Two Fictions
By Jesse Ball
from THOUGH I AM HATED BY ALL BIRDS
The Proper Technique
Approach the
child quietly from behind. Snatch it up, obtaining a solid grip
with both the right and left
hands. Have the basin ready, and set about waist level. Strip
the
child of its clothing (if possible, see that the child is brought
unclothed). Ignore any struggles, whines or shouts that may escape
its
mouth. Lift the child above the basin and make a short
speech. Then,
proceed with the dipping. Be sure to wear nothing that cannot get
wet. For many a bold child will at this juncture splash and fume to
such a degree that all the basin's water makes its way into the
air. Should the child prove tractable, then dip it wholesale into
the
water. Make a slow count of three. Then, produce the child,
raising
it up principally by the grip of a single hand upon its left
ankle. This is the traditional way. Others involve a gripping of
the chin or
wrist. These last are less effective, though time-honored as well. As
the crowd surges up to praise the little thing, give it into the arms
of its mother, stopping only to dry the child with a soft cloth which
should be kept at hand.
Mother and Child, headless child, handless mother.
In
the shop, the replacements were not to be found, though they looked and
looked. Up and down the broad aisles, the servants went, examining
every niche, every nook and cranny, trying desperately to find the
section where spare hands and heads would be kept. For the butcher had
been no help. The baker had provided only fortification for the
coming
search. And the tailor had directed them here, to the Miscellany
Shop
run by defrocked priests. A spare head for a child! Who would
imagine
ever being sent to fetch such a thing. And by a woman with only
half a
head herself. The very idea! If only the child were not so
unfortunate and sad, missing its left arm and half of its
right. Better that it had no head so that it might not look upon
the sorry
state of its lower regions. Then with a glad leaping shout, the
youngest servant scurried up a series of shelves. Balanced upon
the
top shelf was a toy-soldier, the very proudest sort. Surely such
a
fine head as that would serve. And its arms as well. The
servants
jostled each other, running in haste up to the proprietor, pressing
coin into his hand, and shoving their way through the crowded
storefront to the wagon and home. How pleased she would be! thought
the head-servant. What praise will come from these very lips when
the
child awakens, said the youngest one, holding in his filthy hands the
brightly painted face. It was a good outing, thought they all in
unison, and we are a fine lot of fellows. Surely the mistress must
count us among her several blessings, if she should ever have a hand on
which to count at all.

Jesse Ball is the author of The Way Through Doors (Vintage 2009) Samedi
the Deafness (Vintage 2007), Vera and Linus (Nyhil 2006), Og svo kom
nottin (Nyhil 2006), and March Book (Grove 2004). His work has
appeared in domestic and international journals and also in 2006's Best
American Poetry. He teaches methodical courses on lying and dreaming
at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.