When my grandmother died decades ago, she left her breasts to me. It started slowly, almost imperceptibly. My breasts began to swell in size and volume as if they had infants to feed. But it’s been decades since I’ve had babies to nurse, and still they grew—large, pillowy, and pendulous. I’d rested my head on such breasts, and they’d offered me comfort and solace.
She gifted them in trust, in a genetic will, for me to use later when needed.
Soon after, my torso expanded, my once slim curves transforming to a square and sturdy middle. My inheritance from my long-dead grandfather.
Instinctively, the way a wild animal prepares for a difficult winter, my body readied.
It needed thickness to prevent it from buckling in sorrow and softness to cradle the sick.
A season of death was coming.
My mother was first. Aggressive bladder cancer, the doctor said. Diagnosis to death: twelve weeks. My hands did for her what hers had once done for me. They bathed her, dressed her, combed her hair, brushed her brow, and spooned warm broth into her mouth. My mother left me her hands. The ones I held throughout her illness. Now, I see them in mine: our slim fingers, the shapes of our nails, blue veins beneath thin skin that belies strength.
I spent the first anniversary of my mother’s death sitting by my husband’s death bed. Bad heart, brain bleed, sepsis. My mother’s hands held his hands, my children pressed their grief-streaked faces against my grandmother’s breasts, my grandfather’s torso gave me fortitude to withstand the words: suspend life support.
Twelve days. Not even a fortnight. The length of time between my husband’s death and my brother’s death. A poetic word—fortnight. There was no poetry in my brother’s death. There was pain and fear and loneliness. A heart attack in his bathroom. Alone—without our mother’s hands or our grandmother’s breast for comfort.
Ten weeks. Five fortnights. The time between my brother’s death and the arrow piercing my father’s heart. An old heart. A wounded heart. Maybe it wasn’t an arrow at all. Maybe it was a thin dagger. Maybe it was a misericord. Maybe the season of death finally showed mercy. An honorable death stroke ending an elderly knight’s agony over the loss of his wife’s hands and his son’s face.
I see him now, my father, in the wrinkles around my eyes, and the set of my mouth. My brother keeps him company there in the shape of my nose. My dead have taken over my body. I see them daily. My grandmother, grandfather, mother, father, brother. The one missing is the one whose body I want the most.
I see no traces of my husband. I want his breast, his torso, his hands, his eyes, his mouth. God, do I want his mouth. I ache, and want, and look, and nothing. No part of him has come to reside in my body.
Then I see my children. Our children. Children who aren’t children—a strong young woman and an equally strong young man—and I realize he left his body to them.
He’s in their faces, in their eyes and brows. He’s in their hands, and body, and heart.
He didn’t leave himself in trust to them. He willed himself immediately and directly. Because in their grief, they need him now.
And, if I look carefully and steadily at my children, I catch glimpses of myself—then I know we’re all together—my dead, my husband, and me.
___
Aracelis González Asendorf was born in Cuba. Her work has appeared in TriQuarterly, Kweli Journal, The Adirondack Review, Puerto del Sol, The Acentos Review, Litro, The South Atlantic Review, Saw Palm, Black Fox Literary Magazine, The Hong Kong Review, The Santa Fe Literary Review and elsewhere. Her stories have been anthologized in All About Skin: Short Fiction by Women of Color, 100% Pure Florida Fiction, and Home in Florida: Latinx Writers and the Literature of Uprootedness.
Photo by Dinty W. Moore
21 comments
Emma says:
Jan 17, 2022
“The dead have taken over my body.”
This was the sentence that snapped me to attention. Thank you for sharing yourself. This is stunning work.
Melby says:
Jan 17, 2022
The tears on my face are yours.
Mare says:
Jan 18, 2022
Honest, riping, tragic and still hopeful and filled with love. Not at all surprising from this remarkable woman. Thank you for sharing your heart.
Olivia says:
Jan 19, 2022
This piece moved me to tears. Thank you for sharing your art and your grief with us.
Alastair says:
Jan 19, 2022
This is an incredible, haunting piece. Full of deep and instinctive love. Thank you for sharing.
Dee A SCIONTI says:
Jan 20, 2022
I’m having a hard time breathing as I finish reading this. I felt the author. What an amazing, personal, intimate realization she shared. Incredible.
Jan Priddy says:
Jan 21, 2022
I am the oldest left in my family, and I feel this deeply. Thank you. You honor the ones you love and who loved you in their bodies and your own.
Deb Werrlein says:
Jan 21, 2022
This is desperately beautiful, especially for its hopefulness amid so much loss.
Aidan roberts says:
Jan 26, 2022
Amazing. Often have I thought the same things. though I’m still young. I fear the death of my family and the void it will leave in me. This was comforting.
Pam Parker says:
Feb 3, 2022
Achingly beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
Jill Kolongowski says:
Feb 25, 2022
Stunning.
Tatiana Tomljanovic says:
Feb 26, 2022
Your words are so moving. It breaks the heart in all the right places.
Bob balanogg says:
Feb 28, 2022
Beautiful,touching, memorable. Thank you.
Polly Hansen says:
Mar 5, 2022
This line caught my breath especially…”The one missing is the one whose body I want the most.”
You capture an ache so exquisitely. And that first line. Wow.
Chameli Begum says:
Mar 19, 2022
This is an incredible, haunting piece
PHYLLIS E LINK says:
Mar 28, 2022
Oh, my, this is so beautiful.
Motorcycle Price says:
Apr 10, 2022
I’m the oldest left in my family, and I feel this deeply. Thank you. You recognize the bones you love and who loved you in their bodies and your own.
Casey Loken says:
Apr 28, 2022
This is just beautiful. Thank you for gifting this to the world.
Beth Ann Fennelly says:
May 10, 2022
So so moving, and an original look at grief that mirrors what so many readers here feel. Thank you.
Renee K Nelson says:
May 10, 2022
“Maybe the season of death finally showed mercy.” This line echoes in my heart.
This piece really spoke to me. I’m currently working on my own memoir/personal essays and I often worry that stacking so much death like that in one concentrated piece will exhaust the reader, or invoke pity, or turn them off. Now I have an amazing example of a very effective, genuine reflection.
Only I and my two brothers remain of my family. I often felt like the boats man on the River Styx for my Dad, Grandparents, Mom, all gone in the last six years. Just lost Mom to an auto-immune disease. My heart is broken and your piece made me feel like these experiences can have a purpose – an accessible one to all readers – beyond just loneliness in an indifferent universe.
Thank you.
shirley says:
May 19, 2022
oh my God. I love this story. It pained my heart though.