|  | Starling Road  I.  On Starling Road the families, intact
 and kindly, gathered in the evenings on
 their pillowed lawns. An old-gold evening sun
 stroked cats who strolled from palm to palm, resting
 in lugustrum hedges or stretching on
 magnolia trunks in glossy arcs.   The kids
 seemed not to dash or run, but glide along
 the asphalt softening in the heat, heads bent
 and flashing in the sun.  The youngest ones
 pumped down the road on tricycles, with Moms
 in tow.  We loved the shuffling fronds above
 our heads, the pools behind our homes.  Citrus
 dropped off trees like ancient fantasies
 of abundance: tangerines, Parson Browns, limes
 and grapefruit fell uneaten in the grass.
 No robbers came, no naughty kids grew up
 therenot even traffic moved above a crawl.
 The neighbors, in an evening ritual,
 would greet each other on that cradle road,
 the lush green, gold-flecked breast of Starling Road.
 
 II.  Across the street and up from us lived Phil
 and Eleanor.  They had a boy and girl
 named Mark and Donnafixtures in the yard
 who had a lonely air because there were
 no peers precisely either age  (eight or
 nine, nine or ten)  to play with.  They followed
 after teenagers, and babies in their
 strollers, but mostly played alone or with
 each other.  They had a dog named Snowbell
 a poodle-ette with dirty paws and the foolish,
 jolly face of growing puppies.
 Donna in particular would dog our
 steps and call to us to "come see this," or
 "look what I can do,"  before the cartwheel
 or the dog-entangled summersault.  I
 wished I could oblige those kids by being
 twelve years youngerMark and Donna had
 a winning melancholy.  Sometimes I'd give
 in and chase them screaming, barking through
 the yards, up one side of Starling Road and down
 the other, until I saw myself: a
 woman in a dress and high-heeled sandals
 acting silly.  I'd leave them suddenly,
 leave them wondering what they did to make
 me go away.  I see their slight figures
 in the yard, and hear their "please, please, please"
 like distant chickees at my back. "Please come back!"
 
 III.  Alternating with their rounds of school
 and boredom and "Go play outside," was the
 thrill of the unexpected: Eleanor
 was a woman given to drama. She
 had a gift for hauling in the doubters
 and rounding up support for sudden schemes.
 Phil, bemused, would go along, but the kids
 would explode in their enthusiasm:
 "Guess what we're going to do! We're going to be
 colonials, and wear knickerbockers
 and bonnets! My Mom is making outfits
 for us all!" And sure enough, in front of
 their house appeared the Liberty Bell on
 a trailer. Every weekend for a year we'd
 see them troop out in their costumes to drive
 the bell to local shopping malls, churches
 and VFW halls.  Even Snowbell
 had a cunning tri-corn cap with ear-hole.
 I see Eleanor, her busy, frantic
 face beneath a laced mob-cap slapping at
 the kids for screaming, jumping, walking on
 her train, tense with significance and fear
 her kids would misbehave, the car not start.
 That Hallowe'en, when Mark and Donna  came
 to the door for chocolate kisses,
 their costumes were out at the knee, hems down, frayed,
 like midget refugees from Valley Forge.
 
 IV.  Even so, what could have prepared the souls
 of Starling Road for this catastrophe?
 One afternoon in Spring the kids came home
 from school, Killarney Elementary School,
 to be killed by their waiting mother. She
 killed herself as well, and Snowbell, too. We
 never knew why; Eleanor shot them all.
 Did she hide the gun, so not to
 frighten them, and sent them to their rooms to
 wait? They might have thought they got in trouble
 for neglecting chores or homework, pesky
 tasks that hover over childhoodperhaps
 they sulked. Or she might have done it better
 she might have made them snacks and had them play
 quietly alone.  At the worst, the one,
 Mark, perhaps, may have heard the shot that killed
 his sister, or the reverse. Donna may
 have heard her brother's bullet, and held her
 Snowbell to her heart, and wondered if the
 thumping in her chest was what she heard,
 before her mother came into the room
 with tears and eyes that said we can't go back
 now, we're committed.
 Phil found them in their
 beds like pearls, each in a red shell. Snowbell
 lay in Donna's arms like her own true child.
 One might think the neighborhood that held us
 all for decades in its yellow shawl of
 light, its wax-white gardenia, verbena-
 scented air, would not recover from a
 traitor: no alarm exists to warn a
 child from its mother. How could this be
 home, that has a mark like Pilate's unwashed
 hands? Or Cain, the bloody Cain? My parents
 left the old homestead a few years later
 the pool, the treestoo much with kids grown up
 and gone away.  Their condo complex is
 lovely in its way: the lakes, the lawns, the
 same unsilted, wine-like air and light that
 falls on dogs and guns and kids alike. While
 Starling Road remains; its pastel houses
 still recline on beds of green Bermuda
 grass beneath the torpid sky: empty, white.
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