by Brett Rutherford
Two chock-a-block
gingerbread Victorians
stand jowl-to-jowl,
identical, one brown,
one red with paint a-peeling,
otherwise
who could distinguish one from another?
So, the same
architect built two of them
on plots too small: one narrow
passageway,
set in perpetual
shadow between.
I enter the cool
shadow to confirm
the same bay windows jutting hopefully
where
never a glimmer of light came in.
The crusty pavement
underfoot, the coo
of pigeons give this a cave-like aura.
The realtor ushers
me to the porch,
a deep-shaded, one
where once, on gliders,
they sat of an evening with lemonade
and talked the news
of an innocent age.
Inside, it is rather
a shambles.
Wood-paneled parlor,
fireplace, French doors
to a large
dining-room, all very nice
but the antique
wallpaper is undone
and the mummy-powder
of plaster dust
and the hairy fringe
of rampant mildew.
Upstairs is a warren
of bedrooms. “Sons,
five of them, were
all raised here,” I am told.
“So everything is all the worse
for wear.
After the boys were
grown and gone, it was
college boys rooming
here, year after year.”
“I need a little
time alone,” I tell
my guide, “to get
the house’s true atmosphere.”
“I’ll wait in
the car,” the realtor says.
“It’s quiet, if
that’s what you want to have.
Next door it’s just a husband
and wife, and
but for Sunday no
one ever sees them.”
“Church people?”
I ask. She nods. “Old-fashioned
folks who mind their
own business, I’m sure.
Well now, just take
your time. I’ll wait out there.”
Up I went to third
floor: more rooms, with slant
of ceiling but
plenty of good windows.
The window just
across reveals nothing
of the furnishings
of the quiet neighbors.
Ah, but there is a
paper sign, taped up
and in neat lettering admonishing
some former student
tenant: DO NOT SLEEP …
I cannot make out
the rest, the letters
bled with rain
leaking into the cracked pane.
From the adjacent
room, I spy another
warning sign:
Bitte schlafen Sie nicht mit …
the bottom torn. The
last room facing in
toward the stern
neighbors is painted black.
I imagine the
neighbors up at night,
their Bibles always
open to Leviticus,
worse yet, to
Numbers and Deuteronomy,
hand-lettering their
little sermonettes
to the blaspheming
and drunk college boys.
I go to the
bathroom’s smaller window
and see across to
their well-lit chamber:
a claw-foot bathtub,
a shiny white sink.
Between the tub and
the window, I see
a palisade of
two-by-fours, as though
they had started to
build a new drywall,
but later abandoned
the idea.
Taped to it and facing my view, a sign
of
more recent vintage cautions me:
PLEASE
DO NOT SLEEP WITH MRS. KELLY.
I clamber up to the
attic to see
if the widow’s watch is accessible.
It is!
Up into it I climb. I dream
of sitting up here with notebook in
hand,
surveying full half
of the seacoast town
and even out into
the great harbor.
You can imagine my
astonishment
to see, within the
matching widow’s watch
a figure regarding
me eye to eye,
a beckoning fair one
whose handkerchief
waves me a friendly
greeting. Below her,
the thing to which
she points her lily hand
languidly, is a
ladder some roofer
abandoned there
conveniently. With ease
it could connect one
house to the other.
Her dark eyes summon
me. Oh, Mrs. Kelly!
I felt as if I were watching a movie. Very vivid.
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