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The Fourth River

A Journal of Nature and Place-based Writing Published by the Chatham University MFA Program
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Tributaries: "Postgrad"

October 16, 2019

By Monic Ductan

My apartment complex, Hillside Manor, a generous name for the little row of six apartments in a blonde brick building, sat near the town square. Though Hillside was far from the classiest neighborhood, the rent was cheap, which was a gift to someone like me, a twenty-two-year-old with student loan debt. Plus, I lived less than a mile from work, and I figured that when my old Toyota finally died I’d ride a bike or walk to work.

The apartment building was flanked on two sides by a crumbling, wooden, privacy fence. A vacant apartment sat to my right, but a family, the McClures, lived on my left. The McClures were friendly and waved whenever I saw them, though they sometimes annoyed me, as they had a habit of being boisterous. Some nights I’d hear them banging against our shared wall or yelling at each other. The McClure man, who smoked out on their porch, had a penchant for going shirtless, his saggy white skin drooping around his waist. Once I saw him at the gas station in town, both shirtless and shoeless. When the cashier told him not to come back unless fully clothed, McClure grumbled, “Shit, man, I ain’t never wore a damn shirt in the summertime.”

In the country, the insects are noisy at night. They make a mechanical sound. I loved to hear that sound as I sat out on the porch at night and read a book or flipped through a magazine. But I’d quickly quit the habit, as I grew tired of McClure’s cigarette smoke drifting over the railing and into my nostrils. Worse still, one night I went out there and looked next door to see the McClure woman in her husband’s lap on their porch, her t-shirt riding up so high I could see the crack of her ass and the tattoo above it.

My apartment had a back porch, too, but the view was desolate—a tiny square block of pavement that housed the two dumpsters. Scraggly stray cats usually roamed back there, and I once thought I saw a possum slinking away toward Patty’s Café.

On the evening of a supermoon, I drove home feeling tired and stuck in a going nowhere job. Country twanging my radio. My eyes misty with tears. I saw one of the McClure kids, a barefooted girl whose knees were scabbed and dirty, playing in the grass in front of the apartments. A neighbor had dumped a sofa in the grassy acre we all shared as a front yard. The McClure girl climbed onto the broken armrest of the sofa, which leaked foam stuffing onto the grass.

When I got out of the car, I turned. The yellow moon hung behind the McClure girl like a painting. Her hair shot out in front of it, pointing in all directions. Sun rays.

 


Monic Ductan's work has appeared in Shenandoah, Water~Stone Review, Big Muddy, So to Speak, Tahoma Literary Review, and elsewhere. She's an assistant professor at Tennessee Technological University, where she teaches fiction writing and literature.

Tags Tributaries, Ductan, Postgrad
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