,

Goose

Goose

They called her Goose because her hair looked like feathers and her skin was soft as down. Pretty as a picture but with this honking laugh that should have belonged to a steel worker or maybe a lumberjack. Some bearded man. She made it like a song.

She had long fingers and I would watch them with a damp cloth wiping down counter tops, nails nipped to the bud. To be that linoleum. To be those jagged nails. She was absent-minded but nobody seemed to mind, it was an excuse to talk to her, to remind her about the coffee you ordered or that you wanted your slab of meat well-done. Rare. She’d laugh and you’d laugh and for a moment it was as though the whole world shrunk down to fit inside the peeling walls of that restaurant.

It’s funny how you make stories up for people. How you edit out the parts that don’t fit. She had a ring on her finger but we didn’t like that so we ignored it. We ignored it so when it disappeared leaving a funny little white line behind we had to ignore that too. She was our sunshine. She was our hour or two of escape. It wasn’t because she was particularly funny or surprisingly kind and if she had brilliant thoughts or opinions she never shared them with us. But, there was something in how she listened, head cocked slightly to the side or chin propped in her hand. Her “mmm hmms” or the way her eyes widened when you got to the good parts. You forgot the roles that were assigned to you, customer or waitress, and you remembered the way it was once–crouched down next to someone, hands cupped around an ear, whispering secrets.

It’s easy to remember what we took from her, what we kept coming back for. The bell on the door and her head popping up to find your eyes, being recognized. I whittled her down into the character I needed her to be and she played the part the way, I suppose, most bartenders or waitresses do.

Still, when she left. Well, she left. They hired someone new. Dora. She was nice enough, she called you Hun and Sweetheart and always remembered your order. She smelled like stale smoke and wore orthopedic shoes for her plantars faciitis, she said, from all those heels she wore when she was my age. She’d laugh and I’d ask for the bill.

I don’t know about anyone else, I never see them anymore, but I stopped going. It broke my heart to see someone else in her apron, someone else chewing on the end of her pen. It wasn’t Dora’s fault but she was just too happy or too plain and no one ever went there for the food.

I walked by it the other day for the first time in years. It had been renovated and had a new sign on the door. Reality offices or some such thing. I’d have to look it up.

I still remember her leaning on the counter staring into space. A far away look in her eyes. I’d say, “Goose.” Sort of softly and only if I needed to be somewhere. She’d smile right away and jump back into character. Never startled or surprised. I think that’s what I liked best. How I knew she was dreaming but I never managed to wake her up. How we all liked to try.

24 responses to “Goose”

  1. […] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Lindsay Fashion, Lindsay RB. Lindsay RB said: New blog post: Goose — https://birdykins.wordpress.com/2010/11/19/goose/ […]

  2. Kristan Avatar

    Gorgeous story. You should submit it somewhere!

    1. Lindsay Avatar

      Thanks Kristan, but I wouldn’t know where to start even thinking about submitting my stuff. I think I have a long way to go for that sort of thing.

  3. Michael Avatar

    Oh my God. SO well crafted. So well written. Outstanding.

  4. Ashley Avatar
    Ashley

    So true Linds. I make up stories about people all the time just for my enjoyment.

    I loved this.

  5. F.P. Avatar

    Sometimes lines line up like soldiers waiting to shoot with my mind up against a wall counting regrets in the short gasps of life left within in me. That we are the editors and the writers and the agents and the audience of our theater, our matinée, our screen we throw overpriced popcorn and Mike and Ike’s from tiny bags in big boxes at from the back. And we are all waiting to live or living to wait in the dreams we design and keep to ourselves that we chop and splice and package and market as history, a happening; living.

    “I whittled her down into the character I needed her to be and she played the part… …only if I needed to be somewhere.”

    Sometimes the air leaves my lungs and my mouth and my nostrils and I just stand there and watch it; read between the protons and electrons and nothingness and feel, I don’t know, feel alive. Feel life. Feel real.

    That’s how I feel now.

    Thanks.

    1. Lindsay Avatar

      I don’t even know how to reply to this, it may be the most beautifully written comment I’ve ever received. Powerful, you are.

      1. F.P. Avatar

        Sometimes I read things and I don’t finish them. They inspire me so I stop reading and toss the open pages to the floor with empty beer bottles, dirty scotch glasses, laundry, and maybe I’ll trip over them in days or weeks but more often than not they rest there, creasing the spine. I guess what I’m saying is that I devoured your Goose and then went for seconds; that you hold the power, my attention, and coxed out of me that small smattering of reaction I fumbled into existence.

        I have a feeling you deserve better.

  6. Mr London Street Avatar

    I expect you have no interest in feedback from me but this is very much the sort of thing I always wanted to see you write more of.

    1. Lindsay Avatar

      MLS, honestly I meant it when I said I welcome your feedback. I’ve been thinking about it and who knows, you might be right. Adding music here could very well just be distracting and an excuse for me to continue putting off actually writing about the music on a separate site. I didn’t respond negatively to your feedback last time at all. In any case, I appreciate your comment and when I was writing this, I did think for a moment of you.

  7. Eric Avatar

    I thought you were done writing?

    1. Lindsay Avatar

      Are any of us ever done when we say we are?

      1. Eric Avatar

        No, we’re not.

  8. Hannah Miet Avatar

    This is the kind of thing I’ve wanted to read from you for a long time.

    It blew me the fuck away.

  9. Christopher Avatar

    that was incredible, i particularly liked the reality offices part, so subtle and clever

  10. Kaci Johanna Avatar

    Beautiful words, Lindsay.

  11. Mr London Street Avatar

    That is a compliment indeed, thanks Lindsay. I would love to read more longer form narrative pieces from you but of course you can only write what you want to.

  12. Alexia Avatar

    Just beautiful, Lindsay. I love, love, loved it.

  13. hannahjustbreathe Avatar

    With every post, I am convinced you can’t do better. I am convinced that I just read your best work yet.

    And then you write again. And, again, I am astonished, breath held, hands squeezed tight, awash and aglow with your words.

  14. jtwhitaker Avatar

    enchanting.

    powerful because i didn’t just read it, i saw her head cocked, daydreaming. i became a patron.

    xo

  15. dogimo Avatar

    God, I miss that place.

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I’m Lindsay

Mixed-Cree writer, cozy gamer, and book hoarder. Host of Book Me! Podcast. My debut children’s book Snow Day is coming out October 28, 2024 with Nimbus Publishing.

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