Light Boxes

Light Boxes by Shane Jones Page B

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Authors: Shane Jones
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blue sweater with holes at the elbows. He cut his hair in odd angles and took a few snips from the chin of his beard.
    Thaddeus closed the door.
    February dropped the sewing shears. The girl pushed the parchment papers under a bearskin rug. They glanced at each other and looked back at Thaddeus, who was still standing in the doorway.
    Well, come in, said February. Don’t let the cold air in.
    Thaddeus was puzzled. His ankles, beneath his socks, were sticky with sweat.
    The girl who smelled of honey and smoke approached Thaddeus and placed her arms around his shoulders. I’m glad you’re back, she said. Come in and sit on the floor with me.
    February stayed in his rocking chair. He folded his hands in his lap and rocked back and forth. He looks scared, thought Thaddeus.
    I thought you were dead, said Thaddeus, looking at February.
    February shook his head no.
    I’m not dead, he said. As a matter of fact, I don’t know who or what I am anymore. Everyone in town is terrified of me. They blame me for an endless season where all it does is snow and the skies are gray and everyone is filled with endless sadness. They blame me for the end of flight. Did you know that I had visions that you were coming to cut my throat, Thaddeus. Just awful. I had to sleep in an empty cottage at the edge of another town. The weather was warm.
    Thaddeus didn’t know of any other town within walking distance.
    February continued. I ran away from the possibility of you killing me to another town that appeared to be abandoned. The weather was warm, the homes newly built, but there were holes in the ground that appeared to go to the center of the earth. It looked like tunnels underground, and inside them were lamps strung like holiday lights.
    The girl who smelled of honey and smoke got up to make tea. Thaddeus said yes, that he would drink tea only if the bottom of the cup were stuffed with mint leaves.
    I don’t understand, said Thaddeus to February.
    Neither do we, said the girl who smelled of honey and smoke.
    The two holes in the sky, February said, they hold the answer. We believe in a Creator. We believe that the Creator is up inside those two holes in the sky. We believe that the cause of this endless sad season is directly connected to the Creator.
    Thaddeus took the teacup from the girl who smelled of honey and smoke. But you’re February, he said. You’re the cause of it.
    I’m not February, February said. You and everyone else including the Creator call me February. I don’t even know my name. I’m a builder of houses, I know that. I built this house by myself. I should be called House Builder. Most of the homes in your town, I built with my bare hands. That is, before I was driven away. I hate February.
    But you kidnapped the children and buried them, said Thaddeus.
    I wouldn’t do that, said House Builder, kind of laughing.
    The girl who smelled of honey and smoke sat so close to Thaddeus on the floor that their knees were touching.
    He loves children, she said. He wouldn’t do that.
    February the Creator kidnapped the children, said House Builder. February the Creator is responsible for this endless season of sadness.
    But you, said Thaddeus, looking at the girl who smelled of honey and smoke. You poisoned me. You made me see spring. When my daughter was taken from her bed, it smelled of honey and smoke and the window was open.
    Like I can control what I do and how you are affected. I believe I was only doing it for the safety of my husband. Someone told me to do it, and I did it. I, too, have been mislabeled as a girl who smells of honey and smoke. I’m a Housewife. And as for the smell of the room, Housewife whispered, February is a cruel being, capable of such tricks.
    So it is still February, said Thaddeus. All this time February is still occurring.
    I’m afraid so, she said.
    None of this makes sense, thought Thaddeus.
    We feel the same way, said House Builder.
    How did you

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