Read You Don't Have to Say You Love Me Page 12


  But my mother? And her love? How do I define that? Well, damn, the world is filled with people who can tell you stories about my mother’s cruelty—about her arrogance and spite. And, sure, other folks, including my siblings, can tell you stories about her love and compassion.

  But, as her son and as perhaps her most regular opponent, I remember only a little bit of my mother’s kindness and almost everything about her coldness.

  Did she love me? Did my mother love me? When I gather up all the available evidence, I have to say, “Yes, Lillian Alexie loved Sherman Alexie, Jr.” But I can only render that verdict with reasonable doubts.

  In 1983, when our cousin Eugene was shot and killed in a stupid alcohol-fueled tiff with his friend, I wept. And I say “tiff” because it was over the minor issue of who got to take the last drink from a bottle of fortified wine. My cousin died arguing over backwash. How could I not weep for that death and for the utter inanity of the way it happened? I sat on the bed in my basement bedroom and cried for hours. I loved Eugene.

  “Junior, you’re a weird kid,” he once said to me. “But you’re weird in a good way. Nobody gets you yet. I don’t get you. But people are gonna get you someday.”

  After Eugene was shot and killed, my father took me to the outdoor basketball court on the rez. We silently shot hoops for hours. That was how my father mourned with me. I felt so much pain that I thought I might shoot basketballs forever, and I think my father would have kept shooting forever, too.

  As I sat in my basement bedroom, it felt like I might weep forever. And, after I had wept for hours, my mother opened my bedroom door and said, “Shut up, Junior. That’s enough crying.”

  I stopped weeping.

  My mother went back upstairs and sat on her couch directly above me.

  I stopped weeping. But I stood on my bed and I screamed and punched the ceiling.

  My mother sat directly above me. I stopped weeping. But I stood on my bed and I screamed and punched the ceiling.

  My mother sat directly above me.

  I punched that ceiling until my knuckles bled.

  I think my mother still sits directly above me.

  I think my knuckles are still bleeding.

  I think I am still screaming.

  52.

  The Quilting

  My mother made quilts.

  She would sew instead of sleep

  And laugh at sunrise.

  Cotton, denim, wool,

  Needle, thread, scissors, thimble,

  Blister, callus, cut.

  Square by square by square,

  My mother constructed quilts

  And sold them for food.

  My mother made quilts

  With rheumatoid arthritis

  In her neck and hands.

  A memory quilt

  Contains pieces of your past

  Rejoined and renewed.

  My mother made quilts.

  She would sew instead of sleep

  And rage at sunrise.

  When Elvis perished,

  My mom wept and wrapped herself

  Inside a dark quilt.

  Two hundred babies

  Have slept beneath my mom’s quilts.

  Ah, such tenderness!

  How many babies

  Were conceived on my mom’s quilts?

  No one knows for sure.

  My mother’s hands ached

  As she punched needles through wool,

  Denim, canvas, jute.

  I own fourteen quilts

  That were built by my mother.

  I use all of them.

  My mom made a denim quilt

  That was too heavy to lift.

  She cut it in half!

  Quilt by quilt by quilt,

  My mom made enough money

  To pay the mortgage.

  My mom’s arthritis

  Turned her hands into cages

  That captured ten birds.

  My mother made quilts.

  She would sew instead of sleep

  And weep at sunrise.

  We buried our mom

  With a quilt she didn’t make.

  We gave her a break!

  She made her last quilt

  To honor a Native boy

  Heading to college.

  If you want a quilt

  Constructed by my mother

  Then you’re out of luck.

  My mom never slept

  Beneath a quilt that she made.

  Or maybe she did!

  A memory quilt

  Is designed to remind you

  Of what you have lost.

  I never sewed quilts.

  My sisters made many quilts

  Alongside our mom.

  My mother started

  To make a quilt from my poems,

  But never finished.

  As she made her quilts,

  My mother sang Christian hymns

  And old tribal songs.

  My mother made quilts.

  She would sew instead of sleep

  And sigh at sunrise.

  She once made a quilt

  With thirty Jesus faces—

  The Shroud of Too Much.

  My wife doesn’t quilt

  So we don’t have old fabric

  Piled in the garage.

  I miss my mother.

  I miss watching her make quilts.

  Sewing was her art.

  My dad only slept

  On top of sheets and blankets

  Layered on his bed.

  My mom only slept

  Under many heavy quilts

  On the front room couch.

  When Mom and Dad slept,

  They rarely shared the same bed

  Or the same warm quilt.

