“Tin Boy” by Sumita Mukherji (fiction ’15)

An excerpt from “Tin Boy” by Sumita Mukherji (fiction ’15), published by Failbetter.

Tin Boy

My mother called herself a modern-day witch. With all of her poultices and potions, I thought of her more as a mad scientist. But I should have thought of her as a magician, because one day she disappeared.

That day started like many others. It was one of those California valley summers that extends into the fall, the kind that leaves you thirsting for your mother’s limeade all day and dreaming of ice castles all night. On our walk home from sixth grade, the sun, having scorched the ridge where my nose had once broken, burned the back of my stringy neck and parched my friend Jenny’s delicate throat. At the end of my cul-de-sac we paused and tapped at our injured skin, making mock sad faces at each other.

My sweaty San Francisco 49ers t-shirt fell to the middle of my thighs, over my loose gray shorts. At age eleven I was double-jointed, and as Jenny and I climbed the porch steps, I bent my arms forward and backward, aiming to impress my mother, who used to adore my awkwardness and loved watching me journey home from her bedroom window. “My sweet, tottering son,” she would say as a greeting at the front door. She adored it until a few months ago, when my father was legally allowed to stop sending alimony payments, and she quit her job at a marketing firm so that she could devote her days to herbalism and witchcraft.

[…continue reading “Tin Boy” at Failbetter.]