THE BROWN ROCKING CHAIR
by Elsa Snodderly
As I got older, the striped, slightly shiny fabric faded, and the hems frayed from our rabbits chewing indiscreetly on the forbidden fibrous chew toy. Still, the fabric covering stayed, and my father would fall into it after dinner with a bowl of Breyers ice cream and a “What are we watching?” My father’s voice was rough, coarse, distinct like the chair. The kind you could pick out in a furniture loft or a grocery store, three aisles over. If I’m honest, I don’t quite remember his voice anymore. Sometimes I think I do. I fool myself into thinking I remember his baritone that droned on and on like the plane engines he worked on—the ones he smelled like—but it faded long ago like the fabric. What didn’t fade was the creak of his body shifting as he found a comfy position. The giggles of my sister as he scooped her out of his chair and kissed her cheek. His kiss, wet with the leftover ice cream on his mustache. Or the fear of him tipping over as he throws his head back in laughter when John Candy’s foot is crushed by a statue. I can never remember the laugh, but I remember the look he gave my mother as he leaned forward in his chair to hold her hand as she sat on the couch. The chair gave him the movement he couldn’t muster at the end of the day.
The chair is still there, but the covering is gone. Thrown away or stored, I’m not quite sure. But the chair feels like it was skinned with the yellow cover pulled away to reveal the soft brown fabric it was made with. It’s still in the same place—in the living room with the grey couch and polished wooden sleigh, but no one sits in it anymore. The springs don’t groan when the chair rocks forward. It just sits there, making an indent in the shag rug. For movies, an unlucky person has to sit on the floor since the couch can only hold three adults. Sometimes it’s me, with my back pressed against the brown chair. It’s just a place for clean folded laundry now because it’s not a place we can sit, but one that needs to be filled.
Elsa Snodderly is a senior pursuing a Baccalaureate in English with a minor in Creative Writing. She is an aspiring librarian who is rediscovering her passion for writing.