sylvie imagined the hugeness of that responsibility, of discovering the last cord tying you to sanity snapped like a string bean in the beat of an instant. She swallowed bile in her throat, felt her palms slicken with sweat. She saw Edith’s face, standing over her dead husband, blank as paper, nonplussed almost, as if she expected nothing less from a life that had kicked out hard once already and struck her Billy dumb. Sylvie wondered what her own face looked like after her mother’s accident. She wondered if her face, too, had blanched bleak and open like Edith’s, had shown acceptance as cold and inevitable as the season’s first snow. She pulled herself into the dark cab of her truck, let the door shut with a satisfying snick. The worn vinyl material smelled like cigarettes even though Sylvie didn’t smoke. Its familiarity comforted her. She watched as the other woman emerged from the bathroom and waddled to her own tractor-trailer on the far side of the lot. From the back, she looked even more remarkably like Sylvie. The thought clenched another fist in her belly. She turned the keys in the ignition and the engine rumbled to life. The last dregs of Bob Dylan’s Girl from North Country filtered from the cab’s speakers as she gunned the truck into gear and began the last leg of her journey. She switched the music off. Sylvie didn’t ride anymore, so when Daryl said he’d seen her on top of the ridge, mounted to Star, he gave her a queer look. She, in turn, felt a coldness filter from her shoulder blades to the tips of her fingers, making everything numb. Their mother, bedridden in the next room, called feebly when Sylvie dropped the dish she’d been drying and it shattered on the ground. Daryl’s frown reflected from its broken bits, accusing Sylvie of something she didn’t possess, something almost like courage. She hadn’t ridden in years, not since what happened. The subtle glint of approval in Daryl’s eyes forced her own downward. He helped her clean up, his strong hands brushing at the sharp ceramic pieces as if they were cotton balls. She nicked her thumb and let the blood ball up before sucking it clean. Their mother called again. Daryl and Sylvie exchanged pointed 115