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Noises by Grant Bailie
“We paid a lot of money for singing shrubs,” she said, staring out the window. Right then they were whistling “You Are My Sunshine.” One of them might have been a little off key. “Singing shrubs, not whistling shrubs…or humming shrubs. If we wanted whistling we could have got a bird.” “We could have got a parrot. That might have actually sung too.” “The package said they would sing,” she said and that was the end of it. So midnight and there I was. Beneath a full moon with the sanctified shovel, and a plastic watering can shaped like an elephant and filled with the blood of a lamb. The lamb blood was part of the directions on the package. As was midnight and the star-shaped hole. The plastic watering can shaped like an elephant just happened to be on sale. I dug the holes deeper this time. Much deeper and it was nearly dawn by the time I finished. I could hear the birds making their usual pre-morning racket. It sounded to me like arguing, like the birds were waking up irritable, with bird-hangovers and unfinished bird-fights to continue. I imagined the sort of common dramas that might have taken place at a bird cocktail party the night before, with the husband bird spending too much time at the drink table with the sister of the host—an attractive bird with impressive plumage and a brightly colored chest. And the next morning, all the nervous hopping from branch to branch and the feeble chirping explanations. When I was done replanting the shrubs I watered them with the lambs' blood, then squirted them a bit with the garden hose for good measure. I stood in the yard for a moment, waiting to see if they would favor me with a tune. The sun was rising above the trees now, and the birds had proceeded to the part where they silently went on with their business and avoided each other’s eyes. No song from the shrubs though. It was still too soon after the trauma of replanting; it is an unpleasant thing, I am told, to be uprooted and moved. I went inside, stripped off my clothes and crawled into bed smelling of blood and soil and sweat. My wife stirred a little, rolled over to give me a few inches space on the mattress. I lay on top of the covers staring up at the ceiling. The sun was too bright for me to sleep now, so I just waited till the time when I knew I could give up, and would go to the kitchen, make coffee, wait for whatever would happen that day to happen. And right here I wanted to have the shrubbery start to sing something. Something sad and poignant in soft green voices that would drift across the lawn and come in like a breeze through the bedroom screen as I lay there on the bed, my wife softly snoring and the sun moving higher in the sky, its light growing thin and hot. It would have been a nice way to end, I think, but it is still too soon. All content in SmokeLong Quarterly copyright 2003-2012 by its authors. |
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Grant Bailie lives in the poorest city in the country. His fiction has appeared in McSweeney's, Night Train, Eyeshot, Pindeldyboz and numerous other publications. His first novel, Cloud 8, has been called "Mad and fascinating..." by Kirkus Reviews "An astonishing first novel..." by SanFrancisco's East Bay Express, and "Tender and introspective..." by Boston's Weekly Dig. Boston went on to win the world series, which can only reflect favorably upon the book. Read the interview. |
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| Issue Seven (December 15, 2004): Being Frank by Randall Brown «» Axl Rose Is My Dog by Scott Ford «» Falling by M. Lynx Qualey «» Revival Season by Saundra Mitchell «» Noises by Grant Bailie «» Head Case by Steve Dunn «» Aluminum by Gary Cadwallader «» Tornadoes by Paul A. Toth «» Cracks by Ann Walters «» Three-Second Angels by Judd Hampton «» Love and Murder by Rusty Barnes «» Not The Real Jesus Christ by Bob Thurber «» Three Blind Elephants Met a Man by Alexandra Fox «» Whitman Waits Along the Road for Lincoln to Pass by James Devitt «» All Over Again by Tom Jackson «» The Colour of Slate by Roderick Leyland «» Salt by Andrew Bomback «» The Road to a Place I Did Not Know by David H. S. Hubert «» Interviews: Randall Brown «» Scott Ford «» M. Lynx Qualey «» Saundra Mitchell «» Grant Bailie «» Steve Dunn «» Gary Cadwallader «» Paul A. Toth «» Ann Walters «» Judd Hampton «» Rusty Barnes «» Bob Thurber «» Alexandra Fox «» James Devitt «» Tom Jackson «» Roderick Leyland «» Andrew Bomback «» David H. S. Hubert «» Cover Art "Disillusionment and Metamorphosis" by Marty D. Ison «» Letter From the Editor | |||