Hooked
by
Jacqui Sahagian
A thesis presented
for the B.A. degree
with honors in
The Department of
English
University of
Michigan
Spring, 2013
Readers: Linda
Gregerson and Keith Taylor
Acknowledgments
I'd like to thank Keith and Linda for being awesome readers and lots of fun to work with. Thanks to Linda for taking time from her incredibly busy literary-rock-star schedule to do the thankless job of being my second reader. Also thanks to both Keith and Linda for recommending Mary Karr, she's incredible. I want to thank the creative writing professors who helped work on these stories before I started the thesis: Tish O'Dowd and Sugi Ganeshananthan.
Thanks
to Mark for sitting with me while I wrote this and helping me with inane
details, titles, and character names. Getting this done would’ve been a lot
shittier without you.
And
finally, thank you, Spencer, for the material. Thanks for encouraging me to do
the irresponsible things that lead to good fiction writing, for forcing me to
take breaks to eat while I was working, and for being my best friend.
Abstract
This
collection of stories, all set in Jackson County, Michigan, where the author
grew up, are at their core about the wonderful loneliness and terrible boredom
that comes from living in the middle of nowhere, and the tension between
staying there and leaving for elsewhere. Jackson County’s an awful place to
live and a wonderful place to write about. These stories are about obsession,
addiction, and co-dependency, things that occupy most of the author’s time.
“Twins” is about a brother and sister trying to understand their lives without
each other after the sister flees Jackson to go to college. “Swamp Song,” is a
creative non-fiction piece about falling in love in rural Michigan, being a
teenager, duckweed, divorce, and the author totaling her mother’s car. The
author would like to expand that story into a full-length memoir someday. The
second half, and bulk of, this thesis is a collection of seven linked stories
called Blood on the Tracks. All the
stories take their titles from the Bob Dylan album of that name. Blood on the Tracks tells the story of a
love triangle and alternates in perspective between each of the three
characters involved. In writing about a love triangle, the author wanted to
explore the differences between love and friendship, and the importance of
femininity. In the stories in this thesis, the characters’ complex
relationships with place are as important as their relationships with the other
characters, if not more so. The author would like for the stories in this
thesis to be simultaneously elegies and hate-mail to her hometown.
Twins
“Don’t tap it against the ashtray like that. See, it
comes unpacked here.” Kale pointed out the dents in the side of the Marlboro
Menthol he’d given to his sister. “Just tap on it with your finger like this.
Or flick it with your thumb. Some people call it ‘flicking the cherry,’ but that’s
gross.”
By some people, you mean
the meth-mouth white-trash brats you hang around now, Colleen thought, squirming
on the sticky red vinyl of the diner booth. Kale was teaching Colleen to smoke.
Up until that point Colleen had taught Kale everything. She was older, after
all, and the age gap was bigger than the mathematical reality of one year and
twenty-two days. Now she felt like his child as he taught, and she liked it.
Kale taught Colleen to place the cigarette slightly to
one side of her lips, because if you put it in the center, you look like you
don’t know what you’re doing. She’d quit letting him light cigarettes for her
because she thought it made her look dumb, and though he said buddy lights were
more intimate, she used her own lighter. Kale told her how to judge someone by
the brand they smoked. Boring sluts smoke Marlboro Lights. Hipsters smoke
American Spirits because they’re organic. Black men and slutty white girls who
want to sleep with black men smoke Newports. Badasses smoke Lucky Strikes. Colleen
became obsessed with watching people smoke, especially since, on her healthy
college campus, smokers were ostracized for being a public health risk and
polluting the environment.
The slouching waitress came to refill Kale’s coffee and
bring Colleen more hot water for her tea. The siblings were killing time,
flying through coffee and cigarettes, before Kale had to start the graveyard
shift at the local hotel. “Thank you, Chelsea,” Kale said loudly, so that
everyone in the establishment would know he was in with the staff. Chelsea
looked at them, new weird girl in the
diner. She was probably trying to figure out if they were related or if
they were dating. That was generally what that expression meant. Kale and
Colleen had a vague physical similarity which hinted they were siblings, but were
also physically affectionate, communicating through hand squeezes and eye
contact, which made it difficult to read their relationship.
The two wouldn’t have looked anything alike if they
hadn’t had the same attitude about beauty. Kale was a full foot taller than
Colleen, Colleen had brown eyes and Kale had blue ones, but since they dyed
their hair black and shared oversize black T-shirts advertising punk bands,
strangers could sometimes guess they were siblings. They avoided the sun like
the plague, which was reflected in their milky white pallor, and ate little.
They often ruminated on the attractiveness of a fully visible rib cage and
egged each other on in their efforts to look like skeletons. Every pants size
dropped triggered a celebration and a challenge to the other.
Kale had never actively taught Colleen anything before.
Knowledge wasn’t gold to him as it was to her, and he thought Colleen was smarter
than he was anyway, or at least not interested in learning the kinds of things
he might know that she didn’t. He was better at painting and drawing than she
was, but he never tried to teach her. Just encouraged her, bought her art
supplies for Christmas, painted his grotesque cartoonish ravens and skeletons
sitting across from her, but never taught her. Kale used various mixtures of
thick black, white, and red oil paints, and Colleen’s still-lifes paled in
comparison to his abstract horrors which bled before her. She’d taught him to
play guitar, drilling each chord, offering the perfect tidbit of advice when he
got stuck, but that was forever ago. Now Kale was better than Colleen at that,
too. She told him all about different musical and literary movements—the punks,
the Beats, the Lost Generation in Paris—and he retained some of those facts
through sheer repetition rather than interest. She taught him to write poetry
simply by forcing him to do it. He hadn’t beaten her at that yet, but although
she’d recently won some money for a poem she’d written, she was sure her
brother would soon outstrip her in that area, too.
They offered each other the art they created like cats
leaving dead birds on the front step. Each time he outdid her all she could do
was scoff and snarl, “Remember, if it weren’t for me, you wouldn’t even know who
Sid Vicious is.” Colleen had given him all the artists she loved, so Kale was
better than Colleen at everything, but she had a bigger impact on his life than
he had on hers. There was no way to tell what he’d be like without her, while
she’d more or less be the same, and she saw this as another defeat. If Kale
hadn’t been born, as their parents hadn’t intended him to be, Colleen would’ve
still been an artist. He couldn’t say the same. He had no way to conceive what
his life would be like without her, although such a life was peeking out from
around corners since she’d abandoned him to go to college.
All the employees at Denny’s appeared to know her
brother intimately. The hostess gave them his favorite booth in the smoking
section, knowing that he’d be expecting more people. The waitress, Chelsea,
only asked for Colleen’s order and automatically brought Kale coffee and
buffalo chicken wraps with extra sauce. He put two regular sugars, one
sweet-and-low, and a generous helping of cream into his coffee while she drank
her tea black.
Colleen thought Denny’s was one of the most depressing
places the kids stuck in this wasteland could hang out. The waitresses stank of
prescription drugs, trailer parks, and terminated pregnancies. There was
nothing on the menu Colleen would allow herself to eat. The air conditioning
was always on too high. The place felt like sitting on the inside of a garishly
lit, empty refrigerator, but you could smoke there. The only other thing young
people in the town could do for fun was loiter in Walmart or brew meth. Their
hometown was predominantly working class, if you were lucky enough to even have
a job, and recent declines in the economy had ravaged the small city. There
were as many abandoned businesses as there were operating ones, but still many people
who’d been born there never left—including their parents.
Their parents were hicks, but Colleen hadn’t learned to
hate that about them until after the divorce. They split up when she was ten
and Kale was nine. The worst thing about it was realizing she’d been too dumb
to see it coming. The family never had any money to begin with, so the drop to
relying on a single income destroyed the slight degree of stability their parents
had been able to provide. Growing up, Colleen had hero-worshipped their father,
while Kale was closer to their mom. Their dad was an artist, a writer, and a
musician, but was also angry and melancholic, prone to mood swings and alcohol abuse.
All his faults that Colleen had been too young to see surfaced in the wake of
the split. After the divorce, he took a job that required him to spend six
months of the year installing security systems at research bases in Antarctica,
and the other six months unemployed in the States, living in a
four-hundred-dollar-a-month hotel room. The job doubled as an escape from all
responsibility related to his children. When he moved out, Colleen, Kale, and
their mother couldn’t afford to stay in their house. They moved ten times in
the next eight years, but their living situation had stabilized some after
Colleen left for college. Their mother still worked sixty hours a week at two
minimum-wage jobs, and they still lived in a dilapidated basement apartment in
one of the poorest neighborhoods of the dying city, but one fewer mouth to feed
eased the financial burden, and they hadn’t moved for the two years Colleen had
been at school.
The city where Colleen went to college was only forty
minutes from where she and Kale grew up, but it might as well have been the
opposite side of the earth. The college town was prosperous and thriving on the
money brought to it by overpaid professors and wealthy out-of-state students; a
fake utopia of the Midwest. People there renovated cute, old houses and filled
them with expensive art and ironic kitsch. Adults and students held public
protests against war, education cuts, and pollution. Wealthy ex-hippies who
liked to pretend they were still radical grocery shopped at Whole Foods and
sent their kids to prestigious public schools with lovely facilities. They hung
out and drank sustainable coffee in cafes, used book stores, and ethnic
restaurants. There were no cafes, book
stores, or ethnic restaurants in Colleen and Kale’s hometown. But you could get
unlimited coffee for two dollars at Denny’s, which at least attracted some
business by being open twenty-four hours.
Kale’s friends trickled in and out of the diner—they
knew to look for him there—while Colleen smoked and plunged her tea bag in and
out of the hot water. She said hello to everyone—if they hadn’t met her before they
knew her by reputation. Colleen listened to the conversations, but didn’t feel
she had anything to say that wouldn’t sound like a thinly veiled insult. She watched
Kale interact with the others through a curtain of smoke. People Colleen knew
and didn’t know came and went, and she observed the new phrases and facial
expressions Kale used around them. He’d picked up a few annoying catch-phrases,
including calling anything he liked “hot” and referring to girls as “tricks.”
He cocked his head to the side at a sharper angle than he used to after saying
something he thought was clever, but still rubbed his nose with the back of his
hand the same way he always had, with a lack of the self-consciousness that’d
invaded his other movements. He was changing, but she wasn’t going to lose him.
Kale refused to learn the importance of education no
matter how hard Colleen tried to teach it because evil education, which he’d
always associate with the rich people who filled the city she lived in with
their superfluous possessions, had taken his beloved sister away. Colleen, on
the other hand, did not associate education at all with her rich neighbors whom
she too despised. She felt education was saving her from becoming a white-trash
teenage bride like every other girl she’d graduated high school with. Without
the university she thought she’d have to start abusing prescription medication
to cope with existence, and so being away from Kale was just an unfortunate
side effect of having her life saved. Neither could come close to fathoming the
other’s point of view, just as neither could understand how they’d come to be
so dependent upon each other.
Colleen had taken up smoking, conscious of all the
negative health effects, conscious of how her university friends would turn up
their noses in disgust, in an effort to remain close to her brother. It was a
desperate and carcinogenic attempt to salvage common ground. Colleen kept
herself estranged from her peers by acting more white-trash than she actually
was, much as she’d kept herself estranged from her high school classmates by
acting more cosmopolitan than she actually was. Her fellow university students
reeked of money and easy living, with their smart phones and designer bags that
their parents paid for along with their tuition. They just confirmed her low
opinion of human beings. Her brother escaped this filter, and Kale was the only
one who got past it.