  My mom’s arthritis

  Turned her hands into fires

  Fed by ten dry twigs.

  How long do quilts last?

  I think they’ve discovered quilts

  In a pharaoh’s tomb.

  My mother made quilts.

  She would sew instead of sleep

  And mourn at sunrise.

  How many coffins

  Have been draped with my mom’s quilts?

  Too many to count.

  When old quilts tattered,

  My mother would repair them—

  The Quilt Whisperer!

  Square by square by square,

  My mother constructed quilts

  And sold them for wood.

  Always cold, my mom

  Often walked around the house

  Quilted like a queen.

  Even wrapped in quilts,

  My mother kept our small house

  Burning like the sun.

  In flames, we kids kicked

  Aside our quilts and thirsted

  And desiccated.

  Square by square by square,

  My mom also abandoned

  And ignored her quilts.

  Ah, that poor half-quilt

  Can only make a half-ghost

  That haunts half of us.

  A memory quilt

  Is constructed with dark things

  You’d rather forget.

  I think I was raped

  On one of my mother’s quilts.

  But my eyes were closed.

  Wrapped in my mom’s quilts,

  I wept after funerals

  For so many friends.

  When my big sister died,

  I wanted to gather quilts

  And burn all of them.

  My mother made quilts.

  She would sew instead of sleep

  And collapse at dawn.

  Square by square by square,

  She punched anger through our skin

  And turned us into quilts.

  Wrapped around our mom,

  We quilts absorbed her anger

  And her fear and pain.

  Wrapped around our mom,

  We quilts absorbed her courage

  And
her love and grace.

  Square by square by square,

  We quilts honor our mother

  And her strange genius.

  She taught us survival

  With needle, thread, and thimble

  All stained with her blood.

  53.

  Three Days

  1.

  Why is it that I never remember

  How to spell “resurrection”?

  I have to Internet search

  For the correct spelling every time.

  2.

  Three days after my mother’s death,

  She rolls the stone from her tomb

  And walks into my dreams.

  Most people would insist that it’s actually her

  Or her soul reaching out to me.

  But I’m not a literalist. I know,

  Even as I’m dreaming,

  That my subconscious is only fucking

  With my conscious, or vice versa.

  And, yet, as I dream of an ordinary day

  Where I take my sons to school,

  Grocery shop, drive through

  For fast food, and browse a bookstore,

  My mother feels shockingly real

  As she follows me everywhere.

  She doesn’t speak. She doesn’t touch.

  She just follows me and follows me.

  She’s in the backseat, smiling at me

  In the rearview mirror. She’s knocking

  Oranges and apples from the displays

  In supermarkets. She’s the barista

  Making my coffee. She’s the hum

  Of the refrigerator. She’s that tree

  Heavy with crows. She follows me

  Until the simple act of dropping

  Ice cubes into an empty glass

  Sounds like a thousand angels

  Screaming with grief and rage.

  3.

  Dear Mother, I am sorry

  That I don’t believe

  In your ghost. I am sorry

  That you are a ghost.

  Dear Mother, I would call out

  Your name, but I’m not the one

  Who made “resurrection” more

  Difficult to spell than “doubt.”

  54.

  Navigation

  Hey, Smartphone, I’m lost. What am I supposed to do next?

  —Dear Sherman, you must eventually forgive your mother. Don’t forget.

  Wow, Smartphone, I don’t have the inner resources for that. Not yet.

  —You better hurry. I’ve scheduled you for increasing amounts of regret.

  Damn, Smartphone, that seems rather mean.

  —Well, pal, just like me, Grief is a relentless machine.

  So, Smartphone, does this journey have an ultimate destination?

  —You might get somewhere, but it won’t be cause for celebration.

  Okay, Smartphone, how do I take the first step? Then another?

  —I already told you, asshole. You gotta forgive your mother.

  55.

  Sedated

  AND THEN, ONE summer night, when I was seventeen, my mother asked me to go find my father. He’d left home a week earlier on a drinking binge. And he had diabetes. After seven days, we had to go looking for him. It was a family rule. We had arbitrarily decided that my father would only begin to seriously endanger his health after a week of booze and bad food. Plus, we’d get lonely for him. So I got into my car and drove from our home on the Spokane Indian Reservation to the Coeur d’Alene Reservation. My father, a supposedly full-blood Coeur d’Alene who had a suspiciously full mustache, had not lived on his reservation since he was a child, but that’s usually where he went to drink. He was always trying to fill some indigenous absence. There were five or six party houses where I would search for him. And then, once I found him, I would have to persuade him to come home. My mother used to exclusively perform this family chore. But once I earned my driver’s license, it was something I was often asked to do. My mother never commanded it, but she also knew I was unlikely to refuse the mission.

