Tempered Magazine December 2013 // January 2014 // Issue 01 | Page 7
HEIRLOOM
By Sara Graybeal
My daddy was a hunter. He kept
branches and hurled pecans at
a rifle on the top shelf of his closet
each other across the yard. “You
and on the day after Thanksgiving
got me! You got me!” we cried
every year he took it down and
when hit, clutching our bellies and
wiped the dust away with a rag.
imagining our intestines spilling
Maurice and Sandrey and Kayle
through our fingers.
and I sat on the floor in front of him,
cross-legged, always the same
question: “Can we go with you this
year, Daddy?”
Daddy came home somber, as if
he’d spent the afternoon in church.
Parading around the truck, we
shouted, “Didja kill ‘em, Daddy?
We watched him from the front
Were they real bloody? Didja bring
porch as he slid the gun and the
any home?”
box of bullets into the passenger
seat and climbed into the truck.
We watched him grind down the
driveway, pull onto the pavement,
and speed up. Then we played
Pirates and Cowboys and Alien
Invasion, whittled guns out of tree
Some days he said, “I gave the
meat to Ms. Lucy, boys, for letting
me hunt in her woods.” Other days:
“Tell you the truth, I didn’t hit a darn
thing.” In all those years, we never
tried a bite of our daddy’s kill.
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