Whisper Down the Lane by Clay Chapman (best books to read for success .TXT) š
- Author: Clay Chapman
Book online Ā«Whisper Down the Lane by Clay Chapman (best books to read for success .TXT) šĀ». Author Clay Chapman
Eliās father.
What was left of him. This must have been Hankās box. All the artifacts that had been left behind had made their way here, buried among the plastic pumpkins and Santa hats.
I dug in, hoping to learn a little bit more about this man. Iād only heard stories. Tales from Tamara of the Man Before. Maybe there was something else to glean from him in here.
What was Hank like? Iād ask.
Believe me, sheād always say, the less you know about him, the better. She never wanted to talk about him. If he ever came up, sheād steer the conversation as far away as possible. Almost like she didnāt want him to exist. Certainly not in Elijahās life.
Tamara and I never dug into each otherās past. I didnāt ask her about her childhood and she didnāt ask me about mine. There was an unspoken agreement between us about the lives we had led before we found each other. Who we were before we met, our ups and downs, were behind us. All we had were our scarsāsome more visible than othersāand that was enough to tell the story. Our past didnāt need to define our day-to-day, as long as we were honest about who we are now.
So why had she kept all of her ex-husbandās crap? How could she not have thrown his things away? I wasnāt about to get jealous over some box, but it was strange to me, meeting this man this way, learning about him through his discarded belongings. A lost and found for one.
I kept Hankās box. What if he came back for it one day? Iād have to explain that Iād been the one who tossed him out, which wasnāt something I felt ready to do. The others ended up by the curb on trash collection day, while his box stayed in the corner, under the waspās nest.
Next step was to set up my studio.
Before school started, I had cleared the floor and put up some shelving units. Tamara was pleasantly pleased with herself for assigning me a house project, which, in all honesty, I had begun to suspect was some sort of pretense for me to clean out their goddamn garage.
No matter. The space was mine now.
After the whole papier-mĆ¢chĆ© incident, I told Tamara I was going out to the studio for a bit before dinner. Just to wash the day away. Class left me a little rattled.
I canāt put my finger on it, but I canāt stop thinking aboutā
Mr. Yucky
āthat papier-mĆ¢chĆ© puppet. Who couldāve made it? I decide to get my mind off things and finally christen my new workspace with a charcoal sketch. Just a little drawing to limber up the olā imagination. See if I still have it in me. Tamara would complain about how everything I touched had blackened fingerprints all over it if I ever sketched, but thatās the price of inspiration. Secretly, I think she liked it. Itās her way of keeping tabs on me. Sheāll know Iāve been working.
So what am I going to draw? I stare at the white space on the sketchpad, losing myself in the vast expanse. When working with charcoal, you bring darkness to the page. The shadows come first. Before the image clarifies, before you even see what youāre drawing, itās all black.
I prefer charcoal because of its impermanence. Itās a delicate substance but thereās a brittle quality to it as well. It allows for quick sketching to capture an image before it disappears from the mindās eye. But charcoal fades faster than most other materials. Without a fixative, the charcoal particles wonāt adhere to the paper. Not permanently. They will fall off, like dust. The image itself drifts away from the page over time, until itās gone altogether.
Itās cold out here. Tamara is rightāI should winterize this place. The temperatureās only going to drop the deeper into the year we go. Winter is on its way and without a heating system, Iāll freeze. Just over my shoulder, I spot a cardboard box in the corner and remember what it is. I reach in and pull out what I know is already there.
The sweater fits perfectly.
Beside a few loose threads, itās still a good sweater. Snug. Itās strange to be wearing it, but letās just consider it a quick remedy for the cold. Iāll take it off before I head back to the house.
I saved all of Tamaraās CDs, stuffed in a box along with a dinged-up Discman. I sift through her old albums until I find the perfect soundtrack for tonightās endeavor.
The Police. Synchronicity. I havenāt listened to this in ages.
I slip on Tamaraās headphones, the foam disintegrated but still usable, and press play. Let The Police take me away. Track one kicks off and I pick up a stick of charcoal.
Sketching has always been a somnambulistic act. I donāt want to think. Donāt want to be conscious of what Iām drawing while Iām working on it. I tend to shut off and let the work take me away, as if in a trance. Iāll eventually wake up to an image. Music helps.
I wait for the shadows. Wait for an image to rise from my mind. One stroke. Then two. Iām conducting a sort of sĆ©ance here.
Skrch.
Skrch.
Skrch.
The charcoal scrapes over the sketchpad.
Skrch.
Skrch.
Skrch.
Shadows seep into my peripheral vision, the charcoal dust blotting out everything around me, until I head off somewhere. Somewhere else. Far away from here.
Skrch.
Skrch.
Skrch.
The image materializes over time, like conjuring a memory. What am I drawing? Even I donāt know. Not yet. Not until I snap out of it.
At some point I realize Iām more than halfway through the album. Where did all that time go? I step back and take in the image.
Mom.
Her hair fans all around her head, as if sheās drifting underwater.
Thereās
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