Specimen Days

Specimen Days by Michael Cunningham Page A

Book: Specimen Days by Michael Cunningham Read Free Book Online
Authors: Michael Cunningham
Tags: prose_contemporary
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away, and not only his resolve. His self was diminishing. He was becoming what he did. He began to think, as an hour passed, that he had dreamed of Catherine and her plight, had dreamed of everything that was not this, and was awake again, in the only world. To rouse himself, he thought of her putting stitches into blouses and shirts. He thought of the pressing machine, its rollers raised and waiting, exhaling draughts of steam.
    He was ready. If he didn't do it now, he might not do it at all. He glanced around. The others were at their labor. He took a plate, dropped it on the belt. He placed it perfectly against the line. He was expert at that; he was proud of it. He put his left hand the left would be better along the plate's upper edge. He aligned his fingers against the edge and in so doing was calmed. This was his work. He reached over with his right hand and pulled the lever.
    The belt started. He felt the movement of the rollers that turned the belt, their sure and steady rhythm. This was how the iron felt, going in. His left hand rode along with the plate. He felt graceful, like a dancer.
    He passed through a moment of beauty. He was partner to the iron and the machine.
    His hand was conveyed along. His body was gently stretched, and stretched further. His toe slipped away from the lever. He scrambled to find it again and lost his grace. He was a foolish thing, struggling. His foot touched the lever, though he couldn't be sure it was the right one. He glanced back. He couldn't be sure. When he turned again, his fingers were going under the wheel.
    He watched it happen. He saw that his hand was positioned between two teeth. His fingers slipped into the space between them. The teeth bit into the iron. His fingers went under. His knuckles went under. The drum of the wheel touched his fingertips. It was warm, warmer than he'd expected it to be. It was as warm as his mother's mouth had been when he reached in to retrieve the bit of potato. He felt it crushing his fingertips. There was no pain. There was a high pale nothingness. With its warm implacable patience the wheel crushed his knuckles. There was no pain and no blood. There was no sound but that of the machine.
    Then he returned to himself. Then he saw what he did. He saw the larger body of his hand going under. He tried to pull the lever with his toe. He lost his purchase. He cried out. He didn't recognize the noise he made. He fumbled with his boot, and found the lever again. For a moment it didn't yield. And then it did. With its little clicking sigh, the wheel stopped turning.
    Lucas could not remove his hand. There was still no blood. There was still no pain, but there was something. A tingling. A newness. He remained where he was, looking at his arm and his vanished hand with numb fascination.
    He heard the sound of the others. Someone it would be Tom pulled the second lever, which reversed the wheel. Someone else, it was Dan, put his own hand over Lucas's wrist as the machine began slowly to release it. Lucas saw Dan's big hand, with its two missing fingers, receive his own.
    His hand had been flattened. He thought for a moment that it was unharmed, that it was only larger. But no. Blood welled up around his fingernails. He held up his big, bleeding hand. He wanted to show it to himself and Dan. Briefly, his fingernails were outlined in red. The blood increased. It ran in streams down his fingers.
    He fell. He hadn't meant to fall. One moment he was standing looking at his hand, and then he was on the floor, with the black ceiling over him. There were the pulleys and hooks. The floor smelled sharply of oil and tar.
    Dan's face arrived. Tom's face arrived. Tom put his arm under Lucas's head. Who'd have imagined him capable of such tenderness?
    Dan's face said, "Stay here with him." Dan's face departed.
    Tom's face said, "My God." Tom's mouth was broad, its lips rough. Its teeth were the color of old ivory.
    Lucas said to Tom's mouth, "Please, sir. Send for

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