PRESENTING CALIFORNIA
WRITER
KATE CAMPBELL’S
Songs from the Caldera
I.
Circus Chimera
A soft wind lifts dust from dry fields and blows it around the setting sun,
muting the evening light. Temperatures cool on the hard, flat belly of
California’s Imperial Valley.
Lizards and snakes crawl from their hideouts, searching for prey. Heat waves
shimmer on the asphalt ahead of the car carrying Juana, Sandra and Maria to the
rag-tag carnival set up on the edge of Calexico. It’s plopped in an uneven lot,
rutted from trucks that wait to cross the Mexican border. The girls sing songs
in low voices, giggling as they bump along in the back seat.
The day’s heat, 117 degrees in late July, has kept the sisters indoors, watching
TV and playing board games in front of the air conditioner under their
grandmother’s watchful eye. Tonight, after their father gets home from his meat
cutting job at the Brawley beef packing plant, and the heat throttles down, the
family ventures out.
When they get to Circus Chimera, their father finds other meatpackers who’ve
brought their children to the traveling show, too. They sit and drink lemonade
in broken green plastic chairs, set randomly beside a faded red and white food
trailer, its torn awning limp in the breathless night. The children are turned
loose as the hot vice of summer loosens it grip. An old thermometer hangs
loosely from the side of the trailer. It has cooled to 107.
The sisters buy tickets from a battered booth and climb into the air-filled
bounce house, slowly lifting and falling, sweaty legs stuck to blue plastic.
Around them the rides whirl and flash. The air smells of axel grease and cotton
candy. Knees bend. Ankles flex. Up and down. Up and down. Yellow and red shadows
swirl around them. They bump against each other, fall in a jumble, giggle, roll.
They pull sweaty shorts away from damp legs and loosen stuck panties. They jump
again and again, mouths open, legs spread. Falling, falling. Giggling, giggling.
Carlos had struggled in the mid-day heat, a strip of torn T-shirt tied around
his forehead to catch the sweat, to set up the children’s attraction, drinking
beer, pumping hot air. Now he leans against the side of a trailer and watches
the girls, light headed from the heat. Sweat pours from his armpits, stains his
tank top, releases an oily beer odor as he lips a cigarette. He’d crossed the
desert on a moonless night behind a coyote, tripping over a barrel cactus that
embedded its spiney tips into his chest. He did not cry out. He’d fled
Magdelena, when his neighbors, led by the priest, chased him from
Mexico for touching a child. He’d floated down
the sewage in the New River into
America on a dime store inner tube, crawling,
hiding by day, finding this work as a roustabout with Circus Chimera.
He watches the girls now, sees a flash of pink and a small brown belly. He sees
even, white teeth, flashing brown eyes, long, black hair, loosened from
barrettes, tousled. His tongue darts to his dry lips. He licks the salt of his
own sweat and sees his chance. He fingers his crotch, lifts his long, black hair
gathered loosely in a ponytail that, in the heat, hangs heavy on his neck. His
eyelids drop to slits.
He comes to the edge of the jump house and calls to the girls through the mesh
enclosure. They stop to listen. He calls again.
Do you want candy? They ask what kind?
Fresa. They come closer; shoulder each other to be in front. He pokes pink
pieces through the mesh, calls them ninas
bonitas. They laugh and bounce on their bottoms.
He says they should see the snakes in the trailer next door. It’s cool and dark
inside, he says, and promises to lift them up to see the black widow spider. He
says he will let all three of them in for a dollar. The girls, tired of the heat
and the excitement of jumping, reach in their pockets, pool their change, give
him seventy-five cents, go inside. It’s cool and black. They shiver, feel a
little dizzy.
Carlos picks up Sandra before her eyes can adjust to the dark and quickly runs
his hands over her hips, gauging her heft and sets the eight-year-old down. Then
he picks up eleven-year-old Juana, he says so she can see better. Not meaning
to, he pinches the skin in her armpits, making her squirm and hard to handle.
