Claudia

November 14, 2016

By Jo-Anne Cappeluti

She was only 15 and already had lost a leg to bone cancer.

Our high school girls’ Sunday school class had pondered this for a few weeks before we met her one Sunday morning walking in on crutches.

It’s always strange to see someone in the flesh after you’ve talked about them—in our case someone we supposed to be lame or wounded. Her smiling blue eyes didn’t fit that description, although inviting us to a slumber party drew attention to a new possibility of slumbering. We all showed up the next Friday night. She obliged our curiosity by detaching her artificial leg and passing it around so we could feel how light it was. She also told us about something called ghost pains in her missing leg.

Claudia and I were the only ones still awake at midnight and decided to go outside and sit on the roof of their carport, which doubled as a patio right off the kitchen. It was January, and I was so taken with the number and brightness of the stars I forgot she was there and was startled by her voice, telling me she knew she was soon going to die.

At 60-something now, I still remember her voice coming out of the cold and how, aiming my flashlight toward the sound, I framed her blue eyes, smiling, painless, as if from a great distance.


Jo-Anee Cappeluti’s poems have been published in Cultural Weekly, Marathon Literary Review, Commonweal, and Alaska Quarterly Review. She also has a creative nonfiction piece in St. Katherine’s Review. 

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More Beautiful Things

Soar

Soar

By Sonya Fitzmaurice
The kaleidoscope filtered through a canopy of trees lining the street outside its tall metal fence—a fortress of suspended time blessed by the hourly church bells around the corner...

Laughter Dies Last

Laughter Dies Last

By Rebecca Dimyan
My mother-in-law looks at me with a smile that knows nothing of shame. She mumbles something about being late to the dance, and I tell her not to worry, she’ll be right on time...

Heap
Heap

Heap

By Patti Jo Amerein
It wasn’t uncommon for me to return home from school to find Mom in a heap on the dirty shag carpet of our living room floor...

Naleśniki

Naleśniki

By Jehanne Dubrow
Of course, you can make them yourself, these thin pancakes called naleśniki. But to really arrive in Poland, it’s best if a small woman named Pani Basia is standing at the stove...

Sugar in the Evening

Sugar in the Evening

By Jennifer Anderson
After I finished washing dishes at the nursing home, I returned the goblets to the china hutch and sometimes found her in the dining room alone, “walking” from table to table in her wheelchair like Fred Flintstone and the bottomless car he powered with his feet.

Open
Open

Open

By Colleen Addison
She kindles the fire in her woodstove, and I try not to see meaning in this; the stove’s kindling, I think, cannot match a heart’s and not mine, in any case...

Submit

Micro nonfiction submissions to River Teeth‘s weekly online magazine, Beautiful Things, must be 250 words or fewer. Please submit one beautiful thing at a time, via Submittable; there is a $3 submission fee, but watch for free submission periods.