Seeing Kale and his friends, people who’d made the
incomprehensible choice not to leave, contentedly hanging out at Denny’s
reminded Colleen of how odd her simple decision to get the hell out of there
was. Neither of them was quite sure how she’d come to the revelation that she
could leave. The act of leaving is simple. The realization that it’s possible
to leave is the hard part, the part her brother couldn’t accept even with her
ecstatic ravings about classes and city life. He came to visit her sometimes.
Colleen didn’t have much room in her matchbox apartment, so they would sleep
next to each other, scrunched together on her twin bed. They walked around the
city, him holding her hand even though it reduced his chances of getting hit
on. They stared at the cars and people and businesses as if they were at the
zoo. They both felt that the bustling humanity before them was something
outside themselves.
Colleen was loneliest after Kale left, maybe because of
his eagerness to do so. He made walking out the door of her apartment look so
easy, so natural, that she was forced to understand he didn’t belong there.
She’d mope around her apartment when Kale left and clean up after him,
cataloguing the things he left behind: crumbs from lime-flavored tortilla
chips, dirty dishes, guitar picks, empty packs of cigarettes. The most
interesting and annoying finds were the ones he left in Colleen’s bed. His
random pocket change imbedded itself in her space, continuing to turn up long
after he left. She’d wake from an afternoon nap with a nickel stuck to her bare
thigh, former president’s face pressed into her flesh. She’d pull back the
sheets to find Abraham Lincoln glaring up at her. Change on the kitchen table,
bathroom sink, under rugs—she didn’t know how so much money could flow from a
kid so poor.
Shortly after Kale got his tattoo he left behind black
skin peelings on her blue-and-white checkered sheets. The tattoo was a quotation
from Dr. Seuss, one of Colleen’s favorite authors. On the inside of his bicep
in Gothic black lettering he had printed the word “UNLESS.” Their entire lives
she had to whine incessantly to get him to read The Lorax with her, so the tattoo was a small victory. There was no
way he could look at it or tell someone about it without thinking of her. Kale
left dyed black hairs too, but Colleen’s were longer. Their dead hairs sought
each other out on the floor of her apartment to form tangled black knots. Once
he left his rotting leather wallet, full of the forgeries of Denny’s coupons
that he lived on. Kale left things behind wherever he went because the tight
jeans he loved were meant for women, who were meant to carry purses, and everything
spilled out of his shallow pockets.
Kale had picked Colleen up from the Greyhound station
earlier that evening. Colleen didn’t have a car because she was terrified of
driving and had no use for one in the city. She had to take a city bus from her
apartment to the Greyhound station, then the Greyhound to their hometown where
Kale had to pick her up. This stretched a commute that could’ve taken half an
hour to almost two, but Colleen felt she met interesting people riding buses,
so she didn’t really mind. Traveling alone made her feel self-sufficient. The
long journey increased her anticipation of seeing Kale, and so as long as the
bus didn’t smell too strongly of urine, she found the trip pleasant.
Kale’s enormous, fifteen-year-old, green Lincoln was sitting
in the parking lot when Colleen arrived, music blasting from the cassette
player, and she clumsily ran out of the bus with her acoustic guitar on her shoulder.
Kale got out of the car to let her in—the passenger door didn’t open—and gave
her a hug and kiss. The pack of cigarettes bulging in the pocket of his flannel
crushed against her cheek. “I wish you’d clean some of this shit out of here,”
she said as she shoved fast food trash and empty cigarette packs onto the
floor. “Maybe you could get a girlfriend if your car wasn’t so nasty.” He
ignored her.
Though Kale had one of those car ashtrays that could
hold hundreds of butts and put the cigarette out for you, the front seat of his
car was still covered in ash. The backseat was full of everything he needed to
live: a guitar, a banjo, his entire wardrobe, a Tupperware container full of
tobacco and cigarette tubes, a blanket, and more trash. Rarely did Kale return
to the apartment he shared with their mother. He ignored his hunger pangs and
crashed at friends’ houses, napped in a booth at Denny’s, or went without
sleep.
Colleen was glad of her decision to skip dinner as they
drove away from the bus station. The Lincoln had no suspension, so she became
horribly nauseated if she rode with him for longer than twenty minutes. Every
bump felt twice as high as it should have. Each time Colleen visited their
hometown things looked different. More businesses had gone under, so places
where there should’ve been neon signs, advertisements, and parked cars were
vacant. Walmart was reliably well-lit and crowded. The movie theater was still
there, though it had been reduced to showing only the two biggest blockbusters
at any given time. The street they drove down was lined with fast food joints,
some operating and some empty.
“So, what do you wanna do?” Colleen asked. “We have a
while before you need to be to work.” Kale made some vague
I-don’t-know-what-do-you-wanna-do type noises in his nose. “We can go to
Denny’s if you want. I don’t know why you think I hate all your friends, but I
don’t, okay? Let’s just go there until you have to work.”
“Okay.”
She was kind of lying. Something about Kale’s new
friends put her on edge, but she couldn’t figure out exactly what it was and
decided to try and be diplomatic. Through their childhood and until she moved
away they’d spent most of their time together and had the same friends. Partly
Colleen was jealous because Kale’s new friends got to spend more time with him
than she did. Partly she felt they were replacing her, and this filled her with
rage. Partly she felt that his new friends were unintelligent and not very
interesting, but she wasn’t sure if she was just being a snob. When Colleen
visited home, she was always self-conscious about acting like a snob, because
she thought the spoiled rich brats she went to school with had turned her into
one.
Colleen blamed Kale’s friends for their new rifts in
communication, which scared her so much she’d erupt in tears if Kale didn’t
hear something she’d said or misinterpreted a facial expression. The real cause
of the problem was distance. They both knew it, but refused to do more about it
than complain about how little the other visited. She’d been shy her entire
life, but for the first time she felt her brother was misreading her shyness. Kale
should’ve been able to distinguish between her I-hate-this silence and her
I’m-ok-with-this-I-just-have-nothing-to-say-right-now silence. Kale should’ve
known that Colleen not saying a word the entire time she was with him and his
friends didn’t mean she wanted to leave. Sitting at Denny’s for hours on end
was the thing to do for community college drop-outs in her town, and Colleen
sometimes found it interesting from an ethnographic standpoint.
The caffeine was making Colleen more nervous than usual;
she bit at her cuticles and tore the Lipton tag dangling from her tea bag to
shreds. There was a new girl in her brother’s life who was bound to show up at
some point. Kale wasn’t good with girls, he’d never had a serious girlfriend, but
every new bimbo he became infatuated with put Colleen on edge. Being displaced
in her brother’s affections by a white-trash loser with the IQ of a Barbie doll
wasn’t going to happen. Sure enough, Jane strode into Denny’s with a confidence
inappropriate for a shitty highway diner, obnoxiously well-dressed in an
artsy-bohemian vein, clothes purchased from Urban Outfitters with her parent’s
money.
“Hey! Look at us. We spend, like, everyday here. We’re,
like, best friends.” Jane giggled, but stopped abruptly when she noticed Kale’s
discomfort. “I mean, except for your sister. Everyone knows she’s your best
friend.” Jane laughed another fake female laugh and was saved by the waitress.
“Hi, Chelsea. I’ll just have an order of chili cheese fries and a Coke.”
“What the fuck, Jane? I’ve been tryin’ to get a hold of
you all week. What, am I supposed to sit at Denny’s by myself?” Kale said
loudly, ignoring his sister’s presence.
“Oh my God, Kale,
I haven’t called you because I got, like, really fucked up last weekend and
lost my phone. I thought it’d be here, but no one’s found it, so it must be in
the backyard of the place this party was at…” Jane continued babbling, but
Colleen quit listening, her previous suspicions about Jane’s character
confirmed.
The bitch can eat nasty food and still be that thin,
Colleen thought, hunger gnawing at her, giving her the low blood sugar shakes
that her brother never got. Colleen knew this little blonde idiot was trying to
fuck Kale, or at least manipulate his affections to her own advantage, but she
had the nerve to try to cultivate a friendship with him first, maybe in
preparation for some deep, meaningful relationship. Since finding out about
Jane, Colleen had started having the dreams again. Colleen thought Kale’s
crushes would suck every ounce of his time and personality until what little of
him she had left would be taken. In the dreams, Colleen murdered his female
suitors, ripping skin and hair to shreds, beating flesh against concrete, left
with nothing but an inanimate bruised body. These dreams made her question her
sanity sometimes—was she capable of doing anything that violent? Colleen knew
that their father had spent some time in jail when he was young for almost
killing a man with a golf club, and she felt that same blind rage heat in her
veins.
Jane glanced flirtatiously at Kale from under blonde
bangs and heavy eyelashes while Colleen picked at the dead skin around her
cuticles with shaking fingers. Colleen saw Jane’s relief when their friend Ben
came in, greeting the entire staff of Denny’s before coming to their table.
“How’s it goin’, man? Hey, Chelsea, get me a coffee and
a cup of ice.”
“It’s goin’ great, man. I came up with this new guitar
thing today. I’m tellin’ you, it was some hot shit.” Ben’s arrival was a relief
for Colleen too because she was under less pressure to talk. Over the next hour,
five more of Kale’s friends showed up, crowding into the red booths. Kale’s
conversations with his friends irritated Colleen because they were full of
ridiculous narcissistic posturing, tasteless jokes, and references to different
situations in which they’d gotten fucked up and done something stupid. His
words, tone of voice, and subject matter were completely different when he
talked to her, which made everything he said over his Denny’s coffee sound
fake.
After sitting in the sticky booth for a couple hours
they went out to Kale’s car so he could get high before starting his night
shift. He used the same excuses to
justify his marijuana habit he’d used when he started smoking cigarettes; it
helped his anxiety, he needed it to stay awake, his stomach hurt without it.
Colleen had succumbed to the cigarettes, but she hated the weed. She thought
marijuana made people stupid, and the loss of her intelligence terrified her
more than anything. She wasn’t pretty, or nice, or funny; being smart was the
only positive quality Colleen possessed. She recognized the hypocrisy of
refusing to smoke pot because it’s bad for you while she starved herself, but
decided to ignore it. Maybe she smoked cigarettes instead of pot for no other
reason than because she thought one would make you skinny and the other fat,
but she stuck to her familiar excuses. She knew her brother was just as
intelligent as she was, and if Kale could do something stupid on purpose, so
could she.
Kale lit up with his stupid penis-shaped lighter that he
thought was funny. It was made of fleshy rubber and had huge veins sticking
out. Colleen sat next to him in the Denny’s parking lot and stared out the car
window, covered with ash and reeking of marijuana. “I fucking hate that lighter—it’s
disgusting,” she said, not turning to look at him.
“Fine. You know what? I’ll just get rid of it then.”
Instead of chucking it out the window like she hoped, Kale began to pick the
rubber apart and throw the pieces at her, until nothing but the metal tube was
left. “Happy?” Tears streamed down Colleen’s face, dragging track marks through
her mascara, but she had turned away and didn’t make a sound. She felt trapped
by this malevolent person she no longer knew, her own hometown a strange
foreign country she had no way to navigate without him. “I have to go to work
now.” Kale started the car and waved at his friends milling around the parking
lot as the Lincoln bounced over the curb and drove away.
Since Colleen worked at the library and had class during
the day, one of the only ways they could spend time together was if she
accompanied Kale to his night shift working the front desk at a hotel. Colleen
was afraid she’d get him fired, but Kale insisted it was fine and he didn’t
care if he did get the axe. She sat on the couch in the lobby reading
Shakespeare or Faulkner for her English classes while he worked, and he came to
sit next to her when he didn’t have anything to do. They didn’t talk as much as
they used to, just sat next to each other, her head on his shoulder, his head
on her head, dyed black hair blending together.