With his right hand shoved down the back of her shorts, he feels from behind for
what he needs–soft flesh; full vulva; deep, wet crack, he wiggles his fingers.
Juana gives out a startled yelp and swings her elbow at his head. She bucks and
kicks. Carlos holds her close, sets her down. The girls run from the trailer
into the hot orange light of Circus Chimera, little Maria stumbling on the metal
steps as they escape. The fathers hear them, push over the plastic chairs, grab
the girls, charge the trailer.
Carlos welcomes what will happen next. Air-conditioned cell, color TV, guards
lazed by the heat. For a moment he’s relived the pressure of picking up and
laying down of his lust. In the dark, before he is beaten, the fathers breaking
his nose and loosening a few teeth, and the Calexico police arrive, Carlos licks
his dirty fingers, satisfied with the dainty taste. Later, he waits like a sissy
for trial in the sweet, sticky honey pot of the
Imperial County
jail, bleeding from his ass like a girl, puncturing his arms with plastic forks
just to feel the sizzling jolts of pain.
Something stirs in the Sonoran
Desert. Then there is silence, shooting stars,
flowers blooming in the dark and dying before first light, deer pointlessly
butting chain-link fences along canals where they once could drink water.
Lizards with long, black tongues lick crystallized piss from rocks where the
desperate and hungry relieve themselves on their way north. Carnival freaks with
greasy hands reach out from the shadows of the dime toss and Tilt-a-Whirl to
sample local sweets and, in the heat, flick their tongues and don’t give a fuck.
II.
Safe from Suffering
Playing in the garage, my father sweeping.
My kitten playing in boxes, chasing string.
Fog gushes in from the bay, mixes with
eucalyptus oil, swirls into a stew of
odors the summer I turned seven.
My father smells like Old Spice aftershave.
He’s not drunk today.
He found the kitten, small and gray,
in a box outside the grocery store and
brought it home to me. I keep it in my room,
at the end of my bed and call him Smoke.
He follows me, won’t go away.
The calm of chores and making nice.
A summer lull.
The lawn is mowed. The grass is raked.
My mother stays inside. Vacuumed air.
Lemon oil. Laundry soap. Bay leaves boiling in a pot.
My father whistles, swats cobwebs.
I ask questions he’s not always there answer.
Marguerite daisies by our front door push their
faces to the light. I pick them, go inside.
My mother scolds that flowers are for
looks. To show the neighbors. They make
pleasantness on the street. If they’re picked,
they die. Besides, she says, they’re not
mine to take, anyway.
Go outside.
Play.
Next door, the Colemans come out,
try to start their car. They greet my father,
who smiles his funny, tight-lipped grin.
He squints, pulls his spirit closer. I see it dart
back inside. They get out, raise the car’s hood.
I go get the screw driver. Stand aside.
My father leans in, tinkers, says it’s the idle.
The hum goes smoother. I put the tool away.
The Colemans get back inside, gun the engine.
The car begins to roll, slow, pulling out,
Mr. Coleman looking the other way.
My father waves. I see the cat.
I yell. I run. The crunch under the wheel convulses me.
I fall, skid on fresh-clipped grass.
The Colemans stop and he gets out. My Kitten
skitters down the gutter, dragging his hind legs
My father, calm and quick, goes into the garage, gets a
hammer, hits Smoke in the head, he says
So he won’t suffer.
He says it’s for the best, and guileless, prepares me
for his own future. Empty bottle, broken neck.
My father grabs my kitten’s smashed hind legs,
carries his dangling body into our briefly tidy garage.

III.
Potato Salad Sisters
I should have known when you told me.
Fifty pounds of potato salad is more
than you can make in your tiny, greasy kitchen,
with its tomato-red counter tops,
out of date since 1950.
I should have known that since I inherited Mom’s big,
heavy pots, that I’ve taken care of all these years—
made turkey dressing in, beans for baseball barbecues—
that I would be the one to do the salad job.
