you a call.â
Kyung restrains himself, clutching the back of his chair as Gillian tries to show her out, but Gertie stops just before she reaches the door.
âI know you probably hate the idea of renters in here. Most people in your situation do, but it might not be the worst thing in the world to spend more time with your parents right now. I wish I had.â
Mae is fifty-six years old. She doesnât have Alzheimerâs. She doesnât have anything. But Kyung doesnât bother to correct her because dementia is the only reasonable explanation for what sheâs done. As soon as Gertie leaves, he runs out the back door toward the field, the same way he did when he saw Ethan turning blue at a neighborâs birthday party. He was choking on a piece of candy, a thumb-sized chocolate that he wasnât supposed to eat. Kyung was terrified at first, and angry later. Now he feels the full force of both. He rips a beach towel from the clothesline, and a plastic pin snaps off and hits him in the face, missing his eye by almost nothing.
The grassy field comes up to his knees, littered with things that he never noticed from a distance. Everywhere he steps, thereâs broken glass and pieces of metal and thick patches of thistle that sting and scrape his legs. Even if the ground were free of obstacles, he wouldnât look up. He canât. His mother is so conservative, so timid about her body. Sheâs never even worn a bathing suit. He doesnât understand how that woman became this one. As they meet near the middle of the field, Kyung turns his head and hugs her with the towel, covering the parts of her that he doesnât want to see.
âWhat?â he shouts. But his thoughts are too scattered to finish the question. â Why? â
Maeâs face is filthy. Her skin is covered with dark brown streaks. He worries that itâs excrement, a possibility no stranger than wandering naked from her house to his.
âWhere are your clothes?â
Maeâs expression doesnât change, not even when he shouts the question just inches from her ear.
âHelp,â she says, followed by something in Koreanâso low, he can barely make out the words.
âEnglish. Speak English. I canât understand you.â
âHelp,â she repeats.
âIâm trying to.â He pulls the towel around her tighter, embarrassed by the sight of Mae so diminished, wrapped in hot pink sea horses and neon green stripes. âWhereâs Dad? Can we call him to come get you? Can he bring you some clothes?â
âAboji ga dachi shuh suh.â
âWhat? What are you saying?â
âAboji ga dachi shuh suh.â
Korean is no longer the language he speaks with his parents. They retired it from use years ago, when Kyung was just a child. Like a dog, he sometimes recognizes the sounds of certain words, but doesnât always grasp their meaning. Aboji ga ⦠your father? Dachi shuh suh ⦠hurt me? Your father hurt me? The air catches in his lungs as the question forms a statement, and suddenly everything forgotten is familiar again. He turns Maeâs face toward his, gently lifting her chin until he notices the bruises. Two in the center of her throat. Eight more fanning out on the sides of her neck. Fingerprints. When he backs away, the towel slides off her shoulders and falls to the ground, but Mae doesnât reach for it or even cover herself with her hands. She just stands there, trembling as he takes in everything that he missed before. The scratches on her arms and breasts. The bloody patches where her pubic hair has been ripped out. Bruises everywhere. Bruises again.
Behind him, the kitchen door squeaks open and bangs shut.
âIs she all right, Kyung? Whatâs going on?â
As Gillian approaches, his mother buries herself in his arms and starts to cry, but itâs like no cry heâs ever heard before. She wails, long and low, like a
Amy A. Bartol, Tiffany King, Raine Thomas, Tammy Blackwell, Sarah M. Ross, Heather Hildenbrand, Amanda Havard, C.A. Kunz