The new physical tics and facial expressions her brother
had developed in Colleen’s absence made him more fascinating to watch. She’d
always been obsessed with watching his hands. They were odd-looking; large,
flat, with incredibly long fingers that ended in nails bitten to the quick. Tobacco
stains had appeared between the first two fingers on each hand. Kale’s hands
looked new to Colleen when they cradled a cigarette, confidently flicking the
end with his thumb. They were too large for his pockets, and she loved the
strange, uncomfortable way he rummaged about in his pants, spilling spare
change in the search for his lighter.
There was a deep, jagged scar on Kale’s right thumb from
an incident with a hand-saw when they were in high school. He’d been cutting
branches in the yard as Colleen watched, and they were discussing their mother’s
new boyfriend. Kale sliced his thumb open and looked up at her in shock. Always
useless in emergency situations, Colleen cursed and screamed while Kale
spattered blood all over them, the yard, and the kitchen. Their mother tried to
save them a trip to the emergency room by closing the wound with the glue she used
to apply plastic fingernails, but it wouldn’t stop bleeding. After putting in ten
stitches, the nurse at the free clinic said he’d come close to cutting a tendon
that would’ve rendered his thumb useless. The scar still hadn’t lost its
raised, purple presence.
Kale and Colleen’s father had abandoned them, but their
mother was no paradigm of perseverance either. She nursed her loss with a new
sexual promiscuity both frightening and disgusting. She courted men in online
chat rooms designed for people looking for sex. It wasn’t uncommon for her to
send Colleen and Kale a text in the day telling them not to come home after
school until she called them. Kale was angry, but he was so good at pretending,
deluding himself that there was nothing there. Colleen became homicidal,
picking fights with her mother’s boyfriends until her mother stopped bringing
them home, then stopped coming home herself. Sometimes Colleen thought Kale was
being reasonable and handling things better than she was; other times she
thought he was just a coward. When she saw him slice his finger nearly in two,
she realized they shared more rage than she’d thought.
His hands might’ve seemed foreign to her while he
smoked, but Colleen hated watching them fiddle with his phone. She considered
herself pretty anti-technology, but Kale was the opposite, and Colleen was more
jealous of his phone than of any friend or girlfriend he had. Kale was
constantly stroking it, touching it, checking its various bodily functions to
make sure it was all right. She’d glare at him as soon as she heard it
vibrating, curled up in his pocket. Kale would spend his free time at Denny’s
with Ben while both of them texted other people and barely said a word to each
other. This pastime seemed completely useless to Colleen, but that was the key
to their difference—he wasn’t obsessed with finding a use for all of his time.
Colleen enjoyed accompanying her brother to the hotel.
She loved being awake while everyone else was asleep, the intense solitary
feeling of early dawn. Only the hotel’s strangest occupants were awake during
Kale’s shift, standing outside to smoke and taking dozens of the complementary
cookies he baked. She read the old issues of Time and Newsweek sitting
in the lobby, took an occasional cat nap on the couch, and sat next to him on
the benches outside during his cigarette breaks. She loved how eerie the
streetlights looked when the sky was beginning to lighten in the morning.
The night shift at the hotel consisted of hours of
boredom punctuated by moments of incredible weirdness. Around one a.m., Ben
stormed into the lobby, completely drunk, freaking out about having lost his
credit card at the local bar. He’d stolen the card from his mother that very
morning and now was without funds to buy cigarettes. Though Colleen found him
mildly amusing and they shared an interest in Edgar Allen Poe, she regarded him
as if he were from another planet. Colleen couldn’t understand how one could
still be sneaking out of one’s parents’ home at the age of twenty-five and not
be too addicted to hard drugs to have friends. When a handicapped hotel guest
limped out the front door for a cigarette, Kale and Ben sat in the lobby and
waited until the guy was out of earshot to laugh at him. Colleen laughed meanly
too, but at her brother and his friend, not the disabled man.
After Ben stumbled drunkenly away to go steal more money
from his parents for cigarettes, a tall man with an afro came down from
upstairs, told Kale he was expecting a guest, and that, if she wasn’t blonde
and cute, not to give her his room number. The woman in question appeared not
thirty seconds after the man disappeared up the elevator. She must’ve passed
inspection because she was directed to the man’s room. After she left, Colleen
and Kale raised eyebrows at each other from across the lobby and Kale mouthed,
“She’s gonna have sex with the afro guy.” When the woman re-appeared two hours
later to weave her way back out to her car, they exchanged the same glance
behind her back and smothered their laughs. That night it was raining while
they sat outside for four o’clock cigarettes. They wore leather jackets, and
his arm was around her shoulders. The droplets fell hard and straight down, and
Colleen thought the rain in the parking lot was one of the most beautiful
things she’d ever seen.
Around five she drifted off on the couch, crushing her
Shakespeare anthology beneath her, but Kale shook her awake soon after. “I’ve
gotta make breakfast, and people are starting to come down. You gotta get up,”
he whispered. A reporter on the television in the breakfast room was
re-glorifying the horror of September 11th for the disaster’s tenth
anniversary. Kale let her eat the breakfast he made if Colleen pretended she
was a guest and didn’t let on that she knew him. They never had any problems
because, with her head stuck in a book at 5:30 a.m., no one said any more than
good morning. That morning when she finished, she pretended she was leaving and
sat in Kale’s car in the far corner of the parking lot before his shift ended,
striding out of the too-eager automatic doors as if she had somewhere important
to be.
He’d agreed to drive her back to her apartment that
morning. He could sleep there in the day, then drive back to work that night.
Neither of them was in a fit state to drive, both so exhausted they felt as if
their bodies were made of cement. Colleen offered, but since the car had no
title, plates, or insurance, Kale refused. He didn’t want her to get in trouble
if they got pulled over. If you got arrested, I’d make them take me with you,
Colleen thought. Where else would I go?
Colleen preferred when Kale drove. She’d been terrified
of driving since she’d totaled their mother’s vehicle, nearly killing the both
of them, a month after getting her license, in one of the moments of intense
stupidity that punctuated her high intelligence. The four a.m. rain hadn’t
diminished, and the windshield wipers smacked at it pathetically, smearing
water across the window and making it even harder to see. Colleen’s heart raced
with the sickening mix of terror and excitement she loved about reckless
driving. Kale wasn’t a very attentive driver, but riding with him was exciting because
then she felt her life was in his hands, and she liked being unsure what he’d
do with it.
“Will you roll me a cigarette?” Kale asked, as they
dodged traffic cones and semis, the road before them a watery blur. That
highway was in a constant state of construction from March until November every
year. The sedentary cranes and bulldozers rose regally above the muddy median
like dinosaurs. She reached into the back seat for his plastic container.
Colleen was horrible at rolling cigarettes; she ruined at least three tubes
before managing to do it correctly. “It needs some more tobacco. Here, turn it
upside down and clean it out. No, no, leave the thing open while you’re doing
that.” Kale tried to coach her, but she was pathetic.
“I can’t do it.” She threw the container into the trash
pile at her feet.
“Ok, then I’m gonna have to stop at the next exit and do
it myself. I’m falling asleep.”
The sun strained to get out from behind the clouds, but
it was losing, and the white sky turned everything grey. Colleen stuck her left
thumb in her mouth, peeling off chunks of her cuticle with her teeth. Kale
hated this nervous habit of hers and yanked her bleeding hand out from between
her lips. He held it firmly—the same way their father used to grasp the back of
their necks so he wouldn’t lose them in crowds. She’d done it this time, the
sticky blood slid between their hands and dripped into the cup holder. They
clutched each other’s hands as they flew.
Swamp Song
The house I grew
up in bordered a man-made swamp, as did most of the homes in rural Jackson
County. These swamps weren’t supposed to be swamps. They were supposed to be
canals that led into lakes, which were not man-made, so residents could keep
their pontoon boats and canoes in their backyards and have easy access to the
lake during the one or two months of the year warm enough to fish or swim. They
say that in Michigan you’re never more than a half-hour’s drive from a lake of
some kind. Our lake was called Swain’s Lake. I don’t know who Swain was. The
canals were dug to increase property value in a part of the world homes sold
for not much more than mini-vans or tropical vacations. The canals silted up,
growing shallower and muddier each year, turning themselves into swamps.
One of the most
exciting events of my childhood was the summer our canal, which led into Swains
Lake, was dredged. The canal had grown so shallow that, while canoes could
still float atop the mud, pontoon boats couldn’t move. They rested, idle and
rusting, on the fetid brown sludge until the neighbors were able to pool enough
money to have the canal dredged. I was five years old and shell-shocked from
kindergarten. Cranes drove through our backyards to scoop out the mud. I
imagined the machines were brachiosaurs and walked along the muddy ridges they
left behind as if I were tracking them, as if in my backyard a portal to the
Jurassic period—a time and space where I’d have rather been—had opened. The
adults complained that the dredging left our backyards as muddy as the canal.
The swamp was growing in revenge for that assault, crawling towards the houses
on the top of the hill. Our house was yellow. It had a carport instead of a
garage, and a red wooden deck in back with the grill and a picnic table. Mom
would call out, Jacqui, Emily! to my
sister and me from the house, and I’d pretend not to hear her, that her call
was the shrieking of a pterodactyl from above.
Dad, Emily, and I fished pathetically in the canal when
he still lived with us, catching the bluegill and sunfish hiding from the
fishers on the lake, the occasional small bass. We threw everything back. The
fish disappeared under the pale green duckweed when my father tossed them in.
They always looked dead to me, lifeless after suffocating in the air while
being unhooked, but Dad explained that, if you tossed them up so that they
smacked when they hit the surface, they’d come out of shock and swim away with
nothing more than sore lips. I thought my dad was tall, but he wasn’t really.
He had black hair, grey stubble, and wore wire-rimmed glasses. Dad loved
fishing, even though the fishing on the canal was miserable compared to how
it’d been when he and my mother lived up north, before Emily and I were born.
The fish we caught most frequently were what Dad called “Madagascar weed fish,”
which weren’t fish at all, but long trails of prehistoric-looking weeds from
the bottom of the swamp. He’d pretend to struggle with them, impersonating the
wildlife adventurers from the Discovery Channel that I idolized. I’d laugh, and
wish we could actually pull something that interesting out of our muck.
We also caught the painted turtles that sunned
themselves on logs. Dad would groan when I dragged up a turtle on my yellow
Snoopy child’s reel. Dad hated catching them because they often swallowed the
hooks. He’d pull his fishing knife out of the front pocket of his flannel
shirt, cut the line as close to the turtle’s mouth as he could, and let the
struggling creature with its long, sharp nails slide back into the water. I
asked, Will they be ok? What’s gonna happen to the hook? He’d say, They’ll be
fine. It’ll just rest inside their stomachs. Like silent anchors, like waiting
death, I thought, and knew he was lying for my sake.
The people living on Swains Lake spent most of their
time outdoors in June, July, and August—no one had money for any other kind of
entertainment. The swamp’s smell became overpowering by mid-August. You were
reminded of the water’s presence even in the front yard where you couldn’t see
it. The odor of rotting matter was ignored or masked by the smell of campfires.