All those years you drank and dated dangerous men,
while I took care of business.
When you came struggling through my front door
with your sacks of onion, celery and potatoes,
I should have known, smelled the salty
San Francisco air,
should have remembered
I’m the big sister, and it’s still like
we’re little girls again, sharing a room,
fighting over paper dolls.
I should have known we’d soon
be stirring the resentment pot.
I should have known you would deny secretly
soothing the salad dressing with sour cream,
that you would buy cheap mustard and beg
tang from the horseradish in mine, that you would turn
away, squeamish, while I sprinkled raspberry
vinegar on boiled, naked spuds.
You put your hands in Mom’s big pot and mushed
as I spooned dressing. You said you wanted it wet
as your tight pussy and wiped a mayonnaise-coated
hand across your fat tit. I scraped the bowl
and licked the spoon. You cracked a shell and said
you love my hard-boiled-egg farts. I frowned.
All those years I raised our sons while you ran wild.
We swatted flies on my back patio, talked about our
grandchildren, diced sweet pickles, warty little puds.
You said all men really want is meat.
I said yours is tough and stringy, even if it’s free.
We laughed, you choked and I should have known.
Tomorrow, the men at work will rave about your salad, you said.
I said nothing, but should have known that you’d take
all the credit and I’d end up delivering it.

IV.
Roadside Distraction
Sam’s stomach lifted and shifted as he came over the rise in
County Road 32A. He traveled the road, cracks shaped
like alligator skin, to and from work every day. Way up ahead he saw a car
pulled to the side with the trunk open. He noticed because strange vehicles were
rare on the back roads around Courtland, a delta farming town south of
Sacramento. A summer breakdown, with no wind or shade or
water, meant a quick case of heat stroke. Like everybody, he automatically
stopped to see if he could help.
Courtland, with its tidy cottages, crumbling post office and trailer park where
Mexican field workers and their families live, was a hazy outline far off in the
distance. The is town nestled along the levee, below the level of the Sacramento
River that flows lazy in late summer, riffled by an occasional jet ski or an
otter plunging in to cool off. Fruit ripens on backyard pear trees and chickens
cluck deep in their throats as the afternoon warmth builds in their ramshackle
coops.
Through the heat shimmers rising from the asphalt Sam watched a figure look into
the open car trunk. He mentally calculated how long it would take to help change
a flat. Maybe 20 minutes, a half hour. His hands were dirty anyway from working
in the vineyards. He’d spent most of the day running the irrigation crews near
Lodi – checking sprinklers, adjusting drip lines.
This won’t take long, he thought. Worst case, he’d give the driver a lift
into town.
As if flying a plane, he glided down the road in his new pickup, a sensible
white F-150 with a utility box bolted across the bed, shovels rattling. The
stranded car got bigger, its outline sharper. With the sun in his eyes and the
wheat swaying in the hot puffs of Delta breeze, Sam didn’t really know what
color the car was, much less the make or model, didn’t care. The temperature was
topping 104 degrees and pushing higher in the late afternoon. The car’s details
didn’t matter. A cold beer did.
Nothing much ever happens on this road, he
thought. An occasional bale of hay got bucked from a truckload or a farmer
got to driving too fast while talking on his cell phone and drifted into a
ditch. Sometimes the guy died. Depended. The sheriff never came out this way, no
dip-stick ambulance driver could find this place.
It was no man’s land, he thought as he blasted down the country road in the
dog days of summer.
She stepped from the back of her car to the edge of the road like an explosion,
bursting through the whites and beiges and sun-baked yellows of the simmering
afternoon in a dress the color of ripe Bing cherries. The breeze billowed her
skirt.
He downshifted in an automatic reaction, almost whistled, and pulled in behind
her car, sending hot gravel flying. Before he could turn off the engine, she was
at the driver’s side window, leaning toward him, smelling of vanilla, brown hair
shining like cinnamon and spun sugar in the sunlight. He cut the engine, pushed
the hazard button.
