Do you know where your kids are?
This month’s exercise for my writer’s group:
Word: Journalize
Question: Do you know where your kids are?
I’ve never been one to journalize (I’m more the stream-of-consciousness sort) but this crisis should be documented, and I’m the only one who can do it.
You see, I’m the only one left. Everyone is gone–my friends, my family, my husband, the police, the mayor, and worst of all, a loss I cannot contemplate without tears (they flow from my eyes as I write) my kids.
It began innocently enough, I suppose; at least, I had no suspicions that life as I knew it was about to end. As for why I remain, I have no guesses. It’s a mystery to me, and there is no one to ask.
The day had dawned bright, one of those glorious, burgeoning May days that make you believe in immortality. I was in the kitchen trying to do too many things at once, talking on the phone with my mother, cooking dinner and mediating a life-and-death dispute between Sherry, five, and Teddy, who was three.
“So, what do you think I should do?” I asked Mom. I was telling her about an issue I had with my oldest son’s second-grade teacher, Mr. Eberts. He had been unfairly picking on poor Samuel, who was a sensitive boy. I was really angry but was too shy and intimidated by his air of authority to say anything directly to him. Instead, I bitched to Mom.
“You should make him stop!” Sherry shrieked, slapping at Teddy, who began to cry.
“I wasn’t talking to you, sweetie, I was talking to Grandma,” I said. “And don’t hit your brother! That’s no way to settle a quarrel.”
“I think you should march right up to him and give him a piece of your mind,” Mom stated firmly. Of course I knew she would say that. I didn’t really expect her to solve my problem. It was an old habit of mine, asking for her opinion, then ignoring it. She appreciated being asked, and I felt it was good for our relationship.
“I can’t do that,” I said. “He’s just so tall. And he looks down at me like I’m some kind of a bug.”
“Mommiiee!!” Teddy whined. “She gots my twain. Make her give it me!”
“I had it first, you little baby!” Sherry quickly interjected. “And it’s not yours, it’s ours! Santa gave it to the whole family!” (I had known that was a bad idea, but Glen, aka Santa, had insisted.)
“Mine! Miiine!!” Now he was full-out shrieking. I sighed.
Reaching down, I lifted him to my left hip and rocked him while I propped the phone against my other shoulder. “It’s ok, Teddy. Sherry’s right, the train set is hers too. And she did have it first. But you can help Mommy talk to Grandma, okay?” He sobbed inconsolably, and Mom said, “Heavens, Susan, you do baby that child. You’re going to turn him into a Mama’s boy.”
I chose to ignore that, bringing the conversation back to Mr. Eberts. “Okay, I know I should stand up to him, Mom, but I think he takes unfair advantage of his height and his big deep voice. He treats me like I’m just another child, not a parent. I should lodge a complaint with the administration, I think.”
Talking with Mom helped me to get clear in my own mind what to do. I breathed a sigh of relief. Teddy’s sobs trailed away and he began to fall asleep against my shoulder, and Sherry contentedly took the train back into the playroom to join the rest of the train set so she could continue with her game… a working woman commuting to the office.
That’s my girl, I thought.
Just then I noticed smoke curling around the edge of the oven door.
“Shit! I mean, shoot! I have to go, Mom, something’s burning.”
I opened the oven door to see what was happening in there. Immediately smoke billowed out, making me cough. I reached through the vapors to shut the oven off. Then the smoke alarm came on, hideously loud, waking Teddy, who shrieked.
“Dammit!” I cursed. The wail of the smoke alarm sliced into my brain like a serrated knife. I plopped Teddy onto the floor and looked for a towel to flap at the smoke alarm to dissipate the smoke and make it stop screeching.
That’s when it happened. I’ve gone through this story in detail, hoping I might find some previously unnoticed clue. But I still don’t understand. In the blink of an eye, all the people vanished into thin air. I wasn’t looking…I was busy…but I could feel it happen. My mom went first. I felt her go, like a soap bubble popping in my mind. Then Glen, my husband, went, along with his boss and co-workers, and Mr. Eberts, and all the teachers and grown-ups in the town. They blinked out of existence, whole blocks of them at once.
Last of all, my kids went. I had begun to realize what was going on and was turning toward Teddy to snatch him into my arms, but just before I could face him he vanished too. And then Sherry and Samuel went. One at a time, their bright little flames disappeared from the world.
I knew I would be the one to stay. I could feel it. Whatever it was, it didn’t want me. I was left here all alone in my smoky house, smoke alarm screeching. I started to howl like a madwoman and didn’t stop until my throat was raw. On the streets, suddenly-empty vehicles smashed into buildings, trees, telephone poles and each other. All the world came to a crashing, thudding, screaming halt.
That was a week ago. And I still don’t know where my kids are.