At that same time, when the swamp smelled the most putrid, the snapping turtles
mated. They writhed and rocked under the duck weed, and it looked as if the
swamp were boiling. I would watch the water swirling from the snapping turtles’
furious mating while I sat on my rusty, yellow swing set on the top of the
hill. The snapping turtles would traverse the empty country roads slowly to
cross from swamp to swamp. When Emily and I were kids, if we came upon a
snapper while driving, Dad would pull over and pick it up by its dragon tail.
He’d poke a stick between its jaws so it couldn’t bite him (a full grown
snapper can easily take a man’s finger), then place the turtle on the side of
the road toward which it had been heading—Emily and I thoroughly impressed with
his heroism.
When I was in middle school, after the divorce, my dad
converted me to punk, though he wasn’t even a punk himself. Mocking me for my
typical adolescent taste in music he said, “Good Charlotte’s not punk, the Sex
Pistols used to spit on their fans.” That sentence changed my life. At first I
thought, why would a band spit on their fans, aren’t bands supposed to love
their fans? But I was intrigued enough to go to the library and read every book
I could get my hands on about the Pistols, about CBGB’s, about Kurt Cobain. I
needed something to spend my energy on, school and friends sure as hell weren’t
going to cut it, so my father’s sentence came at the right time. I read
everything punk was about before I listened to any of it. By the time I found a
copy of Never Mind the Bullocks I was
already hooked. The Pistols had something important to say in their music; it
had purpose. The Queen can go fuck herself because we live in garbage outside
her window. Destroy me, I’m begging you, but I’m already dead and I’ll drag you
down with me. Please Kill Me was the
title of one of the books I read (taken from a t-shirt Richard Hell made for
himself), and I carried it through school, jacket facing out, waiting for
someone to say something to me about it, but of course they never did. I
imagine the teachers at my middle school were so busy fighting off the urge to
commit suicide that they didn’t have the energy to worry about the weirdo in
the class, especially since I got good grades. Punk became all I listened to,
all I read about, all I did. I’d play three chords on my guitar in my room
alone, mimicking Courtney Love’s slutty stage presence, trying to sing like
Johnny Rotten. All of my time outside school, and most of my time in school,
was devoted to the bands I loved. I tried to get my more trusted peers in on my
incredible secret, this thing only I knew about, but Johnny Rotten sneering,
“She was a girl from Birmingham / She just had an abortion / She was a case of
insanity” wasn’t embraced by my fellow seventh graders. I could relate to these
punk characters like I couldn’t to my classmates, and a bunch of dead musicians
became my best friends. Kurt Cobain came from a shitty small town and had
divorced parents, too. Sid Vicious was beautiful and awful at the same time and
I needed to figure out why. Debbie Harry was sexy in a way the celebrities on
TV weren’t. I wanted to look like her, something I’d never felt staring at the
actresses whose appearances I was supposed to aspire to. I pasted pictures of
the CBGB crowd on my wall, begged for New York, and shoved my weirdness in the
face of every redneck I was forced to speak to like a bloody deformity.
It would’ve been poetic if my first love had come from
the swamp—like the Creature from the Black Lagoon, who I’d imagined would make
an ideal husband when I was six—but he didn’t. Spencer came from school, where
all first loves come from. Spencer grew up on a swamp a few miles away from
mine. I never imagined I’d have a boyfriend in high school. I created elaborate
fantasies about the beautifully tortured punk rockers I’d meet in college, but
there was no way, no way I’d find
anyone to like, much less like me back, among the hundred-fifty redneck losers
I suffered through high school with.
Spencer noticed me because I was weird and because his
older brother Steven told him I had nice legs. I met Spencer at marching band
camp a few weeks before school started in the fall. I’d cut my hair and
bleached it blonde, letting the dark roots stick out. I was almost as short as
my mother, and thin, with oddly large hazel eyes that I thought made me look
like a bug, or an alien. Spencer was tall and as skinny as I was, with long
light-brown hair that hung in his eyes, which could be either blue or green
depending on his mood. I saw Spencer—a new freshman, a percussionist like
Steven was and his younger brother, Skylar, would be—watching my sunburned and
bug-bitten thighs while I marched with the flutists, and was caught off guard
by the idea that someone would be attracted to me. As the only punk rocker in
my high school, guys were generally too intimidated by my feminist babblings
and confused by my outfits to be interested.
Spencer wasn’t very socially observant and completely
ignored my desire to be left alone. I sat in corners, arms crossed, folding
myself to take up as little space as possible, face stuck in the rock musician
biographies that I rabidly devoured. No matter how many icy glares or one word
answers I gave him, he kept talking to me. It didn’t take him long to figure
out that asking about whatever band was splashed across my t-shirt would get me
to talk. I was hungry to convert anyone and everyone to punk. I wouldn’t admit
it, but I wanted someone to share my obsession with.
I noticed Spencer because he wouldn’t stop noticing me,
and because for his first day of high school he bought a pair of black Converse
sneakers like he’d seen me wear at band camp. Mine were rotted from years of
overuse. His were new, the black and white contrast still sharp. I wrote “I
wanna be your dog” on his in black pen at lunchtime, and he wrote some dumb
line from a Fall Out Boy song on mine during a water break from marching band
rehearsal. I ignored the stupidity of his taste in music, then fell in love
with him when he let me change it.
The sixteenth summer of
my life was nothing but Spencer and me visiting each other’s homes and swamps,
begging our parents for rides between houses. I got my driver’s license in
June, but had no car. I stared out the kitchen window at the swamp and read
outside in the hammock while Mom was at work. I pretended to do the things I
enjoyed, but was really waiting for business hours to end, for Mom to come home
so I could whine and plead until she let me drive the five miles to get
Spencer, as long as I promised to return him to his own swamp and be home
before midnight. Sometimes Spencer would catch a ride to my house from Steven
or his parents, and I’d sit on the cold concrete of the front porch, pretending
to read The Catcher in the Rye for
the twelfth time, heart racing like a caffeine overdose with every car that
passed.
The suddenness and severity of our attachment to each
other scared me because it was outside of my control. It was as if my
affirmative response to his whispered “Will you go out with me?” on the way to
our separate school buses had deliciously cursed me. We fell into a wild,
intolerable selfishness. We wanted to care about the people around us, but
couldn’t. I was sixteen when Spencer gave me my first kiss. I was in bed,
sleeping off one of the chronic migraines I still suffer from. He’d stopped by
to wake me up and see if I was feeling any better. His lips were full and
covered small crooked teeth. The Nirvana and Green Day posters on my pale
yellow walls swirled from prescription pain killers and lust.
Mom, my younger sister, Emily, and I took a short
vacation to Saugatuck that summer, and that trip was when I realized I was in
deep, so much deeper than the mud of our swamp, deeper even than Lake Michigan.
It’d been two months and many hundreds of kisses since he’d kissed me for the
first time. I spent my family’s only summer vacation daydreaming about home,
about the first time he put my breasts in his mouth, pulling apart my white
bikini top while we lay half-naked in the sun on the picnic table, pulses
throbbing with the thrill that someone could’ve been watching.
In Saugatuck, my family and I stayed in a cheap, rustic
motel for five days, and I missed Spencer so much I thought I was going insane.
I wanted to enjoy the beaches and kitschy shops—I told myself in my adult voice
that it was good for us to spend time apart—but the thought I wish Spencer was here kept surfacing
no matter how hard I tried to ignore it. I have carried that thought into every
stressful moment and period of depression in my adult life, years after we
broke up. It sits in a pile with my other ineffective knee-jerk responses to
catastrophe, along with I need a
cigarette and I wanna go home. I wish
Spencer was here: a mantra that still brings no comfort.
When we got home and I’d washed the Lake Michigan sand
out of my hair, Mom let me drive her white Ford Escape to pick up Spencer and
Skylar, and bring them back to our house for a campfire. I drove seventy miles
an hour on the un-policed back roads because that’s how my older classmates
drove and I thought it was what I was supposed to do. Emily rode in the
passenger seat, window rolled all the way down, her naturally blonde hair
whipping across her round face. She frowned in disapproval at the speedometer,
but I was high on recklessness. Spencer and Skylar lived down a meandering dirt
road where the houses were a mile apart. Driving out to their place made my
neighborhood feel cosmopolitan. The summer had been dry. I thought of Steinbeck
as I watched the pale dust fly up behind us in the rearview mirror.
Spencer and I offered to clean up the campfire when the
others decided the mosquitoes were becoming too oppressive despite the smoke.
It was cloudy and there was a new moon. After Spencer put the fire out, and Mom
had pulled down the blinds in the house, there was no light. Graham crackers,
marshmallows, and Hersey bars piled in my arms, I turned to walk towards the
house guided by memory, not sight. Before I made it to the foot of the hill,
Spencer grabbed a fistful of my hair and threw me under him on the damp ground.
Dew soaked through my red Stooges t-shirt and tattered jeans. The swamp sounds
were deafening and mosquitoes chewed every inch of my exposed flesh. Spencer
was thin, but wiry; each of his ribs was visible, but he always defeated me in
wrestling matches. I couldn’t see anything, only heard the graham crackers
crunch when they hit the ground and felt his fingers digging into my hips
through my jeans, his lips on my neck.
Dad left when I was ten. After that the fishing stopped,
and I spent the rest of my childhood summers with a butterfly net slung over my
shoulder, capturing frogs and turtles. I mentally catalogued their traits, and
let them go, convinced I’d be able to recognize individuals if I caught them
again. The most important thing was to be observant. I’d let the evidence of my
parent’s unhappiness slip through my filters; I hadn’t paid close enough
attention. I thought everyone’s moms and dads ignored each other. I thought
everyone’s moms and dads slept in separate bedrooms. Dad had told me he had
trouble sleeping, so he had to sleep by himself, and I bought it—hook, line,
and sinker. It wasn’t until my first friend slept over in the third grade that
I realized something wasn’t right. When I gave her a tour of the house, she’d
asked me three times, confused, why don’t
your parents sleep in the same room? I should’ve seen it coming.
Spencer was the first person I ever wanted to be around
more than I wanted to be left alone, and our affection made me understand how
frigid, how non-existent my parents’ marriage had been. I knew that because we
were so young, our affection was exaggerated, but I also knew my parents hadn’t
had a shred of what Spencer and I did. Six year later, I was glad they had
split up. I understood how lonely and frustrating it must have been to grasp
for their evaporating love and keep coming up empty-handed. Six years later,
though I could hardly comprehend my own behavior, I understood my parents.
So after the divorce I went catching to make up for the
lost fishing, because I had a compulsive need to hold wild things. The duckweed
grew so thick and the water was so still that the canal looked like land
covered in pale grass, what it originally had been and was trying to become
again. Mostly I caught frogs and painted turtles, and sometimes I caught garter
snakes sunning on the bank. Those were the most exciting catches because they
were the hardest, they required the most skill. I couldn’t use the net on
snakes. I snuck up as close as I could, then in a strike I thought was fast as
lightning, I’d grab them just behind their heads, the way the men on the
Discovery Channel caught venomous adders and rattlers.
Emily and I had never spent much time playing together,
at first because of the three-year age difference and later because we shared
no interests. Emily would swing back and forth on the rusted yellow swing-set
next to our deck and jump on our neighbor’s trampoline while I’d venture out
catching. Our yard was large with at least a dozen gardens holding different
varieties of flowers, fastidiously maintained by my mother. Each week-night,
when she got home from work, she changed out of her pants-suits and into
matching sweatshirts and sweatpants to work in the yard until it was too dark
to see. I smelled always of mud and excrement from the Canadian geese that
lumbered through our backyards, goslings in tow. I counted the yellow fluffy
babies and ran in terror from the hissing adults when I got too close.