“Can you help me?” she asked and Sam nodded not knowing what he was agreeing to.
“It’s my dog, Freckles. She’s having puppies. Come and look.”
Sam grabbed the door handle and pushed out, leaving the keys in the ignition.
She was hanging onto the window frame and he almost knocked her over. He stepped
down and started to move around her, glancing at her feet. Little, he thought,
and in white sandals with bows on the toes, not from around here.
“What are you doing out here on this tractor road?”
“I’m trying to get to the vet in Courtland. It’s Saturday and my regular vet in
Elk Grove isn’t open,” she said, puffing a little in the heat. “The girl on the
phone in Courtland told me to bring Freckles right in. She said take Road E2 off
of Highway 99 and go west. I’m lost.”
“You sure are,” Sam said. “This is the back way.”
“She said the vet would wait for me,” the girl said, craning her neck, looking
away. “I put Freckles in the back seat, but she stopped breathing. I pulled over
and rubbed cold water on her. She started breathing again, but now she’s
whimpering like she’s really hurt. She’s in the back seat.”
Sam and the girl took the few steps to the car and looked in.
“That’s a big dog,” Sam said, marveling at the size of the pit bull stretched
out across the back seat. “I’m surprised you could lift her in there.”
“Oh, my God,” the girl said, recoiling. “The puppy’s half out. It’s dead. I know
its dead. It’s dead!”
Sam put his hand on the woman’s shoulder and felt the sun’s heat on her skin,
the closeness of her bones. She started sniffling and stepped away from the car,
back toward the truck, as if to protect herself from the sight.
Sam leaned in, stretching across the seat, hitting his knees against the car’s
frame, teetering on his toes as he reached for the dog. He talked softly. “Nice
girl, good girl. Pretty Freckles, pretty girl.” Then he pulled the limp puppy
from between its mother’s legs. The dog turned the instant the pup was removed
and clamped her jaws full force onto Sam’s hand. He dropped the puppy.
The pain from the bite buckled his knees. He hollered like he was falling from a
cliff, the sound echoing in his ears, riffling the wheat in the field beside the
car. With its jaws firmly locked on Sam’s hand, Freckles died. He turned to look
for the girl behind him but she wasn’t there.
She sprayed gravel as she peeled out in Sam’s new truck, fishtailing as she
drove down the lumpy road, waving goodbye out the window with her slender hand
and blood-red fingernails. He looked over the car’s front seat and saw wires
dangling below the ignition. There were no keys. The horn was beyond reach. It
hit him that the car was stolen, probably the dog too. Looking back at his hand
clamped in the locked jaws of the dead dog, he saw four bold letters stamped in
gold on its thick leather collar.
Just before he passed out, Sam saw there wasn’t much blood seeping from the
punctures, although his hand was swelling, and it occurred to him he might not
make it to work tomorrow. When he fainted, Sam fell across the car’s backseat on
top of the dog, his dirt caked work boots hanging out the passenger side door.
In the dark he felt their hands, moving over his body. The smell of stale beer
and body odor brought him to his senses. They spoke Spanish. Sam understood some
of what they said from his work in the fields. The men felt in his pockets and
took his wallet. They rolled him over and found Sam’s hand in the dog’s mouth.
They reached over Sam’s body and hit the animal’s jaw with a tire iron. It
sprang open like a trap. The men pulled Sam out of the car by the belt loops on
his pants, cradling his head as they gently lowered him to the ground, saying
hurry up. Darse prisa! Darse prisa!
Sam looked at the ring of brown faces above him. His head was lifted, water was
forced to his lips. Someone carefully placed his wallet on his chest.
“Como te llamo,
Senor?”
Sam choked, cleared his throat, and whispered, “Bitch’s name is Rita.”

Portfolio by Kate Campbell. ©
2007. All rights reserved.
NOTE TO READERS
:
These are original works of fiction. Any similarity that may exist
between the characters represented here and actual individuals, either living or
dead, is purely coincidental.
