Blue
Beard's One-Hundreth Wife by Denise Duhamel This was before battered women's shelters, before serial killers were called serial killers, before divorce, even before handguns. Blue Beard's one-hundredth wife found his dead ninety-nine others stored in a forbidden room. Some said he tired of a woman once her mystery faded. Others thought he was too quick to temper. He went on long business trips before there were business trips, trying perhaps to curb his domestic violence. His beard was blue before punk rock was fashionable, which manipulated some women into feeling bad for him. They stroked his speckled mustachehis navy bristles and soft gray hairs which grew in aqua. He curled into their breasts, playing sensitive, his big rough hands stroking the backs of their necks. In a week or two a wedding, in another month she'd drop a dish or smell up the outhouse and it was all over. No one ever found his weapon. Certain forensics guess he used his bare hands, pulling his wives apart as though they were roasted chickens. Luckily for them, this was before magic was obsolete and Blue Beard's one-hundredth wife knew how to sew. When she found the pile of dead wife parts she pieced them together like Butterick patterns and took to arms and heads with a needle and thread. After two afternoons of non-stop work, the women breathed again, all perfectly proportioned. Some said, "Thank you, I've always wanted red hair." Or, "Wow! I wondered what it was like to have big breasts!" Blue Beard's one-hundredth wife sewed the light eyes to the light skin, the small ankles on the small legs. This was before plastic surgery, this was before women's magazines, before body doubles were used in movies. Yet here were ninety-nine untouchable pin-ups, their creator a Plain Jane with a good eye for detail. When Blue Beard came home his grief shook the stained glass windows of his castle. He tried to kill his one-hundredth wife, using the excuse of her entrance into the forbidden room, but his ninety-nine exes pushed him out his heavy oak front door. This was before lawyers, but the one hundred wives still got the house. |
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Denise
Duhamel's most recent titles are The Star-Spangled Banner (winner
of Crab Orchard Poetry Prize, Southern Illinois University Press, 1999)
and Oyl (a collaborative chapbook with Maureen Seaton, Pearl Editions,
2000) Her other books and chapbooks of poetry include: Exquisite Politics
(a collaborative work with Maureen Seaton), Kinky, Girl Soldier,
and How the Sky Fell. She has been anthologized widely, including
four editions of The Best American Poetry (2000, 1998,
1994, and 1993). In 2001, the University of Pittsburgh Press will publish
her new and selected poems, Queen for a Day.
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