
Razor blades. He leaves them lying around everywhere all the time. I cannot stand to see them and I cannot make myself touch them to put them somewhere out of my sight. Right up there on the kitchen counter tonight. Silver, single-edged but no less ugly and chilling than the double edged blue-black one my mother used.
Washing dishes, trying to look at the beautiful tidal creek outside, I can’t stop seeing it. Something white crusted on it. Did he put it there so I would wash it? I’m not really looking at it but can’t stop knowing it’s there and the pictures start up in my head every time, even though I’m looking out the window at birds, trees, setting sun reflected in dark green water and then it starts to look like a bathtub, not a creek. The water inside, that blue water picture inside my head with brown clouds in it and the water outside with streaks of sunset stretched across it get mixed up.
I know it’s not real, the bathtub with striped blue-brown water and my mother laughing and crying all at once but I feel heavy, like too much gravity has been switched on in my house, even though I know it’s a beautiful creek not a bathtub and on the counter in front of me it’s just a razor blade my husband uses for work. He never even cuts his finger with it. No one cuts themselves with this razor blade so close to me.
It looks big, much bigger than I rationally know it is. I am angry that my husband would leave such a mean, dangerous object lying right in front of me. It’s been there all day and I have not looked directly at it until now. The razor blade seems almost like a living thing to me, as if it knows I am afraid of it, afraid to move it, as if to look at it is to look into it. Like it knows what it really is and is just waiting for me to recognize it. When I look at it more, I can smell the water. Not salty oily mud water from the creek. The bathwater with so much of my mother’s blood in it.
I pick up another dish, deliberately inhaling almond scented soap; focus on clean clear water streaming from the tap. It’s only a razor blade my husband used to scrape putty onto the wall to repair a spot where it leaked in the last storm. No reason for my heart to hurt, no sirens, no blood anywhere. Not like the movie that runs through me each time I see one of those ugly things.
The first thing I noticed when I got home early from school was sounds coming from the bathroom. Sounds like laughing and crying struck together that made me run and then stop still before I opened the door. Long, skinny, threads of sound I had never heard anyone make before. I knew I didn’t want to open the door. But I did.
Before I saw, I smelled the water. The animal in me smelled it, knew it was bad before I saw. There was so much blood in the water in the bathtub where my mother sat, wearing her prettiest summer nightgown even though it was December. I remember thinking that was the oddest thing, not that she was covered in blood, which I didn’t even register was blood. I just knew it was wrong; the picture was wrong and bad. But mostly it was the confused alarm sound, the smell and why would she be in the bathtub with her summer nightgown on that made me so dizzy I stumbled through the doorway.
“Oh, pumpkin”, she said, “don’t come in here. I’m a mess.” A pale, dreamy voice. Then, I understood the blood and the meaning of everything imploded. Dark, light, here, there, up, down, me, you, it all collapsed inside. The thing was lying beside the bathtub, blue-black in a puddle of pink. Shiny sharp rectangle. So small, the thing that did this to my mother.
Artists buy them to cut canvas for their paintings. Editing rooms used to be littered with them. Razor blades are handy for opening shrink wrap packaging on CDs. Housepainters rely on them for scraping splatters off window panes. In the bathtub, most women only use them for shaving their legs. Helpful objects. Razor blades are small, useful tools.
The sun is just memory now. Roosting birds are stilled in their evening nests. Over black cellophane water, a new moon rises like a sharp silver smile. All the dishes are done. I’ll ask my husband to put away that little thing on the counter, make sure the doors are locked and put out the porch light. Everyone’s in; my family is safe for the night. Outside, dark water pulled by a new moon, flows out to sea.