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A Blind Dog Named Killer and a Colony of Bees by Mary Miller
There's no basement is the first thing I notice. There are loose cats everywhere is the second. "What're you on?" I ask. "Drugs." "Yeah, I know, but what kind?" "Not sure, pills," he says, so this is bad: the kind of person who takes things without knowing what they are. "So you just take whatever people give you?" "Yeah, don't you?" "No. I don't." "That's how you get the best shit," he says. Then he asks if I want to see his colony and we walk behind his house to a shed that's spilling its contents: tires, car parts, a canoe, what looks like a deep fryer. "The queen is the only sexually developed female," he says. "The males don't do anything but screw her." "I need a drink," I say. "You don't want to hear about bees? Bees are great," he says, and I scrunch up my nose. I pull a curl from his head and he grabs my hand and holds it for a second before letting go. I follow him up a couple of stairs and onto the porch. He waves his hands as if to introduce me to a rocking chair and a stack of bricks. A large white dog sits in the middle of the kitchen floor. "That's Killer," he says. "Killer's blind, so he likes to stay in one spot." "Oh. That's smart." "Glaucoma. Help yourself," he says, pointing to a row of bottles. "I got cranberry juice if you want it." I'm thinking about what kind of person lives alone in the middle of nowhere with a blind dog named Killer and a colony of bees. Aislynn warned me. She said he wouldn't transfer. She said some people don't transfer and usually she can tell which ones. He sits on the counter and crosses his legs. He looks old, small. I want to put him back behind the bar at The Parrot, Aislynn beside me with her blond hair that smells like the ocean. "You ever hook up with a girl?" he asks. "I don't do anything but drink too much and go off with strange men," I say. "That girl you're always with. What's her name?" "Aislynn." "Yeah. My friend Dave's in love with her." "I'm not surprised. Everyone's in love with her." "Including you?" "I'm a fan of the penis," I say, making myself cringe, and Jeff reveals a row of yellow teeth. Aislynn and I go up to The Parrot at least twice a week. We drink the same drinks and tell each other the same stories because there's something satisfying in knowing the way a story ends. Then we go home with strange men or familiar ones or else we call our roommate, Summer—who never goes anywhere—to come get us. Summer has bad acne so mostly she sits around the apartment picking her face and slathering herself with ointments. Besides this, something is wrong with her, but we don't know what exactly. Her fingers get stiff when she's mad; she laughs the canned laughter of television sitcoms at inappropriate times; she holds her legs to her chest and rocks. Summer is a friend of a friend we're not friends with anymore and we'd like to get rid of her but we don't know how. I sit on the floor and pet Killer. Jeff's eyelids flutter, make me think of hummingbirds. "So you think Aislynn would go out with Dave?" he asks. "I don't know," I say. "I don't know Dave." "Yeah, but you know Aislynn." "She's easy. Is that what you want to hear?" "I suppose," he says. We sit there, me on the floor petting his dog, him on the counter watching me. He picks up a piece of sausage from a plate on the stove and takes a bite. "What're you doing here?" he asks, as he chews. "I don't know," I say. "I don't know what I'm doing here." All content in SmokeLong Quarterly copyright 2003-2008 by its authors. |
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Mary Miller attends graduate school and works at a children's shelter in Mississippi. She writes a lot. Read the interview. |
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| Issue Eleven (December 15, 2005): Forks in the Road by Eve Abrams «» Retirement Home by Greg Ames «» A Drop of Dew by Edgar Omar Avilés, translated by Toshiya Kamei «» No One Left to Care About the Fat Man by Rusty Barnes «» The Mother's Guide to Flight Patterns by Theresa Boyar «» It's All True by Nadine Darling «» What She Gave to the Sea by Katrina Denza «» It by Patry Francis «» Cemetery Day by Laurie Frankel «» Cityscape by Judd Hampton «» The Black Squirrels of Ottawa by Niranjana Iyer «» Diagnosis by Beverly A. Jackson «» Green Monster by Erica Plouffe Lazure «» Sophie, Now by Mary McCluskey «» A Blind Dog Named Killer and a Colony of Bees by Mary Miller «» The Sky Is a Well by Claudia Smith «» You Only Get One Chance to Be El Latigo by Elizabeth Smith «» Flights by Jim Tomlinson «» Song of Giants by Girija Tropp «» Ice by Joseph Young «» Interviews: Eve Abrams «» Greg Ames «» Rusty Barnes «» Theresa Boyar «» Myfanwy Collins «» Nadine Darling «» Katrina Denza «» Patry Francis «» Laurie Frankel «» Judd Hampton «» Marty D. Ison «» Niranjana Iyer «» Beverly A. Jackson «» Toshiya Kamei «» Erica Plouffe Lazure «» Mary McCluskey «» Mary Miller «» Claudia Smith «» Elizabeth Smith «» Jim Tomlinson «» Girija Tropp «» Joseph Young «» Cover Art "Detail of The Death of Susan" by Marty D. Ison «» Letter From the Editor | |||