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29

Put fat on the opening. Rub the fat with your hand. Rub the fat hard with your hand, with the palm of your hand. Slip inside. Slip the boot hook inside. Pull from inside the opening. That is how things are born, even in a grand house. With fat and an opening. With a hand or a hook. The children listen. They have knocked over the chairs. They have knocked over the rocking horse. Tamworth leans on the neck of the horse on the carpet. The wooden runners of the horse press into her thighs. She is very fat. She is fat and round. Her breasts are fat and round. They strain the seams of her gray dress. No one has taught them about the fat and the hook. In a grand house, the Mistress births hard. She dies. She dies with blood in the bed. The pigs do not die. The cows do not die. The Mistress dies. In a grand house, she dies. I rubbed the fat with my hand. I dug through the dried deposits with my hand. I dug fast. I pushed with my hand. I pushed in the hook. I hooked. I pulled hard. The hot air filled my mouth. I gagged. I pulled. The sweat ran down my arms and ran down the handle of the hook. The opening spilled. It opened farther and spilled. Brown dung spilled in the fluid. My feet slid. I braced against heaving. I was pressed against the wall. My wrist cracked. I screamed. I could not pull with the hand. I took the other hand and I pulled. My shoulder made a sound. My shoulder cracked. I pulled harder. I slid and the weight of my body pulled down. It pulled down. It pulled down. I lay down flat on the dung. I lay down flat on the fluid. My neck itched with straw. My arms burned. My shoulder burned. The opening spilled and I brought it toward me. It moved toward me. I felt the blows, the hard blows, in my stomach and thighs and it moved against me, wet and hard. The deposits and dung went thick in my mouth so I was very quiet. I did not scream. My mouth leaked. It bubbled. I did not scream. Tamworth listens to the lesson. Her mouth is open. Her mouth is dry. It does not leak. She licks her teeth to moisten the deposits. She wiggles. She is ready for a lesson. There is no hook in the nursery. The hooks are in the kitchen. Meat hangs on the hooks. I will take the meat from the hooks. I will carry the meat to the moat. I will put the green meat on the moat. The meat will not sink. The moat is thick. There is a thick skin on the moat. It ripples. Beneath the meat, curds. Beneath the meat, scraps. Black flies cover the meat. White flies cover the meat. They take the shape of the meat. Little wings on the meat. Sacks bump the meat from the below. Spot fills the sacks. I have seen him fill sacks. He drops sacks in the moat. Things move in the sacks. No, I will not go to the moat. I will not put meat in the moat. Meat should hang. In the kitchen, it dangles. It grows scabs. It grows wings. I will cut the meat from the hooks. I will tie the meat to the beam. It will dangle. I will take the old fat from the can. I will take the old fat. I will take honey. I will take hooks. I will bring the hooks to the nursery. The children have only learned one lesson. Who taught them the lesson? She did not teach them. She taught them globes. She taught them geology. They wrote names in the book. They wrote figures in the book. They counted dogs. Many dogs fit in a sack. Many small dogs. There are many steps to the kitchen. There are many steps to the tower. From the tower, the dogs look small. The Master looks small. They watch the small Master. He carries a sack. No, he carries a dress, a shape in a dress. His head is an apple. It is the size of an apple. Tamworth puts her face on the glass. She flattens her face. She pushes. Spot pushes. He puts his hands on the glass. Tamworth flattens her face on the glass. Spot pushes. Fine white hairs cluster on his cheeks, Tamworth's white hairs, long white hairs. They come loose from her head. They stick to Spot's cheeks. He pushes. Her reddish eyelids twitch on the glass. He pushes. He counts hairs. Tamworth bangs on the glass. Her wet mouth makes an O on the glass. It makes a square on the glass. He pushes hard. She says, Master. She says, Master. He is too small to be seen.

