I’m Afraid There’s Something Wrong with Mr. Prescott

By Ron Burch

He started wearing 18th century clothing, donning a coat, waistcoat, and breeches. The breeches, with buttons down the side, went over his silk stockings. His shoes were rounded at the toes with low heels, the tongues fastened with large buckles. He had adopted a long riding duster that cut low past his knees, and around his shoulders sat a triple cape. Ruffles of lace appeared from under his coat at his wrists, along with a jabot on the front of his white shirt. Adorning his wrinkled head, for Mr. Prescott was in his 70s and bald, perched a powdered white wig, the back bound in a pigtail. On top of that, when he ventured out he wore a round-crown felt hat with a broad brim. In his right hand, he carried a heavy ornate cane, which he shook at people when he was annoyed.

He also sold his car and purchased a large brown horse and saddle. He stabled the stallion in his garage against the HOA rules for our neighborhood, a suburb built in the 1960s, and his adjoining neighbor threatened to call the city and complain.

Mr. Prescott waved his cane at Gary, promising to thrash him.

Several of the neighbors were annoyed because his horse, which he named Privilege, had shit all over the streets where the kids usually played, and it was, honestly, everywhere.

Last Saturday, while our neighbor Dr. Lowry mowed his front yard, Mr. Prescott emerged from his house, wig intact but with no coat or waist coat, and demanded the doctor, a person of color, mow Prescott’s yard and repaint his house “as was his duty.”

Luckily, I was able to intercede before Dr. Lowry—beloved neighbor, well-known heart surgeon, and former college football line tackle—physically removed Mr. Prescott from his front yard. At the next HOA meeting, a petition signed by almost all the homeowners was submitted requesting that the Prescotts move out of our neighborhood due to the inappropriate behavior with Dr. Lowry. From the back of the room, Mr. Prescott stood, in full regalia, and accused the rest of us of “TYRANNY!” and ignorant of “the natural order of the world.”

After he stormed out—attempting to break a chair on the way, but being plastic, it only bounced—the HOA approached Dr. Doris Hinshaw, the therapist who lived the next block over, and offered to pay for her for a session with Mr. Prescott. Dr. Hinshaw declined saying that last week Prescott verbally assaulted her as a “whore and slattern” because she was not covering her head while at the grocery store and was not accompanied by a male guardian.

Mr. Prescott filed a lawsuit against our suburban community, Wind Hollows, claiming that since he was one of the original and still living purchasers of land in our neighborhood, the suburb belonged to him, “given his God-given right as a white male in our country.” His lawsuit also stated that the rest of us, his neighbors, were really his indentured servants who should be working the land at his behest, and he added two sheep to his garage barn.

The sheep took to wandering the neighborhood. They ate Mrs. Jenkins’s roses, and when she said she was going to sue him, Mr. Prescott threatened to have stocks built at the empty corner of Solace Street and Happy Drive to incarcerate her for public shame.

After Mr. Prescott rode Privilege to work (his office building is only a few blocks away where he is an accountant), my wife, Polly, visited Mrs. Prescott, who had been notably absent from the goings-on. She had been reduced to wearing a bodice and skirt with wooden clogs and her gray hair powdered white and covered by a cloth. Forced by her husband to give up her job—she had been the manager of our local library branch—she now gardened and fretting how poorly their plants were coming up. Even more worrisome, her husband expected her to turn their sheep into dinner courses.

Polly said Mrs. Prescott cried almost the entire visit, and my wife noticed that the tears washed away her white make-up, revealing a large bruise on her face, which she claimed an accident from walking into a door. She offered Polly some homemade jelly Mr. Prescott insisted she make from berries he’d found near their pool. When Mrs. Prescott could not name the type of berries, Polly politely passed and returned home.

Concerned about Mrs. Prescott’s safety, she called the police who came out but didn’t do anything, even after all the complaints, the threats Mr. Prescott had made, his wandering farm animals, and the concern that his mental faculties might be impaired. They said he was probably having a bad couple of weeks, and, even with Mrs. Prescott’s bruise, they declined to take any action.

