the power in sean's palm
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Short StoryTRANSCRIPT
The Power in Sean's Palm
By Mark Foster
Evening blows across the sky, early stars stretching out like
cotton, soft and deep. This is June in Colorado, just past dusk: cool,
dry, and violet. I make my way up the trail from the culvert, across
the field and towards the car, with Sean at my heels. He pants and
shuffles along, struggling to keep up. He's a foot shorter than me,
and as is his custom, he keeps on talking. ". . . and then the ghost
waved his arms and because the Indian was afraid of ghosts he
jumped on his horse. . . " Sean talks, but we rarely converse. These
excursions of ours across the expansive suburban meadows are
exercises of his legs, tongue, and imagination--and my ears. I take
him on these hikes by choice, but not for the conversation. I feel
some sense of obligation towards Sean, though I’m not sure why.
Maybe it's my inner nice guy. Or maybe it’s just fatigue that makes
me relent to his constant requests, because I have a hard time saying
no. But something tells me the real reason has little to do with Sean.
These trips are for me, an imperfect antidote for loneliness. On a
otherwise perfect Friday night, it’s either Sean, or no one.
Sean has a syndromic appearance: short stature, misshapen
face, mild retardation. But either through denial or bravado, his
parents don’t acknowledge that he is different, determined that he be
treated as absolutely normal. Since they moved onto our cul-de-sac
two years ago, they've never made mention of him being different—
playing catch in the front yard, inviting me over to watch movies,
going to football games. Or encouraging him to go with me on these
evening hikes. Sean is eighteen years old, a year older than me, on
track to graduate from high school next year in the special ed
program. He is nearly "normal" enough so that at times I've
wondered if he has any true handicap other than being slow. He is
nice, harmless, not unpleasant in any way. But his small size,
compact facial features, and thick gaze mark him physically. I take
the cue from his parent's and act as a friend, treating him as normally
as possible. But what does normal mean to Sean? He’s still talking,
“. . .then the chief shot the arrow straight through the heart and then
the Indian - - ”
I’m ready to change the narrative. “Hey, Sean,” I interrupt, and
we stop walking. I point upward. “Look at the stars tonight.” Sean
continues to blithely tell his story for a few more steps until he
collides with my leg.
“What?” he asks, stumbling backwards through the weeds. He
sees that I'm pointing and looks up. “What?”
“See that really faint cloud up there?” I feel like a museum
guide. My elaboration of facts is a standard feature of these treks. I
continue, “That's really a billion stars or more that are so far away
that to us they look like a cloud of light. It's called--”
“--that's the Milky Way,” he finishes for me, matter-of-factly,
staring at me rather than at the stars he’s just named. I cross my
arms and look back at the sky.
“Yeah,” I say, “you're right.” Sometimes he surprises me by
knowing more than I expect. I breathe deep and feel the cool, dusty
air in my nose, and for a moment I feel like I'm breathing in stars--so
bright tonight, so far away. The breeze glides open and vast across
my face.
“Mark,” Sean calls, “do you know what stars are?” He has yet
to lift his eyes off of me, continuing with that thick gaze. I smile
down at him, waiting for his answer, preparing a pending correction.
He concludes emphatically, “They’re burning planets.”
A thin smile escapes my lips, and after a second, I respond
smoothly, “Well kind of, Sean. They're actually huge balls of gas
that burn super hot. They're like the sun, just farther away.” His
gaze remains unbroken. In the starlight, I can't tell what he's
focusing on—my nose, my cheeks—but it’s not my eyes. He stays
silent, and I wonder if he is thinking or if his brain is just on pause.
We're only few feet apart, but suddenly it seems there is a great
distance between us. I glance towards my car a hundred yards away
and turn towards it to walk.
“Mark ..." I turn my head back around and see Sean holding
up his palm. He whispers, “Wait.”
I stop walking and turn to face him, wondering what he's going
to do. He is breathing deeply and closes his eyes, bending
dramatically forward. He squats and brings his palm down among
the weeds, passing his stubby hand back and forth a few inches off
the ground. He whispers, “I can feel them.” I say nothing. A
moment passes, and he tries again. “I can feel them,” he repeats,
adding, “They were here.” He grabs a handful of dust and pebbles
and lets them sift slowly out of his thick fingers. He soulfully turns
his gaze back to me and begins to speak. But I beat him to it.
“Who?” I ask. The line between reality and imagination is
thin for Sean, and I have run out of patience for tonight. “Who
was here?”
Sean theatrically sweeps his gaze across the fields, to the
mountains and back, fingering the dust. With his eyes on me again,
he intones, “The Indians.” Tension mounts in his voice. I wonder
what movie gave him this idea. “Six of them. They died on this
ground, because of. . .” Once again, his eyes sweep to the ground,
back to me. "Because of . . . the white man."
He says "the white man" with a well-imitated, introspective
guilt, as emotionally raw as an 80’s TV Western. When he pauses
again, I blink and turn away, walking briskly towards the car. Sean
churns his legs and stumbles through the weeds, struggling to keep
up. The drama intensifies in his voice. “Mark, I can FEEL them.”
He waits for me to say something, but I don't. He grabs my arm,
but I don’t stop. “You don't believe me, do you?” I have little
desire to respond and can’t think of what to say. We have reached
the car. I walk over to the driver's side door. Sean follows me
around, watches as I slip into the driver's seat, and then walks back
around to the other side. I turn the ignition as he opens the door and
plops down. The radio comes on loudly, and I turn it down to a
murmur. Sean stares forward and asks again, “You don't believe
me, do you?”
I roll down the window and put the car into drive. I glance at
Sean, then back to the road. What should I say? “Sure,” I shrug,
“there used to be lots of Indians around here. Utes, Arapahoe, some
Cheyenne, I think . . .” Then I stop, realizing I don’t really know any
more beyond what I’ve just said. The lights from the suburbs shine
across the fields. In the daylight, I can pick out my house from the
crowd, but at night they all melt into a wash of lights and empty
spaces. The cool Colorado air flutters through the open window,
drowning out the radio, so I reach over to turn up the volume. I look
at Sean. His head is bent over like he might be asleep, but I catch a
wet glint of the distant lights reflecting off of his onion-skin eyes.
He's awake, staring at his dusty palm like a Bible.