30

The nursery door is open. It is a wooden door, a small wooden door; a child could push open the door. Where are the children? It is a dark time of day. Not night. No, it is a dark time of year. It is a dark season. The walls are very gray. The carpet is wet. The chairs are empty. Where are the children? The nursery is small. The nursery is meant for children, small children. There must be children somewhere in the nursery. Children laugh and play in the nursery. They play tricks. They tip the rocking horse. They tip the two chairs. They whistle to the dogs that go up and down the staircase. They kiss the dogs. They hit the dogs. They climb into the desks. They climb into the crib. They make holes in the carpet. They crawl into the holes. They wiggle. They laugh. They are rosy and dear. Little dears, that is what she called them. She counted to three. She put her hands on her eyes. She stood by the crib. She covered her eyes with a rag. She counted to ten. Charles has 10 apples. He gives his sister 7. How many has he left? He spends 6 cents for apples. 9 cents for cakes. A cake is worth 3 apples. How hungry is Charles? Twice he drinks 2 quarts of milk. 2 children start from the same place. They travel in the same direction. How many halves in 3 apples? On the wagon: 1 sack of apples. On the wagon: 1 sack of sugar. 1 pail of milk. 2 barrels of pork. Charles wishes to divide his books into piles. 3 piles. 10 books. How many books in each pile? How many dogs in each sack? A drover gave 7 sheep to the farmer. He got a cow and a calf. A book for 10 cents and a top for 7. Charles ate 5 apples as often as his sister ate cakes. Ann ate cakes. How many cakes? The man had 5 sacks. He had twice as many daughters as sacks. Not sacks. The remainder between apples and cakes. What is the remainder? The unit is cakes. How many cakes? His daughters are how many cakes? Where are the sacks? A tree has 10 branches. 2 apples hang from a branch. 1 apple kicks. 1 apple has spots. It swings. It dangles. She counted to ten. She counted ten apples. Ten little pigs eat ten little apples. The pigs are still hungry. Ten brown soft apples. Ten white hard pigs. Pigs are not little. They are hungry. They dig ten little holes. She felt with her hands on the carpet. Hairs stuck to her hands. Crumbs stuck to her hands. She felt the edge of the tray. She felt the belly of a dog, the thick hair, the stiff, cold belly of a dog. She felt the stiff leg of a dog. The little dears — where could they be? They'd left behind their crumbs. They'd left behind their dogs. The nursery door banged on its hinges. The windows were open. There was a draft in the nursery. It was a dark time of day. Through the rag, it was night. It was wet. She banged her hip on the crib. She banged her shin on the table. She felt the rails of the crib with her hands. Little dears. She felt the frame of the door. She felt the cold in the hall. She felt the first step with her toe. She felt the second step with her toe. She felt the second step with her heel. She felt the third with her heel. She felt the fifth with her knee. She felt the sixth with her wrist. She felt the seventh with her chin, the eighth with her chin, the ninth with her chin, the tenth with her wrist, her ankle, her hip, her neck, her nose, her palm, her shin, her spine, her rib, her chin, her chin, her chin, her chin.

31

The farmer had two daughters, each daughter like the other. They rode on dainty ponies, each pony like the other. Sometimes they walked. Arm in arm, they walked from the farmhouse to the fields. They sat on a low stone wall. They clapped hands. They walked into the forest. They found the hovel of the half-wit. He worked for the farmer. He dunged the fields for the farmer. He dunged the fruit trees for the farmer. He drove a cart of dung. The daughters did not see the cart and so they approached the hovel. The trees had dropped their acorns. The daughters approached the hovel over acorns. They felt the pressures of the acorns through the soles of their shoes. The hovel had a door, a plank for a door. It hung open on a broken hinge. The daughters went through the door. They felt smooth dirt — cold smooth dirt — through the soles of their shoes. They had expected the hovel to smell like dung, but the smell in the hovel was a different smell. The daughters breathed hard through their mouths. They looked straight ahead. They turned their faces to the side and vomited, each in her own corner of the room. Straight ahead of the daughters lay the half-wit. The daughters looked straight ahead. They had never seen a naked man and now they saw the half-wit. The half-wit's legs were thin and bent, but his chest was very wide and the stomach pushed up very high. He had white hairs growing on the tops of his shoulders and around his nipples. Something had bitten at the face of the half-wit, at the soft nose and lips of the half-wit, and at the groin of the half-wit. The daughters could see white through the torn cheek of the half-wit, the white of the half-wit's teeth. The dainty ponies of the daughters had things that came down from their bellies when they made their thick streams. Across the white thin leg of the half-wit, the half-wit's thing looked black. The biting had made his thing black with blood and swollen so that it cracked on the sides and the knob. Yellow-clear fluid leaked from the sides and the knob and wetted the half-wit's leg. Arm in arm, the daughters walked to the half-wit. They could not walk around the half-wit. The hovel was too small. The head of the half-wit touched the back wall of the hovel. One of the daughters touched the half-wit's thing with the toe of her shoe. She felt nothing through the toe of her shoe. The knob on the thing was as large as an apple. Touching the knob on the thing with the toe of her shoe, the daughter's face did not look different from the face of the daughter who did not touch, who stood with her shoes on the dirt.