Showing posts with label Andrew Stancek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Stancek. Show all posts

October 7, 2015

Andrew Stancek




Hedgehog

Aquila scratches her shoulder and calls me a hedgehog. Takes me a minute to decide on a reaction and then I’m insulted.

Sure I’ve been called worse. The three years of wedded bliss never were. The first year mostly good. Second, kept busy. The last year’s been the shits. We thought we finally hit sunshine and balloons, and I’d be a damn good dad. One Saturday morning I brought a baby crib from a garage sale, hardly used. She showed me samples of wallpaper for the small room.

At least we didn’t have to have a funeral. This couple down the road, it wasn’t even born but it was so many months, they had to bury it.

Yeah, so, we’ve been seeing fat Ms. Cinna, no pictures of happy children on her wall, and she says she’ll help us with this little hurdle. Me, I keep emotion inside, don’t need to pay good money to be told. Aquila has a temper. She storms and I take it.

So in the last few months, no matter how honey-flowing Cinna is, Aquila has called me loser, asshole, and sometimes I slam the door and sometimes I try to talk her out of it. This hedgehog shit, what the hell is that? I wouldn’t know a hedgehog if its brains were squishing under my Michelins and neither would she. Is she calling me road kill, is that it?

When I feel like a volcano, I’m told I need to breathe and visualize. The first thing I visualize is a knife, stuck right to the hilt. Then I ask, not even gritting teeth, what she’s talking about.

She hoots, stretches her arms like she’s about to fly, and says, “Hedgehog.”

It’s Friday, coming onto midnight. I worked overtime, get home beat and my wife starts taking off her clothes, calling me rodents. She’s not been in the mood ever since when, so it’s weird, but I shuffle towards her after that blouse and bra come off, and she looks at me like I’m a turd she stepped into.

I shift back and watch. I sleep like a baby and don’t get frightened when I’m awake either, been told I must be the one person alive with a clear conscience. Aquila says it shows I’m an unimaginative cold prick.

Aquila’s naked, muscles ripple, breasts jiggle and skin gleams, irises orange, jives, chitters a high-pitched uh-HU.

**

I’ve laid off the liquor; it’s berry juice in my glass. Her screeches pound and echo through the dark rumble in my head as her body changes. Her ears spring tufts, eyes narrow, face turns tawny, speckled with black. She grows barrel-like, loses her neck, sprouts feathers. Her feet are feathered to the vicious talons.

Her eyes are hooded when she measures me. Her screech clearly says, “Hedgehog”. I pat my soft underbelly and my hand hefts the heavy Grand Canyon paperweight. Hedgehogs don’t understand the movements and velocity of rocks but I know exactly what to do.


CP

Andrew Stancek's work has appeared in Tin House online, fwriction, Necessary Fiction, Prime Number Magazine, Blue Five Notebook, and many other publications. He’s been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

January 11, 2012

Andrew Stancek

 
All I Needed Now

The apartment Mami, Oci, and I moved into was on the third floor of a decrepit building in the center of Bratislava. The streets were narrow and winding, most of the streetlights broken by gangs. Tattered Soviet and Czechoslovak flags fluttered from flagpoles; the ever-present banners proclaiming “With the Soviet Union Forever” were covered with graffiti. Scraps of ripped newspapers were blown around, along with greasy cardboard cones, and pieces of chestnut shells. The dark passageways reeked of urine. Wet sand and cement dust crunched underfoot. Grim soldiers marched in formation throughout the squares. People spoke in whispers of robberies, rapes and beatings of pedestrians. Policemen were seen in the daylight, directing traffic, but never at night. After dark no one ventured out. I was frightened, not only at night, but in the daytime as well, unless I was walking with protective adults. Yet I was also happier than I had ever been. I had a Mami and an Oci. I had made friends among the hundreds of kids crammed into the other apartments, in buildings just like ours. All I needed now was a dog.

CP

Andrew Stancek was born in Bratislava and now dreams in southwestern Ontario. His work has appeared in Bartleby Snopes, Pure Slush, Negative Suck, Left Hand Waving, THIS Literary Review, among others.