California
writer Kate Campbell is a journalist and photographer who has been working in
fiction and poetry for the past several years. As a journalist, her writing has
appeared in major daily newspapers and regional magazines. In addition, her
photography has also been widely published, while her first short story appears
in American
River Review’s 2007 issue. Campbell, who
grew up in San Francisco, now lives in Sacramento, where she is grudgingly
coming to grips with the heavy clay soil in her garden and the ever-present dust
on her furniture. She’s currently at work on a full-length novel.

New Age
By Jacob Aiello
The aged actress and her young, handsome lover huddled in bed on Christmas
morning, an open champagne bottle between them, next to their presents. You may
remember the actress from such films as Look What the Cat Dragged In and
Die, Sally, Die, but now she who was once smooth and pale and brilliant in
the camera's reflection lies blemished and faded, like celluloid in some long
forgotten warehouse. She who was once the object of idolatry for thousands of
men is now the pity of one.
He reaches over and kisses her, on her lips, her neck, he reaches over and
squeezes her left
breast, hands careful not to touch the lump he pretends
isn't there, as if by rubbing around but never touching it, it will cease to
exist. Yet his hands avoid the flesh that needs his touch the most, if only to
reunite with the rest of her body.
The phone rings and he picks it up.
"Hello?" he says, and hands her the phone. "It's your son." She rolls her
eyes as he gets out
of bed, naked, and walks out of the room into the
kitchen. She flips her hair and rubs her hands over her face before placing the
receiver against her ear.
"Hello, George."
The lover walks back with a Corona in one hand and a lime wedge in the other,
slowly rubbing the lime around the lip of the bottle, watching her conversation.
He twists the lime while mimicking her distracted responses; he watches her
watching him. When at last she hangs up the phone, they remain silent, until
finally he asks, "Do you know why they put the lime in the Corona?"
He waits for the decorous shake of her head before continuing.
"It's from Mexico, and everyone used to put the bottles in ice chests to keep
them cold. But
after hours under the sun, the ice melted, leaving the beer
sitting in a puddle of dirty water.
They rubbed the lime around the tip so
the citric acid could sterilize the bottle before they
drank. Eventually
people started dropping the lime wedge into the beer, which lead to America
where that's all we do, oblivious to its original purpose. Because our water's
so clean, it means nothing."
"Just like everything else,"
He somberly nods. "So? Did you tell him?"
"No, I didn't want to ruin his Christmas."
"You'd rather he spends it in ignorance?"
"No," she says. "I'd rather he spends it in peace."
"Is there a difference?"
"Fuck you," she replies and wishes she hadn't. Her lips lower and whisper,
"Baby, I'm scared. Really scared."
"You have to have strength now. Courage." He grabs a cigarette from the pack
on the bureau behind him, lights it and exhales, "You know why I love you?"
"No, why?"
"Because you're so mutable. You could turn from the villain to the victim in
the span of a
scream."
"You don't love me," she says, "you love the actress."
He smiles, "Sometimes I think that's all you are. And that's okay, that's
what you need. You do it out of necessity. But right now you have to play the
heroine."
She turns away, towards the bedside table and squirts a dollop of
moisturizing lotion into her
palm. She proceeds to rub her hands over her
legs, ignoring him, smiling a lime wedge and bottle in his hands. When she
finishes she clasps her hands together and looks up at him, renewed and
amnesiac, eyes betraying the sudden distaste in her mouth. "Should we open our
presents?"
He nods and walks over to the bed, sits beside her and rubs the skin still
warm from her
friction. "Yes," he says, "let's."
You may remember the
avocado cashmere scarf the actress wore in Binds of Love. You may even
recall that fateful scene when Elliott Gould grabbed the scarf in a fit of
passion and wrapped her hands, bound in cashmere, around his neck. You may
remember how that role did for avocado cashmere scarves what Jackie Onassis did
for Pink, what Audrey Hepburn did for Tiffany's. In all the
hippest bars and discos, the swankiest dinner parties and performances, women
donned the avocado cashmere scarf in hopes to glean that which had so gracefully
shined upon the actress, the scarf's sexually perverse connotations forgotten.