Mom grew so tired of trying to brush my hair after my
days spent catching that she chopped it all off. She was always tired of
everything; intrinsically fatigued. The yard work was like meditation for her,
she said it didn’t feel like work. What felt like work was holding me down,
enduring my screams while she tried to force a comb through my dirty hair. My
mother was so short I realized she was short even then. She had high
cheekbones, thin and arched eyebrows, and a gap between her coffee-stained front
teeth. Mom never went anywhere, not even to the grocery store, without applying
perfume and a face full of makeup. She was disappointed that her oldest
daughter refused to wear dresses or play with dolls. I let her convince me the
haircut would be like hers—short, stylish and perfectly quaffed—but I only
looked even more like a skinny boy. As is the case with many young children, my
long hair had been the only signifier of my gender, so I spent more time alone,
refusing the companionship of the neighbor kids, after my brown tangles fell to
the bathroom floor. I could feel the ugliness like a permanent grass stain when
friends, family, and neighbors saw me. I wanted that shame to spread to my
mother, who’d done this to me, but she just kept smiling, spreading painted
lips, flashing her gap teeth. I couldn’t decide if she was oblivious, or if she
just didn’t care because she’d saved herself some time and effort.
But I got older. I realized what time and effort means
for a single mother. I let my hair grow long again. I allowed myself to make a
few friends I didn’t care much about. We’d go out on the lake in our neighbor’s
paddle boat, swimming if it was warm enough, just drifting if it wasn’t. Mom
built campfires almost every night in the summer; there was always debris in
our yard that needed burning. We’d roast marshmallows while she tended the
flames, adding dry leaves and kindling, manicured fingers encased in thick
leather gloves. When it got too dark to see the swamp from the fire-pit on top
of the hill, we still felt its presence in the millions of swarming mosquitoes.
The mosquitoes were so out of control that even the ample bat population
couldn’t keep them down. We’d be covered in itchy bites from mid-May through
September. Apparently whoever had made the decision to dig out the canal hadn’t
known that mosquito larvae develop in stagnant water. We slathered on DEET and
lit mosquito candles and worried about catching the West Nile virus. Mom
scolded me when she caught me scratching the bites into bloody welts instead of
smacking them with my palm to relieve the itching. To this day, I don’t feel
like it’s really summer unless my shins are covered in swollen red bumps, runny
with blood.
I want to say Mom, Emily, Spencer, Skylar, and I became
like family my sixteenth summer, but that didn’t come until later. I never had
much capacity for family or friends, and I let everything become Spencer. I
constructed elaborate fantasies in which everyone in the world was dead except
Spencer and me. We’d go everywhere and do everything—somehow visiting the
Eiffel Tower and the Coliseum even though there’d be no one to operate a plane
to get us there. I recognized it was a sick thing to fantasize about, but I
didn’t stop.
That summer was Spencer, but also Spencer and me trying
not to break my curfew, which could result in us not being allowed to see each
other for a few days. My learner’s license forbade me from driving past
midnight, which gave my mother a perfect excuse to enforce a rule she would’ve
imposed anyway. My relationship with Spencer scared her more than it scared me.
I wished the clock could just go slower between five in the evening and
eleven-thirty when I had to take him home, but I’d never seen time pass more
quickly. We watched movies on the couch, hands frantic under unnecessary
blankets, and played hide and seek with our younger siblings, scrambling to
find separate hiding places long after the countdown ended. I cursed the minute
hand: Stop moving. Stop moving.
The night of the accident was a movie night. I wanted to
show Spencer Sid and Nancy, the best
and worst love story of all time. Emily and Skylar played volleyball before
dark and a board game in the basement afterwards. It wasn’t easy to watch
movies with Spencer and me. I don’t remember a single film the two of us
watched that entire summer. For purely selfish reasons I was glad our younger
siblings had become friends; they could entertain each other and leave Spencer
and me alone. Emily and Skylar were in the same grade, loved sports, and even
kind of looked alike: athletic build, hair lightened and skin darkened by the
sun, sweaty t-shirts bearing our high-school mascot and basketball shorts. Now,
when I think of them, I say family,
but then I thought obstacle avoided.
The transition amazes and humbles me.
Spencer and I started out sitting up, but were
horizontal on the red-and-white checkered living room couch the instant my
exhausted single mother said goodnight and closed her bedroom door. I watched
the minutes fly on my watch, thinking, It
can’t be ten already, It can’t be eleven already. Spencer lifted my black
Sex Pistols t-shirt over my head and pushed my purple bra up to my chin.
Spencer had a long torso; his hip-bones peeked out of a gap between his
Ramones’ t-shirt and his red skinny jeans. I counted his vertebrae with my
fingers. I knew we had to leave—I was already on slippery ground from being a
couple minutes late the previous night—but I didn’t do anything. I stayed on
that couch and screamed in time’s face, Watch
me defy you.
At ten to twelve, we heard Emily and Skylar coming up
the basement stairs and hurriedly adjusted our rumpled clothes. “Shouldn’t we,
like, leave soon?” Emily asked, glancing nervously at the wooden clock in the
kitchen.
“Yeah, let’s get going!” I was glad that she was having
too much fun to pay attention to the time as well, even though I was older, and
only my head would be on the platter if we screwed up. We piled into the car,
filled it with nervous energy. I drove fast. Too fast, and I knew it, but
didn’t slow down. All the windows and the sunroof were open. The air smelled
like swamp and cattle. No one said a word. We were bracing ourselves for
whatever it was that we knew was going to happen.
When we tore onto the dirt road from the paved one, we
were in the final stretch, but the digital clock read 12:03—I was already dead.
The bullfrogs and katydids from Spencer’s swamp were deafening even over the
roar of the engine. The gravel was loose under the tires. Somehow I knew, but
didn’t stop. I pushed fifty on a road that should’ve been traveled no faster
than the Amish in their horse-drawn wagons that passed Spencer’s house each
morning before dawn.
As we rounded the final turn, the dirt slid out from
under the tires, and everything was suddenly darkness, vertigo, and
clamor—glass shattering, metal scraping metal. I heard the car noises, but not
my sister screaming, Spencer yelling. When we stopped rolling, luckily landing
right-side up, I thought I’d been hallucinating. I
thought maybe we’d just gone off the road a little, that I could put the car in
reverse and continue as if nothing had happened. People later asked me what my
mistake was: Did I slam on the brakes? Was
I not watching the road? I don’t know. It happened so fast I don’t think I
had time to stomp down on the brake pedal (which, they said, you’re not
supposed to do when losing control of a vehicle). I wasn’t messing with the
radio or distracted by conversation—none of us had been talking. Like Bambi on
the frozen pond, the car’s legs slid out from under us.
When my vision stopped spinning and I saw the crack in
the windshield, I realized there was no getting out of this. Scared shitless, I
played the adult. I was the oldest. “Ok, are you guys ok? Anybody bleeding?
Check and make sure you’re not bleeding. Can you move everything? Check and
make sure you can move everything.” My top lip and front teeth throbbed from my
face slamming into the steering wheel. The airbags never went off, and I’m
still not sure whether that made it better or worse. Mercifully, no one was
seriously injured. We climbed out of the wreckage and stared at the crippled
automobile, counting our hit points. The headlights were still working and the
brights bathed the ditch we’d crashed into in harsh light.
I had a swollen lip, two cracked front teeth, whiplash,
a burn cutting across the left half my neck from the seatbelt, and my hands had
gripped the steering wheel so tight I could barely straighten my fingers. Spencer
had cuts on his face from broken glass, a knot growing on the side of his head
where it’d hit the ground after the passenger window shattered, and a black eye
from a fallen branch that’d struck his face through the hole where the window
should’ve been. Skylar and Emily, who had sat in the back, suffered less severe
injuries—bruises on their ribs from being shoved back and forth against the
door handles and sore jaws from clenching their teeth. We were all covered in
dirt and glass. Dirt was in the pockets of my jeans, in my bra, tangled in my
hair, crunchy between my teeth.
The swamp had not fallen silent out of reverence for my
mistake. On the opposite side of the road was a steep tree-covered hill sloping
straight down into the muck. On the side of the road where the car had landed,
a small embankment covered in thick weeds led up to some undeveloped property.
No houses for a mile. As soon as we’d figured out everyone was all right, Emily
started crying. I wanted to join her, but felt strangely emotionless, hollow.
It was all my fault, and I would’ve felt like a cheater crying for something
I’d done to myself.
There was no cell phone service. We knew that so well
none of us bothered to check our phones, undamaged in our pockets. Spencer
grabbed my cheeks with both hands and leaned down to touch noses with me. “I
love you, Jacqui. I love you no matter what.”
“I almost killed you guys,” I whispered through chattering
teeth.
“We’re fine, Jacqui. It’ll be fine. I love you.” He
turned to Skylar. “Wasn’t that kind of awesome, though? Like don’t you wish you
could do that again without breaking a car?” Skylar laughed and nodded.
“That was not a fucking rollercoaster you psychos,” I
snapped, wanting to be mad but secretly happy that no one was angry at me. Spencer
decided to head toward the nearest neighbor, and told Skylar to run toward
their home to wake their parents. My sister and I stayed with the car, frozen
and pathetic females. It didn’t hit me until later how brave Skylar was,
running a mile alone through the pitch black night, thick with swamp and bugs
and animals. I stood, leaning against the back bumper, crunching broken glass
under my sneaker. Looking more scared than hurt, Emily kept asking, “What’re we
gonna do?”
“I don’t know, Emily. We have to call the police and get
Mom.”
“What if they don’t come back?”
“They’re going to come back, ok?”
The twenty minutes we waited for the boys passed slower
than the evening had been fast. Spencer returned first, with our high school
history teacher, who happened to be his closest neighbor, in tow. If I hadn’t
been in so much shock I probably would’ve passed out in embarrassment. I prayed
that Mr. Renieche would forget all about this before school started, but still
had horrific visions of him re-telling the story to the entire teachers’
lounge. Then headlights appeared from the direction of Spencer and Skylar’s
house. Seeing that we were all right and had help on the way, Mr. Renieche
walked back through the mosquitoes, down the dirt road to his house. The boys’
mother, Barbara, who’d always made me nervous with her own reckless behavior
and unpredictable morality, hugged Emily and me. I wanted to be an adult, to
make a real apology, but I could scarcely bring myself to whisper, Sorry, into her hair, messy from sleep.
Spencer’s dad, Steve, had called the police from their home phone when Skylar
arrived, and he instructed me to get anything we wanted out of the car. Maps,
registration, and a safety kit were all Mom kept in her vehicle. Both of
Spencer’s parents wore oversized t-shirts and plaid lounge pants. I was so
embarrassed I could hardly speak. Barb left us with the ruined Escape to wait
for the police, and drove to our house to wake Mom and bring her to us. I later
found out that Barb had to go in through our unlocked door and roust Mom out of
bed; she was sleeping so deeply she didn’t hear Barb knocking—that’s how much
she trusted me. I wouldn’t have been caught even if we’d gotten in late.
I didn’t know what to expect in Mom’s reaction, but was
numb and ready for anything. She ran toward my sister and me, wearing a
nightgown and her work boots, glasses and no make-up. She pulled each of us to
her chest, thanking God that we weren’t hurt, and I realized she knew the
accident was a better punishment than anything she could’ve come up with.