  So, on that particular summer night, I discovered my father asleep in a chair in our cousin’s house in the little town of Worley, Idaho. He was barely conscious and smelled of beer, vomit, urine, and shit. I didn’t want him to stink up my upholstery, so I walked back out to my car, grabbed the old army surplus blanket out of the trunk, and covered the passenger seat. Then I walked back into the house and tried to fully rouse my father.

  Most times, he’d argue with me. He was never a violent man, drunk or sober, but he often deployed a drunk’s persistent, if incoherent, logic that I’d have to overcome in order to get him home.

  But that time, when I woke him, my father was so hungover and exhausted that he got into my car without protest. And then, as I rolled down the car windows because of my father’s stench, he tried to drunkenly explain our family history.

  “That was the year your mother was addicted to Valium,” he said.

  “Wait,” I said. “What?”

  My mother was a recovering alcoholic who’d sobered up when I was seven years old.

  “Don’t you remember when she was chewing her lips and tongue all the time?” my father asked. “That was the Valium.”

  “I don’t remember that,” I said.

  But I think I didn’t want to remember it. My mother was often verbally cruel and emotionally unpredictable, but she was sober. I would only later learn that even a sober alcoholic can go on dry-drunk rages and sprees. But, in any case, I preferred my angry sober mother to my angry drunk mother. And I hated to think that my mother’s sobriety extended only to alcohol.

  “You were little when it happened,” my father said.

  “That was when she started sleeping on the couch all the time, right?” I asked.

  “No, that was a different year.”

  As we traveled through the pine forest, I desperately tried to remember my stoned mother. But I could not. I could not. And then I did.

  “Oh, wait,” I said. “I remember when she thought she had MS and she was slurring her words.”

  “That wasn’t MS,” my drunk father said. “That was Valium.”

  “And didn’t she have a mini-stroke once?”

  “Valium.”

  “And didn’t she use to wear a blindfold because of migraine headaches?”

  “Valium,” my father and I said together.

  I drove us into Wellpinit, the center of our world.

  “Where did she get the Valium?” I asked.

  “I think that white doctor at the clinic was in love with her,” my father said.

  “So instead of flowers,” I said, “he gave her drugs.”

  “She was in real pain, though.”

  “What kind of pain?” I asked

  “The pain of being Indian,” he said.

  “Oh, come on, Dad.”

  “That’s why I drink so much.”

  “You drink so much because you’re a drunk.”

  “No,” my father said. “I drink because I’m an Indian. I’m an Indian because I drink.”

  I laughed at my father’s bullshit. When I was younger, during my father’s extended alcoholic absences, I would become inconsolable. But, in my teen years, I had come to accept that my father would never stop drinking and would always leave home on binges. In order to survive, I think I’d learned how to love him a little less. I don’t know what my mother did to survive his boozy sojourns but, hey, maybe Valium had been her temporary escape pod.

  “How did Mom quit the Valium?” I asked.

  “One day, she said she was done with it,” my father said. “And she was. Never took them again.”

  “Maybe you should follow her example,” I said. I was never mean to my father when he was sober. But I’d often insult and challenge him when he was drunk. So maybe I never did learn how to love him less. I don’t know anything about my mother’s strategies for loving him. I do know this sad fact: My father was at his most emotional
ly engaged with the world when he was somewhere between pretty-damn drunk and all-the-way drunk.

  “How am I supposed to follow your mother’s example?” my father asked, playing dumb.

  “You’re going to have to sober up someday,” I said.

  “That’s never going to happen,” he said.

  He was telling the truth. My father died of alcoholism when he was sixty-four.

  When I turn sixty-five, I’m going to throw the biggest birthday party of my life.

  “Daddy, Daddy,” I’ll sing, “I lived longer than you.”

  56.

  At the Diabetic River

  Salmon disappear.

  My father goes blind.

  He kneels on the bank

  Close to the river

  So I can wash his face

  With the sacred water.

  O the ghosts of salmon.

  O the ghosts of my father’s eyes.

  57.

  Reunion

  I release these salmon

  I release

  I release my father and mother

  I release

  I release these salmon

  Into their personal rivers

  The river of bitterroot

  The river of broken bone

  The river of stone

  The river of sweet smoke