Things were quiet for about a week. Mr. Prescott wasn’t seen riding Privilege to the office, and all the horse shit on the street was old. Then one night after supper, there was a tremendous crash outside, which brought out all the neighbors. Mr. Prescott’s horse had kicked his way out of the closed garage, breaking the door, freeing both him and the sheep. We discovered that the animals had no food or water as evidenced by the three of them simultaneously drinking out of Mrs. Jenkins’s birdbath. It was decided to try the authorities again, and the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Prescott were discovered at their dining table, the remnants of Mrs. Prescott’s half-eaten berry jelly staining both their dinner plates and their stiff mouths.

The house sold to a nice family, after the Prescott’s kids removed everything except the historical clothing—put out front with the garbage.



Ron Burch’s fiction has been published in numerous literary journals including South Dakota Review, Fiction International, Mississippi Review, and New Flash Fiction, and it has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and other awards. His last novel, JDP, was published by BlazeVOX Books. He earned his MFA from Antioch University Los Angeles.

Photo credit: Photo by Shahabudin Ibragimov on Unsplash.


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Prolapse

By Tara Campbell

 

The uterus is tired.

The uterus is sorry
but it can’t seem to stay
in one place anymore,
which isn’t surprising
considering how often
it’s been poked
and prodded
and pricked
by congressmen’s pens.

The uterus would like
to get in a word of its own,
just one, even edgewise
just one goddamn word.

The uterus wishes
it could remember the words
to that song you sang
when you didn’t have to worry
about your uterus all the time,
when you didn’t have to be
so goddamn vigilant,
didn’t have to keep twisting
and turning away from men
shoving laws into it
edgewise.

The uterus is tired
so very tired.

The uterus would like
just one goddamn moment
to itself. The uterus just wants
to be. The uterus is sorry
it can’t give you that.
The uterus remembers when
it was barely aware of itself
which sounds like a contradiction
but was merely a state of grace.

The uterus is small and pink
and lovely and valued
and sacred and blessed.

But no, the uterus doesn’t believe
its own press. . .
well, it didn’t. . .
well, it shouldn’t have, and now
the uterus is continually disappointed
to find it is neither valued
nor sacred
nor blessed
nor even safe.

The uterus is tired
so goddamn tired.

The uterus is sorry it’s letting you down
because now it’s letting itself down
slowly, uncomfortably—
this is called “prolapse”
and the uterus wants you to know
this is not your fault either,
and it would have told you
everything sooner, but the truth
just gets the uterus bullied,
harassed, and threatened with rape
for upsetting men
(and, when the truth
is too educational,
it just gets the uterus kicked
off the socials for “porn”).

Some days the uterus feels philosophical,
and some days the uterus feels angry—
who are we kidding,
most days the uterus feels angry
if not for itself
then on behalf of other uteruses
who are told they’re overreacting
to getting bullied,
harassed, and threatened with rape
for upsetting men.

The uterus is often depressed
but today the uterus is simply tired
the uterus needs a break
to forget how everyone
is always talking about it
even when it’s not in the room—
especially when it’s not in the room.

The uterus is tired,
and the uterus is tired
of being asked why it’s tired.
The uterus no longer wishes
to be interrogated.

The uterus just needs a little time
a little goddamn time
to itself, and who can blame it
for feeling heavy
for wanting to slide
just a little bit lower
and rest after everything
it’s had to endure.

The uterus simply wants to sit
in the warm and the dark,
mind its own business
and quietly sink, baptized
in silence, blessed
finally
with one goddamn
moment of
peace.

 


Tara Campbell is a writer, teacher, Kimbilio Fellow, fiction co-editor at Barrelhouse, and graduate of American University’s MFA in Creative Writing. Her publication credits include SmokeLong Quarterly, Masters Review, Wigleaf, CRAFT Literary, and Writers Resist. She’s the author of a novel and four multi-genre collections including her newest, Cabinet of Wrath: A Doll Collection. She teaches writing at venues such as American University, Johns Hopkins University, the Writer’s Center, Catapult, and the National Gallery of Art.

Photo credit: Ittmust via a Creative Commons license.


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