The police arrived and interrogated me. I didn’t know
how fast I’d been going, only that it was too fast. I hadn’t been drinking, I
was just stupid. The vehicle had rolled more than once before it stopped. They
issued me a ticket for “driving too fast for conditions” and made it a point to
tell me how charitable they were being for not giving me one for “reckless
driving.” They made a few condescending comments about how the middle of
nowhere was a bad place to get in an accident. It had gotten cold enough that
the humidity turned to dew, coating the wrecked car in tiny droplets, leaving
goose bumps on my bare arms.
While the cops were scolding me, Steven pulled up with
his girlfriend of the moment, coming back home from town. His jaw dropped as he
went past the wreckage and the cops, but there was also a smirk in his wide
eyes, the same color as Spencer’s. He and his red-headed girlfriend, Erin, the
two most popular, well-liked and well-hated seniors at our high school, joined
the gathering crowd. Party at two a.m., corner of nowhere and the swamp. Before
Spencer, I would’ve hated them both, but post-love I just envied their
freedom—Steven had a car so they could have sex and drive places—and the way
their age made their relationship seem legit.
One of the cops was a tall, blonde woman. Steven made a
show of looking her up and down, clearly pleased with what he saw. He elbowed
his father in the ribs and nodded his head in her direction. Of course I
couldn’t get a fat, ugly cop—I had to endure the humiliation of having Officer
Barbie chastise me for my sins, Steven making obscene gestures in the
background. I almost felt bad for her.
Did we know what would’ve happened if we’d crashed on the other side of
the dirt road? Of course we did. You
all would’ve had to be airlifted to the U of M hospital. The SUV would’ve
wrapped around the trees like I wrapped myself around Spencer. The swamp
would’ve sucked us in.
Policewoman Barbie and
her average-Joe partner told Mom the car was totaled. There was no saving it.
Out in the wild staring at the wreck, being eaten alive by insects of all
kinds, I couldn’t think about logistics—not in swampland. Standing on the dirt
road, I thought about death, what it meant to kill someone else accidently. I
thought about the phrase “love kills”— how ironic that we’d been watching Sid and Nancy before we went veering off
the dusty path. Barbara gave Mom, Emily, and me a ride home. Once I was inside
a civilized house with lights and indoor plumbing and screens on the windows to
keep the bugs out, I thought about logistics. I thought about how Mom would get
to work, if she could afford a new car, the inevitable spike in insurance
premiums. These things caused me the most guilt because, no matter how much
luck it had taken, none of us were hurt. It was the real-life shit, most of
which would fall on the shoulders of my tired mother, that would matter.
I asked Emily if she’d
sleep in my bed with me. I was scared and didn’t know how to apologize. She
wrinkled her nose at first, then agreed. I was scared about how Dad would react
when he found out. I was scared that Spencer’s parents would hate me and not
let us see each other. I was scared that my mom would decide Spencer was a bad
influence and not let us see each other. Spencer could kiss me and hold my face
and whisper soothing things, but he couldn’t erase the dead bodies or broken
cars that our recklessness might cause. Reality turned the selfish magic of
love into selfish idiocy; I should’ve known better and I knew it. It scared me
that my obsession with Spencer could make me do something so stupid, so out of
character. I’d been responsible until he came and stole my attention. It scared
me that the recklessness he coaxed out of me might’ve been what I loved about
him. When I awoke the next morning, for an instant, I thought I’d dreamed the
accident. A cool breeze carried no scent of mud through my open window, and I
wrapped the comforter around my shoulders. Then my little sister, whom I’d
almost killed, stirred next to me and I knew it was true, true, true.
Blood on the Tracks
A Collection of Seven
Linked Short-Stories
Lily, Rosemary, and
the Jack of Hearts
I’d thought staying at
home with Ray—going to community college even though I had the grades for
Ivies, taking art classes because that’s what he wanted to do—would finally
push us together, as if the years we’d known each other were like gravity and
eventually, if I waited long enough, the force would add up.
But when Sarah walked in
late to our first painting class at Jackson Community College, the only
institution of higher education within an hour of where Ray and I grew up, she
crushed four years’ worth of dreaming under the heels of her studded combat
boots. She wore black jeans and a scruffy fur coat over a white crop top. She
smelled like cigarettes. She painted her nails black. She was a bad-ass. She
sat in front of us in the only seat available and Ray stared at the back of her
head with such intensity, if the back of her head had clothes on, his eyes
would’ve torn them off. Her hair was dyed black and unwashed, with bangs that
hung in her eyes. I became invisible.
The next week Ray set
his bag on the chair to his other side, the one where I wasn’t sitting. Just as
he’d planned, Sarah had to sit next to him when she finally showed up, because
the other seats were all full. In comparison to her, everything about me looked
worse. She probably weighed a hundred pounds soaking wet, which made me look
obese instead of just curvy. Her milky-white skin made my acne seem redder. Her
giant green eyes accented with black eyeliner made my muddy brown ones look
smaller, my refusal to wear make-up more immature. Her waist-length black hair
was messy in a good way, in a sexy bed-head way. My hair was bobbed, a cut that
maybe could’ve been flattering if I’d ever bothered to style it. Even my
D-cups, which I’d previously been proud of, which had previously been the only
feature I ever attempted to accentuate, now just seemed like extra fat. She
pulled the flat-chested, waify, visible rib-cage thing off really well.
Ray and I painted next to her in studio. It didn’t help
that she was actually good, with her primitive lines that reminded me of
Picasso. While Ray and I painted impressionism landscapes or dirty cities she
was doing weird abstraction. Ray and I liked painting, but were really just
taking art classes because they were easy. Sarah was the only person in our
class who actually seemed to care, who actually stayed after to finish
projects. When she lifted her arm in a particularly passionate brush stroke,
her signature midriff-baring paint-stained t-shirt lifted to reveal a tattoo on
her ribs: tangled up in blue written
in cursive. I knew Ray noticed too. He stared her down, memorizing the nicotine
stains between her fingers, her furrowed brow, how her flesh fit on top of her
bones. Following his gaze, I did the same.
Sarah looked like you
could light a match on her skin.
Like if you talked to
her wrong she’d dump gasoline on you and light you ablaze.
She was hot.
I scrambled for my best
friend slipping through my fingers. I’d make a joke and elbow him in the ribs
while we waited for class to start, but in his reverie he didn’t hear me. So I
focused my attention on her, too, if only to have at least that in common with
him. We’d both know her shaky hands, her chipped nail polish, the fuzz on her
lower back. I had memorized Ray in this way already. I knew his large, flat
hands, fingernails chewed down to the cuticles. I knew his blue-green eyes. I
knew his chipped tooth from where a childhood friend had accidentally shot him
in the mouth with an Air-Soft gun. I knew his lithe torso and sinewy arms. I liked
watching Sarah, too, imagining what it would be like to be like her.
For some reason, Sarah wanted to be friends with me. She
approached Ray and me as a unit mostly. She forced him to remember I was still
there, sometimes. At first, I thought she was just trying to be polite. Later,
a few weeks after we met, she forced me to pile into the trash heap in the
front seat of her enormous, ancient green Lincoln during a break between
classes to go pick up tampons and have “girl time,” she explained to Ray. She
tossed him (he who hadn’t yet started smoking) a pack of Marlboro Menthols
saying, “We’ll be back before you finish those,” smirking behind knock-off Ray
Bans. “Tell me about yourself,” she said. “Is he your brother separated from
birth or what?” I could tell she was hoping this trip would push her into being
friends with Ray and I outside school. We drove past the abandoned businesses
and barren fields that covered Jackson County. Even gas stations were few and
far between. It’s hard to keep a business running when there’s no one there to
buy anything.
“We’re bros,” I
responded. “We went to high school together.” She drove too fast, without the
confident handling of an experienced driver. “He’s crazy about you, you know.”
“I get that a lot,” she
replied. She was so deeply sarcastic that she didn’t say sarcastic things in
the right voice. She said them straight. It would’ve been easy to misread her.
When we got back, just
in time for painting, Ray hadn’t smoked any of the cigarettes, but I was sure
he’d looked at them, jealously. They had being in her mouth to look forward to.
I think Sarah was glad to have found a couple of possible friends. But all I
could feel was the tension between her and Ray. Now I realize she could’ve
slept with him without even speaking to me, without asking my permission, but
at the time I thought she was courting both of us because she had to go through
me to get to him. In painting class that day, she didn’t squeal when Ray wiped
a wet brush, heavy with toxic-smelling oil paint, across her bare stomach.
“Jackass,” she
muttered under her breath.
“Sarah, you got a little something on you. Do you need
me to wipe it off?” Ray and I stared at that flat, flat stomach.
“Fuck off,” she responded, glaring, holding the gaze for
a few seconds too long. A couple of our twelve or so other classmates could’ve
seen, but if they did they’d gone back to painting white-tailed deer or
four-wheelers and talking about sports or how wasted they got last weekend. I
wondered if anyone else in the class really noticed them. I wondered what this
would mean for me.
The next week she got him back, sneaking up behind and
painting a white skunk-streak through the middle of his dark hair with acrylic.
We didn’t have much adult supervision. The professor would stick around for ten
minutes of the three hour period, then disappear to the teacher’s lounge or
play Farmville in the computer lab. The next week Ray painted his hands red and
grabbed her waist from behind. “Great, now it looks like you hit me. I don’t
let people hit me without hitting them back.”
“That or we had some really hot sex.” He smirked at her,
memorizing the pores on her nose, her narrowed, angry eyes. My own heart was
racing, watching them.
“Get a fucking grip.” She wiped the handprints off with
a cold, wet paper towel that made goose bumps rise on her torso.
I could see Ray molding
himself into the kind of guy Sarah would date, although I admittedly knew
nothing about her past. His jeans got dirtier, shredded. He wore only black
t-shirts and grey wife beaters. They spent a lot of time in class glaring at
each other hatefully. He had her with the glob of cold paint smeared above her
belly button, a gesture like an animal marking his territory. I think she
admired that he had the balls to do something that was both really silly and
incredibly sexual in front of the whole class. But despite his charisma, Sarah
was still way out of Ray’s league. He had pouty, movie-star lips, but his teeth
were crooked. He was a lot of fun to be around, but wasn’t very smart. Ray was
six-three and skinny as a flag pole, the kind of guy that would hold the door
for you without thinking about it. His laugh was contagious even though his
sense of humor was a bit idiotic. I was frequently baffled by the confidence
with which he carried himself; where did that come from and where can I get
some?
One morning Ray called to tell me he’d gone to campus
early and couldn’t give me a ride. I was used to him being unreliable, but not
for getting to class early. I drove the red pick-up I used to share with my
sister and found them in the parking lot, sitting in Sarah’s car, smoking. He’d
come with her. His pathetic little white Malibu wasn’t there. It was ten a.m.
My heart sank, and my mouth watered with nausea. I shouldn’t have gotten so
upset; it wasn’t like I hadn’t seen it coming. I considered turning around and
going home, but he spotted me in the rearview mirror and stuck his head out the
passenger window, waving. He’d dyed his hair turquoise. Sarah hadn’t put on any
make-up and she looked drowsy.
She and I sat on either side of Ray in painting class
and I imagined them fucking for the entire three-hour class period. I was
turned on and pissed off. I saw him try to hold her hand under the desk, but
she refused and he settled for resting the hand on her thigh. After class Ray
hastily explained that he had to go with Sarah to get his car and he’d see me
later. She covered her face with her hair and lit a cigarette from between
raven tendrils. I couldn’t even grunt “fine” like I wanted to. I said “ok” in
my disgustingly cheerful voice and she handed him a cig from her pack.
