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Arlo's Big Head by Stefanie Freele
"Besides, I can't hear what you're saying," His dad fiddled with a fork, "So keep it to the confines of your intellect." Arlo raised both arms to go along with his floating head. His mother snapped a towel on the table. "That way you can act as if I didn't say it." Arlo lifted his legs above the crib. If he could just raise his bottom, float above the mobile—seven kinds of fluffy trains—over the kitchen, and out onto the porch. There, he could sit in the middle of his empire: his Exersaucer, where he'd be surrounded by blinking, twinkling, moving doo-dads. "Maybe you didn't." Arlo's dad said while cleaning his glasses. "Maybe in the plane of existence I'm in, you didn't say it." "I did say it." His mom thundered. "And, I don't regret it." Arlo's head hovered above the mattress and tugged at the rest of his body, ascending above the mobile. His mom's voice lowered. "We're on the same plane you dunce." Arlo floated quietly behind his mother's back. The back porch door opened for him. "If there are many planes of consciousness and they interpenetrate themselves," His father spoke slowly. "How can you be so sure we're here together?" It was almost twilight. Bats swooped down on mosquitoes. One tiki torch remained lit. A moth struggled in a melting banana daiquiri. Arlo's head led him to the kingdom of his Exersaucer. He eased his legs into the seat, reached for the green squeezie, "Honk honk." Arlo's dad pushed back a chair. "You left him out there with the June bugs?" "I brought him inside and put him in his crib. I know I did." "Honk." It was all better. The orange donut swerved, the yellow floppy made a beepity-beep sound, the red button said "Three! Triangle!" But then, hands reached under Arlo's arms and he felt himself being lifted. "Sorry son, we'd rather argue than put you to bed." Arlo let his forehead be kissed by his mother and his cheeks be caressed by his father. He let a blanket tuck around him and closed his eyes while his parents admired his soft skin and tiny toes. "Goo," Arlo responded and let his body go heavy, all of it except one finger which remained pointed as if he still had something to add to the conversation, but had fallen asleep mid-thought. All content in SmokeLong Quarterly copyright 2003-2008 by its authors. |
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Stefanie Freele's recent fiction credits include American literary Review, Westview, Hobart, and Contrary. She will have forthcoming work in Talking River, Etchings, and in a speculative fiction anthology titled Futuristic Motherhood. She has completed a novel and is working on her MFA thesis with the Whidbey Writers Workshop in Washington. Read the interview. |
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| Issue Twenty (March 15, 2008): The Cockroach by David Barringer «» Trestle by Matt Briggs «» Worried & Wondering by Aaron Burch «» Dead Dog Rising by Kate Hill Cantrill «» Tinder by Chanel Earl «» Scrape by Utahna Faith «» Arlo's Big Head by Stefanie Freele «» Wei-Ch'i by Vanessa Gebbie «» Last Fall by Katherine Grosjean «» David Dreams of Australopithecines by Savannah Schroll Guz «» The Last Stop by Jenny Halper «» Blue by Stephanie Harrison «» Cadet by Tiff Holland «» Slam by Liesl Jobson «» Beret by Darlin' Neal «» Camp by Elizabeth Oliver «» We by Patricia Parkinson «» Seconds Are Ticking By by Nik Perring «» Brother by Sue Powers «» Carol by Sophie Rosenblum «» Elizabeth Bishop by Glenn Shaheen «» Favorites by Gail Siegel «» Blank by Michelle Tandoc-Pichereau «» Medicinal by Girija Tropp «» Interviews: David Barringer «» Matt Briggs «» Aaron Burch «» Kate Hill Cantrill «» Chanel Earl «» Utahna Faith «» Stefanie Freele «» Vanessa Gebbie «» Katherine Grosjean «» Savannah Schroll Guz «» Jenny Halper «» Stephanie Harrison «» Tiff Holland «» Liesl Jobson «» Darlin' Neal «» Elizabeth Oliver «» Patricia Parkinson «» Nik Perring «» Sue Powers «» Sophie Rosenblum «» Glenn Shaheen «» Gail Siegel «» Claudia Smith «» Michelle Tandoc-Pichereau «» Girija Tropp «» Cover Art "Male Figure" by Marty D. Ison «» Letter From the Editor | |||