The Deva’s Palm - Flash Non-Fiction by Kevin Brown
An angel,
Grandmother would say, saved her life during a four-story suicide jump the year
China went Red. Me on her lap, she told
how she toed the ledge, stared out at the network of alleyways smothered in
smoke and screams and men tearing through men and manmade. How she leaned forward and the landscape fell
up, toward and past her. How Kuan Shih
Yin, the Goddess of Mercy, appeared and placed a palm beneath her. Whispered, “The Earth shall keep
spinning. Spin with it,” and eased her
to the ground. “I broke a leg and both
arms,” she said, raising two gnarled fingers, “but it was magical.”
I’d cry when she
told me about Grandfather, whom she hadn’t seen since the day he was taken
away. He’d been a politician in the
Nationalist Government, and so imprisoned for life. “They took my possessions,” she said, “then
my husband. Forced me to bow and confess
against him to avoid his immediate execution.”
She’d stare ahead. “Last time I
heard his voice, he was screaming mine and your mother’s names as they drug him
away.” She’d blink several times and I
could see the image dissipating, melting into the now. “We were helpless in a country that needed
help,” she said. “Unable to save those
who needed saving.”
Years later, we
returned to the location of her old house, but it was gone, replaced by an
office building. Grandmother only smiled
and said, “Prettier than it used to be.”
She died shortly
after. As she was lowered into the
ground, I asked Mother if she believed a Deva really saved her.
“I don’t not believe it,” Mother said.
I was married later
that year, and each time I looked at my husband, I’d think of Grandmother’s
story. How hard it must’ve been to have
everything one second and be bowing as it is dragged away the next. How easy it’d be to jump. How hard to climb down.
So I mentally
recorded my husband’s voice, his smells.
Behind my eyes, I imprinted his shape and face. Then, on June 4th, 1989, he was
killed in Tiananmen Square, when a tank rolled between us and has never moved
since.
A week later, I stood on my own four-story
ledge with a bottle of prescription
pills. Toed the edge and looked out at my mental vision of the
world, a network of
alleyways that all led to the same dead end. At everyone helpless in
a country that
needed help. I missed my husband. Wanted to see Grandmother
arm-in-arm with
Grandfather, the memories of forced bows and screams erased forever.
So I jumped by
swallowing every pill. Felt the landscape fall up, toward and past
me, until my angel, my
Goddess of Mercy, my grandmother appeared, and placed a withered
palm beneath me.
Whispered: “The world shall keep spinning. Spin with it,” and eased
me to the ground,
where I vomited and it was magical.
Kevin Brown has published two short story collections, Death Roll and Ink On Wood, and has had Fiction, Non-fiction and Poetry published in over 200 Literary Journals, Magazines and Anthologies. He won numerous writing competitions, fellowships, and grants, and was nominated for multiple prizes and awards, including three Pushcart Prizes.
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