That night I imagined
all the sex they were having at that very moment. I thought Ray would be gentle
in bed. He’d want to kiss her and look into her eyes the whole time. He’d run
his hands through her long hair, but he wouldn’t tug it. He might kiss her neck
a little, but he wouldn’t bite her. This kind of white-washed, honeymoon,
romance-movie sex is all a virgin has to imagine. I masturbated, cried, and
fell asleep.
The real insult, I
figured out after co-existing with them awhile, was that she looked like my
older sister. Kate had gone away to school and I thought I was rid of that
particular type of female presence, the horrifically beautiful girl that made
me worthless, see-through. If Kate started listening to punk, smoked
cigarettes, and became anorexic they could’ve been twins. They had the same
long dark hair and pale green eyes. I spent as much time with Sarah as I had
with Kate, hanging out with her constantly when she and Ray weren’t too busy
doing boyfriend-girlfriend things, inviting her to my house for dinner because
I felt bad that her parents were divorced and she had to cook for herself. As I
let Sarah get closer to me, I decided I was a masochist. My man-friend,
guy’s-girl façade was nothing to her brand of recklessness.
So, much to my chagrin,
Ray and Sarah became my best friends. Emphasis on the plural. It had never
occurred to me that I could make new friends at college. When you’re from the
middle of nowhere you kind of have to take what you can get. In Jackson the
worse the economy got, the more people seemed to disappear. We graduated high
school with roughly fifty red-neck losers and most of them went to JCC as well.
There were some new faces at the community college, but it was mostly people
we’d graduated with, plus the least ambitious graduates of surrounding high
schools, plus some old people that had decided to go back to school. Making new
friends isn’t the goal of anyone who stays at home and goes to community
college. Keeping your old friends is. Sarah didn’t have any old friends to
cling to because she’d just moved to Jackson County with her mother from
somewhere up north. The only time she mentioned her high school was when I
complained about all the hicks Ray and I went to school with. “You think that’s
bad,” she’d say, “You should see the people in my high school. Half of them
were illiterate and the other half couldn’t read.” She said things like that,
phrases and jokes that reminded me of old movies. We bonded over a shared
disgust with our community.
Eventually, Ray didn’t exist without Sarah anymore. It
got to the point that, when Ray was working his part-time job at Hot Topic,
Sarah and I hung out without him. At first I thought it was weird, but then I
saw how happy it made Ray that he could have his cake and eat it too, that he
could have the sexy girlfriend every guy dreams of having without the guilt of
losing his best female friend that’s closeted in love with him. Sarah was
oblivious. She’d never had many boyfriends to guard and didn’t know to be
suspicious of me. Sarah spent a lot more time reading and a lot less time going
to punk shows than I’d imagined. She bought what I told her, hook, line, and
sinker.
“Me and Ray are like
best friends,” I said when she asked about our past one day over hot cocoa
(with skim milk, she insisted) at my house. “We’ve known each other forever.”
“But did you ever go
out? In high school I mean?” I could tell what she meant to say was, how could you not be attracted to him?
“No way, that would be
totally weird. We’re like man friends.” I talked frequently about the
importance of friendship over sex and she just sat there, nodding into her mug.
I wanted her to know she would lose if Ray had to choose between us, even if I
wasn’t so sure. She didn’t tell me to fuck off—just sat until one of us changed
the subject.
Sometimes, Ray would
call Sarah after work and be too tired to come meet her at my place. “That’s
cool, I’ll just hang out with Melanie and her family. Get some rest. I love
you, too,” she’d say. He always said “I love you” before she did. Then we’d
look at fashion magazines and drink coffee. I would stand outside on the patio
with her while she smoked no matter how cold it was, wondering how something
that smells so bad could be enjoyable. We’d joke about stupid things Ray had
done and Sarah would ask my advice if she thought something was wrong.
Sometimes, I’d have to coax it out of her when she was particularly sullen.
“What’s your deal,
Sarah? You’ve barely said a word all day.” It bugged me that she could have
Ray, who turned out to be an even better boyfriend than I’d imagined he would
be, and still have these constant mood swings. He liked her that way, though.
He liked that she was unpredictable. She stayed silent for a minute, picking at
her cuticles and twisting snarls into her hair, but I could usually get her to
talk.
“I’m fine.”
“You know what ‘fine’ stands
for? Freaked out, Insecure, Neurotic, and Emotional.” She gave me a look that
said where the hell did you read that?
“Fine. Me and Ray got in
a fight yesterday. I was supposed to stay over at his house, but I left because
his mom was acting like a psycho and he was just defending her.”
“What was she doing?”
Sarah peered at me from behind her black curtain of hair. Ray rarely talked
about his parents’ divorce. He’d give me one-word answers until I got so
frustrated I’d stopped asking. I’d known his family briefly, they seemed normal
enough to me, but after his parents split up he stopped inviting me over and
started showing up at my place unannounced, until he almost lived with us. I
knew things with his mom had been getting ugly.
“It’s really fucked up,
Melanie.” Sarah told me Ray’s mom was popping pills like there was no tomorrow.
Sarah told me Ray’s mom was still sleeping with Ray’s dad, and several other
guys. Sarah told me she didn’t want to do another divorce. “And Ray just
doesn’t think it’s a big deal,” she said, after spilling it all. “His mom is a
fucking disgusting whore.”
“Ray’s mom is a good
person, Sarah, she’s just confused right now. And you can’t just say shit like
that to Ray. He loves his mom. He knew her before she acted like this and
that’s the mom he loves.” My voice was sticky-sweet. I thought I was going to
believe what I said, but once the words hit the air, they mutated. I reached
over and pushed her hair out of her face, behind her ear, as I’d seen Ray do.
“I guess,” she said, defeated. I knew Ray ragged on her
for being pessimistic, so I liked to point out when she was being cynical. I
don’t know why she listened to me. It could’ve been because by that point it
would’ve been difficult for her to date Ray and not be friends with me. It
could’ve been because Ray and I both told her she was a pessimist and so she
started to believe it. I never figured it out. The ability I had to make Sarah
question and doubt even her strongest gut instincts made me feel powerful, but
I still thought I was doing the right thing. I thought turning her around on
herself, encouraging her to be optimistic to the point of delusion, was me
being a good person. She listened to me tell her how to be a good girlfriend
even though I’d never been one.
“Do you wanna spend the
night here? My mom’s making clam chowder and beer bread for dinner.”
“Thanks, Mel. That
sounds great.” The dark cloud still floated around in her head, but it cleared
for moments when she was given warm food, when she asked Mom and Dad about
their boring days. My parents always loved fostering and feeding my
broken-family friends.
That
night, the first time she slept over, I couldn’t believe she’d agreed to it.
“Where should I sleep?”
she asked, after my parents had gone to bed.
“Just sleep in my bed,
with me. It’s no big deal, I have a queen-size.” I was so surprised by my own
response, my blood thumped in my ears. I was certain she’d say no and make some
excuse to leave. Was I really trying to sleep with Ray’s girlfriend?
“All right,” she said,
hesitantly. “I’m just gonna wash my face, can I use your stuff?”
She pulled her hair back
when she slept. I watched the tendons shifting in her white neck when she lay
down on the other side of the bed. We said goodnight and I turned off the lamp
on the bedside table. She smelled delicious, like perfume and toothpaste. I lay
stiff as a corpse, trying not to move while my heart was leaping out of my
chest, feigning sleep. Eventually, I must’ve drifted off, because I awoke
startled from dream in which I’d been kissing Ray, with my eyes closed. His
hair seemed to grow longer and longer, until my hands were stuck in it, and in
the dream I opened my eyes to Sarah staring back at me.
Sarah woke up long before me in the morning. She didn’t
seem to sleep very much, but I made her promise me she’d work on it. By the
time I dragged myself out of bed she was dressed, had her make-up on, and was
nursing a cup of coffee.
“You shouldn’t drink so
much coffee when you can hardly sleep,” I said while she drove us to JCC’s
campus. “What does Ray say about it?”
“He passes out the
second his head hits the pillow. I just lay there with him for a few minutes,
then crawl out of bed and read or paint or watch TV and he’s never the wiser.
His snoring keeps me up even when I feel like I can sleep.” We both laughed. I
thought about Ray telling me how much he loved to sleep next to her and laughed
harder.
Ray met us at JCC before
class and they kissed for longer than I thought was appropriate for a public place,
his hands roving through her messy hair. They smiled at each other with
ridiculous joy, happiness that I’d never seen in Ray before. In high school,
his most common emotions were apathy and mildly entertained. “Careful, you
guys, you’re gonna ruin your tough image,” I’d tell them.
They joined my family
for Thanksgiving. It was Sarah’s idea. She was sick of hurting the feelings of
whichever parent she didn’t have Thanksgiving dinner with. Ray was reluctant.
He didn’t want to piss off his mom. “You know what? Thanksgiving is for eating
and being around people you like, so I’m gonna be here, not with my parents or
your parents who would just make me projectile vomit my turkey. You can do what
you want,” she told him when he protested. Ray caved and convinced his mom to
go visit her family without him. Kate was coming home, which made me nervous
because somehow she always seemed to know what I was thinking. We were kind of
like twins in that way. We didn’t get along, but we could sense each other’s motives.
She knew how I felt about Ray without me ever telling her and she’d know about
Sarah, too.
Dinner was painless at
first. Kate wore a cocktail dress and was mostly silent. Sarah and Ray sported
their usual punk-band t-shirts. I introduced Kate and Sarah, and caught Kate
rolling her eyes at my mother while putting finishing touches on the green bean
casserole. Where’d she find this one and
when’d Ray start dressing like that? her look said.
“That’s Ray’s new girlfriend?” she whispered after
calling me into the kitchen to help her and Mom. What she meant was, you think you can compete with that?
“She’s cute, but she looks like she’s on drugs or something. And I don’t really
think he needs a girlfriend with no family.”
“She’s not on drugs, she
just doesn’t sleep much.” Kate knew everything I felt about Ray, and now she
was trying to be nice. Everyone else said Ray and Sarah made a great couple.
Kate’s skepticism felt better than it should have.
Ray and Kate had barely acknowledged each other in their
entire lives, despite the fact that he spent almost more time at our house than
at his own during high school. Ray thought Kate was a bitch, because of what
I’d told him about her, because she was an ice queen. Kate was more beautiful
than Sarah—I could see it now with them in the same room. Sarah had dark
circles under her eyes, her cheeks were sunken, and she really needed to wash
her hair. Still, Ray’d never shown any interest in Kate and maybe that’s part
of what made me love him. He didn’t watch her like he watched Sarah, not even
for a second, and I would’ve noticed.
Sarah picked at the holes in her shirt while my parents
said grace, and then we loaded our plates and feasted like good Americans. My
parents asked the usual questions, how’s school going, what’re your plans after
graduating. Ray, Kate, and I all responded with one word answers. Sarah was the
only one who told them what they wanted to hear, either because she was
grateful my parents let her and Ray join us or because she was the only one of us
who actually had plans.
“Well, after I finish up
here, I wanna transfer. Probably to Eastern or Western. I think I could get in
to the art schools there. But I really wanna move away and get my own place.
Then I could go to grad school maybe,” Sarah said through mouthfuls. Ray stared
blankly ahead. I knew Ray didn’t know what Sarah’s future plans would mean for
them, but it seemed too far away for any of us to think about.
“Oh, that sounds great!”
Mom said, too enthusiastically, happy that one of the young adults at the table
had goals. Dad grunted his approval, which was more than I could usually get
out of him.
