Naleighna Kai's Literary Cafe Magazine Cavalcade Issue of NKLCM | Page 45

J. D. Mason Dirty Diana Story Note This story came on the heels of some major life changes and on the eve (give or take a week or two) of a dream trip to Europe. It was important for me to reel in the chaos and focus, so I made it a point to progress through this story like an MMA fighter in training. Diana Rigby was shaken out of a deep sleep with words she never thought she’d ever hear again. “I’m callin’ ‘bout yo’ momma,” Aunt Lorraine said in that slow Southern drawl, laced with a kind of artificial sweetness that compelled an eye roll from Diana. “What about her?” Through the years as she climbed the ranks to become a Mixed Martial Arts Champion, she’d almost forgotten that she’d had a mother. That was her goal after she left Rhino, Texas not long after graduating high school. She left that same day, as a matter of fact, not bothering to tell anyone; determined to put as much space between her and the hell she’d grown up in as soon as possible. “She ain’t doin’ too good, Diana,” Lorraine offered, then she waited, no doubt hoping that Diana would ask the most logical question. What’s wrong? Silence hung heavy between the two for several beats before Lorraine continued. “Doctors say she ain’t got much time left. Cancer got her. She stayin’ here with me, until … well.” “That’s too bad,” was the best Diana could muster. Lorraine seemed disappointed in Diana’s lack of emotion or any expression of sincerity in her regret. Diana offered words. That’s all. She had nothing else to give her mother except empty and hollow words that meant absolutely nothing. “She asks ‘bout you. Asks Tray to look you up on the Internet to see how you doin’.” Again, Diana had no response. She left the edge of the deck and settled onto a cream colored chaise. “I’m sure she’d like to see you, Diana. It’s been so long.” Returning to Rhino had never been on her radar. She never expected to see her mother again. But apparently, the umbilical cord between a mother and child is never fully severed, and it tugged on Diana until a few days later when she drove into town in a rented car on the same road she’d ridden on in that Greyhound bus when she left. Welcome to Rhino, Texas, the sign on the side of the road read. Population 24,353.