Flesh and Bone

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Authors: William Alton

BOOK: Flesh and Bone
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LUMINIS BOOKS

Published by Luminis Books

1950 East Greyhound Pass, #18, PMB 280,

Carmel, Indiana, 46033, U.S.A.

Copyright © William Alton, 2015

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-941311-45-5

Paperback ISBN: 978-1-941311-46-2

Printed in the United States of America

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

To Joel MacDonald. He taught me that I could be as crazy as I needed to be without being an ass.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Chris Katsaropoulos and Tracy Richardson at Luminis Books for taking a chance on a very dark story I thought would never see the light of day. Chris, especially, thank you for helping me hammer a blunt ending into something compelling. Thanks to Teresa Hively and Alan Jones, Jr. for being first readers.

Advance praise for
Flesh and Bone:

“Conventional wisdom says a book is great when the reader says, ‘I couldn't put it down.' You will put this book down. And you will pick it back up. Again and again. In my days as a therapist
Flesh and Bone
would have been on my bookshelf labeled ‘Truth.' Alton's book is the reason
no
book should be censored.”

—Chris Crutcher, author of
Whale Talk, Deadline
and
Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes

“Flesh and Bone
captures the reader with its beautiful prose and haunting imagery. I felt like I was let into Bill's life, privy to his heart-breaking journey. Like him, I was scraped raw by his struggle. Alton's words grabbed me from the first page and have stayed with me days after finishing the novel.”

—Margaret Gelbwasser, author of
Pieces of Us
and
Inconvenient,
a Sydney Taylor Notable Book for Teens.

“Alton delves deeply into the dark and desolate side of adolescence where the lost boys and girls—the outsiders—endure the emptiness of existing, wanting so much to fill the void, but not knowing how. Bill describes himself as a smalltown boy, a baby queer, neither courageous nor outrageous. He's a 21st century Holden Caulfield that troubled teens can embrace, and that those in authority will surely want to ban.”

—Laurie Gray, award-winning author of
Just Myrto, Summer Sanctuary
and
Maybe I Will,
YALSA Teens Top Ten Nominee

“Told in lyrical spare chapters, William Alton's
Flesh and Bone
resists easy categorization. It is a series of elegant flash-fictionesque episodes narrated by Bill, a teenager whose life is upturned when his parents divorce and he and his mother move back to her hometown in rural Oregon. Searching for acceptance and a sense of his place the world, Bill, instead, finds himself caught in a string of unexpected sexual encounters that both confuse and console him. Alton's prose is rich and his characters are sharp and compelling.”

—Toby Emert, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Education, Agnes Scott College

“After reading
Flesh and Bone,
I was left with a feeling of amazement, sorrow and hope. This novel chronicles Bill's youth in a small town. Bill's story is not your average coming of age story though. It is full of struggles with loneliness, depression and the search for meaning and happiness where it is sometimes extremely hard to find.”

“This beautifully written novel leads the reader through a dark journey of self-discovery and the yearning to reach out to the teen and offer support and understanding where there was none. We all have our own struggles, and
Flesh and Bone
makes you wonder how you would have reacted had your circumstances been the slightest bit different. For anyone who has ever felt lost (all of us), I highly recommend this book.”

—Teresa Hively, former Washington State Registered Counselor

“In a style that manages to be both stark and lyrical,
Flesh and Bone
is an unflinching portrait of one young man's pain, desire and search for self.”

—Julia Watts, author of
Secret City
and
Finding H.F.

The Night My Parents Split

M
IDNIGHT
. T
HE MOON
hangs like a hook in the sky. Clouds stream past, long, frayed strings. My parents sit in the kitchen talking. They're going through the papers that'll end their marriage. I haven't heard them talk like this in years. Divorce has brought them closer together. Their voices float through the house, but the words are just mumbled whispers. I stare out the window and wonder when they'll be done.

We had dinner together tonight, in the dining room, at the table. They sit in the dining room now and divvy up their lives.

After an hour or so, Dad leaves. I watch him through the window. He walks like a scarecrow down the driveway and leaves in his truck. I wonder where he'll go, but it doesn't matter. He's gone now and there's nothing I can do about it.

Mom comes and stands in the door of my room. The fire of her cigarette burns red and black and lights up her face when she breathes.

“He's not coming back, is he?” I ask.

“Sorry.”

“When will I see him again?”

“Soon,” she says. “Soon, I hope.”

She watches me for a second before turning away. That's what they all do when they don't know what to say. They turn away and leave. Someday, maybe I'll turn away too. Someday, I'll leave.

Packing Up

W
E GATHER EVERYTHING
in the living room. We take the pictures from the walls, the beds from the bedrooms, the clothes from the closets and stack them in boxes. Everything is bare and simple. Mom scrubs the walls while I go to my last day of school.

“Where you moving to?” my teacher asks.

“Oregon.”

“Pretty,” she says.

After my last class, I stand out in the parking lot watching everyone come and go. No one stops to say anything. I'm alone already. It doesn't matter. None of this matters. Soon, I'll be somewhere new and nothing will be the same.