It was this same avocado cashmere scarf that inhabited the young lover's most
vivid childhood memories; he and his mother, hand in hand walking down the
street, the scarf wrapped casually around her neck. And so it was not a
secondary task for the young lover to find the true, original avocado cashmere
scarf, abandoned in the attic of the late producer's home, discovered by his
spurned daughter and sold through an obscure auction house. But find it he did.
"Here," he says, handing her the box. "You open your present first."
"Okay," she says, and begins to unwrap; at first with a self-conscious
deliberation that slowly
evolves into a frenetic explosion of cardboard and
paper until at last she sits, the opened
package in her lap, the avocado
cashmere scarf lying limp across her legs.
He stares at her, wicked with anticipation, "You do remember it, don't you?"
She sits there
speechless, tears streaming down her cheeks.
"Is something wrong?" he asks. "Don't you remember it? It's the scarf
from Binds of Love."
"I remember," she begins, "the first time Elliott and I had to perform that
scene. I was so
nervous. He walked up to me and put his arm around my
shoulders and said, 'You're going to be famous for this.' He said, 'Whether or
not you become anything else is up to you. Just don't stop.' And I tried not to
stop, I kept going and going but it was no fucking good!"
"Baby," the young lover says, "I didn't mean to upset you."
"No fucking good! Did I just give up? I can't even remember. I must have
because that's all I
am anymore, famous, and only cult-famous at that. And
look at fucking Elliott! He's fucking
goddamn Beverly D'Angelo and I'm just
fucked!" He reaches to slide the scarf from between her legs, oblivious, as she
shouts, "But that's all over, goddamnit! It's a new age!" She jumps off the bed
and runs naked to her address book on the bureau. "I'm calling Sylva right now
and telling him he better get me some work. A new fucking age!"
"But Baby, it's Christmas morning."
She turns and glares desperation in his direction. "Fuck you," she says and
picks up the phone. "Hello, Sylva? "That's right, it's me. Merry Christmas to
you too. Listen, I'm sorry to be calling you now, but I haven't heard from you
in some time and I--" she switches the phone from ear to ear, frustrated and
anxious, as Sylva interrupts her.
"What's that? Oh, that's wonderful. But about my-- "
"What? Oh, you mean George. No, he's doing well, he's got children of his
own--
"Yes, but about some work--"
"Well, no, actually. I don't think it's inappropriate at all to be calling
now, I haven't heard
from you in some time and I--"
"Yes, but Sylva, I'm telling you I want to work now--
"Well, I don't think that's really fair, but--
"Right, Monday morning, I'll give you a call. Fine. See you then. Oh, Merry
Christmas to you
too."
She hangs up the phone, head bowed, whether in meditation or sorrow he cannot
tell. She turns to him, just a boy sitting on the bed, an amalgam of concern and
irritation, new age avoiding the eyes of the old; and she says, "Well.
Shall we open yours?"
And somewhere, in a long forgotten canister, in an
abandoned warehouse, sits that moment
preserved: The actress, the wrinkles
yet to curse her face, straddling the idea of Elliott Gould's limp, lifeless
body between her legs, fucking him as tears stream down her face, smearing her
mascara.
"You wanted this," she cries. "This is what you wanted me to do."
She pauses and reaches toward his face, the skin still warm to the touch, the
rouge stripe around his neck yet to fade. She pauses, and then continues.
© Jacob Aiello.
2004. All rights reserved.
Jacob
Aiello is a graduate of Portland State University, holding a degree in English
Literature. You can view an example of his graphic art work on the
Industry News Page.
NOTE TO READERS
:
These are original works of fiction. Any similarity that may exist
between the characters represented here and actual individuals, either living or
dead, is purely coincidental.