Today I’m five. I was four last night going to sleep in Wardrobe, but when I
wake up in Bed in the dark I’m changed to five, abracadabra. Before that I
was three, then two, then one, then zero. “Was I minus numbers?”
“Hmm?” Ma does a big stretch.
“Up in Heaven. Was I minus one, minus two, minus three—?”
“Nah, the numbers didn’t start till you zoomed down.”
“Through Skylight. You were all sad till I happened in your tummy.”
“You said it.” Ma leans out of Bed to switch on Lamp, he makes everything
light up whoosh.
I shut my eyes just in time, then open one a crack, then both.
“I cried till I didn’t have any tears left,” she tells me. “I just lay here
counting the seconds.”
“How many seconds?” I ask her.
“Millions and millions of them.”
“No, but how many exactly?”
“I lost count,” says Ma.
“Then you wished and wished on your egg till you got fat.”
She grins. “I could feel you kicking.”
“What was I kicking?”
“Me, of course.”
I always laugh at that bit.
“From the inside, boom boom.” Ma lifts her sleep T-shirt and makes her
tummy jump. “I thought, Jack’s on his way. First thing in the morning, you
slid out onto the rug with your eyes wide open.”
I look down at Rug with her red and brown and black all zigging around
each other. There’s the stain I spilled by mistake getting born. “You cutted the
cord and I was free,” I tell Ma. “Then I turned into a boy.”
“Actually, you were a boy already.” She gets out of Bed and goes to
Thermostat to hot the air.
I don’t think he came last night after nine, the air’s always different if he came.i don’t ask because she doesn’t like saying about him.
“Tell me, Mr. Five, would you like your present now or after breakfast?”
“What is it, what is it?”
“I know you’re excited,” she says, “but remember not to nibble your finger,
germs could sneak in the hole.”
“To sick me like when I was three with throw-up and diarrhea?”
“Even worse than that,” says Ma, “germs could make you die.”
“And go back to Heaven early?”
“You’re still biting it.” She pulls my hand away.
“Sorry.” I sit on the bad hand. “Call me Mr. Five again.”
“So, Mr. Five,” she says, “now or later?”
I jump onto Rocker to look at Watch, he says 07:14. I can skateboard on
Rocker without holding on to her, then I whee back onto Duvet and I’m
snowboarding instead. “When are presents meant to open?”
“Either way would be fun. Will I choose for you?” asks Ma.
“Now I’m five, I have to choose.” My finger’s in my mouth again, I put it
in my armpit and lock shut. “I choose—now.”
She pulls a something out from under her pillow, I think it was hiding all
night invisibly. It’s a tube of ruled paper, with the purple ribbon all around
from the thousand chocolates we got the time Christmas happened. “Open it
up,” she tells me. “Gently.”
I figure out to do off the knot, I make the paper flat, it’s a drawing, just
pencil, no colors. I don’t know what it’s about, then I turn it. “Me!” Like in
Mirror but more, my head and arm and shoulder in my sleep T-shirt. “Why
are the eyes of the me shut?”
“You were asleep,” says Ma.
“How you did a picture asleep?”
“No, I was awake. Yesterday morning and the day before and the day
before that, I put the lamp on and drew you.” She stops smiling. “What’s up,
Jack? You don’t like it?”
“Not—when you’re on at the same time I’m off.”
“Well, I couldn’t draw you while you were awake, or it wouldn’t be a
surprise, would it?” Ma waits. “I thought you’d like a surprise.” “I prefer a surprise and me knowing.”
She kind of laughs.
I get on Rocker to take a pin from Kit on Shelf, minus one means now
there’ll be zero left of the five. There used to be six but one disappeared. One
is holding up Great Masterpieces of Western Art No. 3: The Virgin and Child
with St. Anne and St. John the Baptist behind Rocker, and one is holding up
Great Masterpieces of Western Art No. 8: Impression: Sunrise beside Bath,
and one is holding up the blue octopus, and one the crazy horse picture called
Great Masterpieces of Western Art No. 11: Guernica. The masterpieces came
with the oatmeal but I did the octopus, that’s my best of March, he’s going a
bit curly from the steamy air over Bath. I pin Ma’s surprise drawing on the
very middle cork tile over Bed.
She shakes her head. “Not there.”
She doesn’t want Old Nick to see. “Maybe in Wardrobe, on the back?” I
ask.
“Good idea.”
Wardrobe is wood, so I have to push the pin an extra lot. I shut her silly
doors, they always squeak, even after we put corn oil on the hinges. I look
through the slats but it’s too dark. I open her a bit to peek, the secret drawing
is white except the little lines of gray. Ma’s blue dress is hanging over a bit of
my sleeping eye, I mean the eye in the picture but the dress for real in
Wardrobe.
I can smell Ma beside me, I’ve got the best nose in the family. “Oh, I
forgetted to have some when I woke up.”
“That’s OK. Maybe we could skip it once in a while, now you’re five?”
“No way Jose.”
So she lies down on the white of Duvet and me too and I have lots.
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