Travelling

D
ESERT TURNS TO
mountains. Valleys crease the ridges. Clouds snag on the pines and cedars like cotton caught in a comb.

The house is huge and red and surrounded by berry fields, pastures and forest. We stop and the windows stare down at me. I sit in the car and the house rises like a tombstone from the fields, a giant's grave.

“This is it,” she says.

This is it. This is where she grew up. This is where her parents are. This is where we'll live from now on.

I close my eyes and imagine it. This is it. This is all there is.

Forever

M
OM GETS A
job waiting tables. She works nights. Weekends, she tends bar.

“We need the money,” she says. “We can't stay here forever.”

I don't know. This seems like forever. Breakfast before the sun. Dinner after it sets.

She works too many hours and I go to school. The day is sliced into slivers of time. Nights, I lie in my bed and watch the cars on the road, counting them. One, two, three. They come and go, bright and loud. In the pasture next to the house, the cattle stand in the rain. Corn and peas grow in the truck garden. Out in the yard, a 'possum waddles through the mud, the grass.

We can't stay here forever. Where will we go? What will we do?

Baptismal

T
HE BARN STANDS
in the tall grass on the other side of the fence. Behind the barn, the pig sty lies like an open wound at the edge of the woods. Sitting in the hayloft, I can see the pigs lying in the mud and shit, the trough pushed against the split rail fence. This is where I smoke. This is where I watch the world.

A creek lies at the bottom of the hill below the house. Stones are fuzzy with lichen and moss. Oaks and spruce, maples and elms rise up over me, over the green water. I have never been skinny dipping, but there's no one around.

Lying naked in the water, watching the speckled surface, the frogs and tadpoles flitting to the shallow edges of the little pool in which I baptize myself. The bottom is slimy and cold, but there are stones too. I come up to breathe. I rise like Aphrodite and stand in the rain, absolutely shivering. My bones ache with the wind. I light a cigarette. It's amazing how many sins can be washed away in the everyday gathering of water and light.

Chores

M
ORNING WHISPERS IN
without the sun. In the east, Mt. Hood stands like a giant broken tooth bathed in dawn's bloody light. Clouds thin the light, make it soft as silk. He comes to my room.

“Bill,” Grandpa says. “There are chores.”

Chores? I wash dishes after dinner. I take the garbage out. What could possibly need doing this early in the morning?

“You have five minutes,” he says.

Jesus. I wait for a moment, but not too long. He scares me. I've heard tales of the beatings he used to lay on my mother and her mother. I dress and hurry through the kitchen where Grandma makes griddle cakes and eggs, biscuits and gravy.

Grandpa rolls a cigarette in the yard with its long, green grass. He takes me to his truck and shows me the buckets of slop. I have to carry them to the pigs behind the barn. They're heavy. The handles cut into my fingers. The slop sloshes onto my thighs. It smells of grease and mold. The
pigs come grunting and squealing. I take the buckets to the barn and rinse them with the hose.

Now it's time to gather eggs. The coop smells of dust and shit. A plain bulb hangs on an exposed wire from the ceiling. The hens peck my hands while I steal their eggs.

Now it's time for breakfast. Mom's sleeping. She got home at three, maybe four, this morning. I don't want to be here. I want to go to someplace where no one bothers me.

“Pigs and chickens,” Grandpa says. “Those are your chores. Don't forget.”

I've decided I hate him a little.

First Day at School

B
LUE LOCKERS ALONG
the creamy walls. Wooden doors stand open, waiting to swallow us whole. I've never been the new guy. I stand on the edge of the crowd and watch the people move past. No one watches me. They move around and no one notices me standing there, gray and faded.

At lunch, we talk about Whitman and Poe. We talk about writing and love. None of us knows anything about anything. We pretend to be bright and complex. After a burger and fries, we go out to the Pit and smoke cigarettes.

“Do you think he was gay?” Richie asks.

“Who?” John John asks.

“Whitman.”

“Does it matter?” John John asks.

“Faggots,” Richie says. “Jesus.”

“There's nothing to be afraid of,” John John asks.

“I don't know,” Richie says.

Me either. I don't know shit. Maybe faggots are scary. Maybe they want to take over the world. It doesn't matter. They can have it. Straights haven't done shit for it so far.

Girls

N
O ONE BOTHERS
me. John John tells me there are people, but I have yet to meet them. I go to class and stare at the teacher and wait for the bell to ring.

“Come out to the Pit at lunch,” John John says.

Lunch comes and I eat a Salisbury steak and go to the Pit. The Pit is at the end of the school's third wing. It's not a pit really. Cars park along the street. A sidewalk goes behind the school to the Ag shop. People stand and smoke and talk. I have nothing to say. I light a cigarette.

John John brings out a pipe and passes it around. He calls me over.

“A little buzz for fifth period,” he says.

The pot is a one hit wonder. It sears through my head and my eyes water and my head spins. Everyone smokes and talks.

“What's your name?” one of the girls asks.

“Bill.”

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