Kate didn’t even do
anything mean until dessert. We were almost friends. Neither of us wanted to
talk about school, neither of us thought Sarah was right for Ray. But, when I
reached for a second slice of pecan pie, after Ray and Sarah had both eaten
two, Kate sighed at me. “Melanie, do you really think you should have that?”
“Kate, leave her alone.
It’s Thanksgiving,” my mom defended me, albeit softly. When Kate and I fought,
my mom just got quiet and embarrassed until it was over.
“Ok, Mom, but you’re the
one who talked to me about her needing to lose weight over the summer and now
she’s just gorging herself.” Mom was trying to be quiet, but our large kitchen
wasn’t big enough that Sarah and Ray couldn’t hear us across it. Noticing the
uncomfortable silence directed at her, Kate excused herself to go study,
leaving the dishes for Mom.
“What’s your problem? Maybe if you ate more you wouldn’t
be so grumpy,” Ray called after her. She’d started climbing the stairs, but she
heard him, pausing, then stomping harder and slamming her door. He was
censoring himself in front of my mother. My heart soared. I actually laughed
when he said “grumpy.” Ray continued eating while Sarah picked at the edges of
the cotton tablecloth. I sat down across from them without the extra pie, and
pretended to blow the whole thing off.
“Sorry, you guys. She’s
such a bitch. I don’t know what her problem is.”
“God, that was totally
rude. She isn’t exactly a size two, herself.” Sarah said. She wasn’t gloating
when she said things like that. Much to my confusion, she sometimes said she
wished she could put on some weight. It’s possible she said things like that to
be nice to me. It’s also possible she believed she could use some more flesh to
weigh her down, to hold her shakes still.
“You’re the best,” I
told Ray, and we high-fived.
“I know, I get that a
lot,” he said, wiping the whipped cream from his plate and sucking it off his
finger.
When months turned into
a year, then a year and a half, I told myself I’d given up. Ray and I would
never be anything other than friends. Sarah stuck around for longer than I’d
thought she would. Spring break of our second year at JCC—the semester Sarah
would be getting her associate’s degree but Ray and I, with our refusal to take
pre-requisites, wouldn’t—Sarah took a trip to Seattle to visit an aunt. It
would be the longest they’d been apart since they met. Sarah was ecstatic;
she’d never been anywhere, she said. This aunt was not really her aunt, just a
friend of her mother, but she had a home on a lake right outside Seattle, a
place that Sarah said had the perfect weather. She hated the sun. Ray was
apprehensive. Mostly he wondered what he was going to do with his time for an
entire week besides play video games, but she’d also mentioned looking at
schools while she was there.
I couldn’t wait to do things with Ray without her. Even
if I just ended up sitting on his couch watching him play Halo, at least she
wouldn’t be there. He called me every day that week, and I felt like we were in
high school, before Sarah ever existed. We played video games together, watched
superhero cartoons that Sarah hated, and drove into Jackson to hang out at
Denny’s, where we drank coffee for hours and made fun of the customers,
imagining the pathetic stories of their lives. Denny’s was one of the only
places young people in Jackson could congregate, and it only cost two bucks for
unlimited coffee. Getting Ray to myself again made me realize how much I missed
him, and I dreaded Sarah’s return. I thought about the time in high school that
we’d had an anti-Valentine’s Day party at my house, just the two of us. I baked
cookies shaped like weapons instead of hearts and we frosted them together with
black and red icing. We watched violent comic-book movies. We made each other
little cards that said things like “Your breath smells” and “You have no
morals.” I thought we were so clever.
“Only three days ‘til
she gets back!” Ray exclaimed upon opening the door to his mom’s latest
dilapidated apartment for me that Wednesday, bursting my bubble.
“Yeah,” I replied, more
cheerfully than I’d wanted to. “Unless she met some hot grunge boy and decided
never to come back. Glad to see you, too.” His glare was more angry and less
playful than it should’ve been.
“I found my other
controller, so we can actually play together this time.”
I watched the familiar
way his long spine slumped with terrible posture, the familiar way his t-shirt
clung to his broad shoulders, the familiar way his mouth hung open when he was
concentrating, and adored all of it. I kept losing, dying, from watching him
instead of the TV. Then I knew I couldn’t take it anymore. I couldn’t take
their public make-out sessions, I couldn’t take trying to patch up their
arguments, I couldn’t take her beauty. Something was going to give, and it
wasn’t gonna be pretty.
After playing Halo for
three hours my brain felt like it was going to melt out my ears and finally he
said something. “It’s weird.”
“What?” I knew he was
about to be earnest because the only time he couldn’t articulate was when he
wanted to say something important.
“This is gonna sound
crazy, but I can smell her. I swear I can smell her on me, like she took my old
smell and switched it with her smell. It’s really weird.”
“Um, ok. Not sure how to
respond to that. Are you sure she didn’t just spray her perfume on all your
stuff to mark her territory?”
“No, it’s not her
perfume smell, it’s her smell-smell. Sorry, you haven’t had, like, a boyfriend
before, so I guess you wouldn’t get it.” My heart raced at the insult and
instantly I was on the verge of tears. I imagined that was how Sarah felt when
I flaunted my knowledge about Ray, and I realized how cruel I was being to her.
I threw my controller on the carpet next to Ray. “Mel? What the hell?”
“Do you ever think,
maybe, I don’t wanna talk about her all the time?” Usually when I snapped at
him, I received a surprised blank stare. This time his eyes narrowed,
comprehending.
What that comprehending
could’ve meant! He finally knew. I wanted him to pull me into his lap, facing
him on the floor. The abandoned video game noises would’ve been drowned out by
our kissing, the blood rushing past our ears. His hands would be firm. I would
finally get to touch that spine, whose arc I could recognize anywhere. He’d lay
me down underneath him on the carpet and we’d hold hands with our arms
stretched above our heads, chests pressing together. And I’d get to be more
like Sarah. My hair would be long and my waist would be narrow. I’d have her
knowledge of him. I’d know how he liked to be kissed, whether he liked whispered
endearments or silence. Maybe he wouldn’t be as gentle as I’d imagined. Maybe
he would pull my long, long hair and bite the tendons in my thin, white neck.
And maybe he would want me to dig my black-painted fingernails into his back.
From the floor, he’d carry me easily, as if I were weightless, into his room,
where he’d lay me on his bed and kiss the tattoo under my breast. What that
comprehending could’ve meant.
You’re a Big Girl Now
My older sister was and
still is much more attractive than I am. Unnaturally so. Siblings are supposed
to have some kind of similarity, whether it be in their faces or bodies or way
of moving, but for Kate and me there’s nothing.
Kate has long, dark
curly hair, a milky white complexion, perfectly arched brows, bee-stung lips,
and the kind of hourglass figure that makes fat people like me unable to call
themselves hourglass as a way to avoid that more unpleasant but still fake
word—curvy. Her natural beauty would’ve been bad enough to live with, but on
top of it she’s a slave to the gods of fashion and make-up, Glamour and Vanity Fair. She never had that middle-school phase where you draw
big circles around your eyes with eyeliner and wipe mascara across your lids on
accident and are still too afraid of eyelash curlers. It was as if she was born
with an innate knowledge of every beauty routine.
She is perfect. And I’m
her ugly sister.
When we were young, I
cultivated a tom-boyish attitude in response, arising at the very last second
before I needed to leave for school, never wearing make-up, doing my hair, or
plucking my eyebrows. Any attempt at those things and I would just have been
more pathetic, my failure to compare would’ve been more obvious. I adopted a
carefree, guy’s-girl type demeanor stolen from a Mary-Kate and Ashley straight
to VHS flick that I thought would make me appealing to the opposite sex because
it seemed to work in romantic comedies.
Kate’s an ice-queen.
People regard her as if she’s too beautiful to exist and they let her get away
with anything. In high school she wasn’t popular with guys, though. Guys went
for the slutty cheerleaders because Kate was unattainable, perfect and closed
as a sphere. Kate likes to read Victorian romances, plays flute, paints still
lifes, and is overall exasperatingly feminine. So much so that back then even
her love of fishing seemed womanly, the way she held the reel and focused her
shadowed eyes, flinging long tendrils of dark hair over her shoulder. She never
had a lot of boyfriends, but I bet a lot of guys have masturbated while
thinking about her.
One of the things that
drew me to Ray was that he didn’t seem too intimidated or even very mindful of
my sister’s beauty, and maybe that’s why I’ve never been able to shake him.
Every guy I sleep with now I think, if he knew Kate, he’d realize how inferior
I am, he’d realize what he’s missing. Maybe Ray wasn’t affected by Kate because
she was three years older than us, which in high school made her out of reach
due to age alone, but also I think it was because her beauty was like some
Greek statue. She was nice to look at, but it would’ve hard to imagine sex with
her was even possible.
Kate’s smart, but not as
smart as me. I solved high school calculus problems in my head with the same
simplicity as our mother washing and stacking dishes, cleanly and quickly
without much effort. Kate could stare at the same problem for days and still
see only numbers. She looked the way the harpies in Dante look, as Sarah later
explained to me—beautiful and furious and more dangerous for their beauty.
One afternoon I came
downstairs on my way to go to a movie with Ray. In the process of becoming his
best friend I had destroyed any desire he might ever have had to date me. This
was something of a relief because ugly girls with boyfriends are always kind of
a bad joke. Kate of course knew how I felt about Ray. We have the twin-like
ability to intuit what the other’s thinking and even get sympathy headaches. We
used to be friends, kind of. When we were kids, she was still cuter than me,
but she let me fish with her. I feel like we could still be that way, if I
could only decipher what how she wanted me to be.
Kate sat at the white kitchen table, organizing her
tackle box, fingering the flies, delicate and sharp. “Is that what you’re
wearing?” She glanced at me, then back at her work. At that moment, I was
certain if I got close enough to feel her breath it would be cold. I stood in
front of her, imagined my waist and thighs ballooning, my acne reddening, the
dark hair on my flabby arms growing thicker. I was good at math, but she could
do magic.
I hid in the bathroom,
crying into the mirror, when Ray showed up to get me.
“I don’t think she’s
coming,” Kate told Ray when he knocked and entered, as I listened from under the
bathroom door. “I just tried to give her advice on what to wear and now she’s
all upset.” I could picture her, at the white kitchen table, fishing flies that
never cut her fingers spread before her. I could picture Ray, standing there,
teenage boy wondering what to do. I knew he knew she was beautiful. But, like
the boys who she wished would like her, he dismissed her. Advertisements don’t
want us to know, there is such a thing as being too beautiful.
“Uh, I guess I’ll wait
then?” he asked. Something about Kate makes people to speak to her hesitantly,
as if only she could know the right answer.
“Suit yourself.” It
certainly annoyed her that he didn’t just leave. I hid, waiting for him to go,
wondering why I didn’t just open the door and come out. Ray never noticed what
I looked like, and I wondered if that was good or bad.
I waited there until the
movie would’ve been over and he left.
Simple Twist of Fate
When Sarah finally left,
I knew I was on my last chance. Her desire to leave Jackson County and make
something of herself confused Ray, which frustrated her, which left them unable
to communicate. In the few weeks before she left for college in Ypsilanti
everything fizzled out. The sexy, hateful staring that had begun their
courtship disappeared. They spent less time staring at each other and more time
cutting sarcastic remarks, him slashing her hopeless ambition, her slashing his
laziness. I watched my best friends chopping each other down and waited.
Sarah suddenly had more important things to do than
drink coffee at Denny’s after class with me and Ray. “If you wanna hang out,
you just have to come with me to the library. I have shit to do,” she’d say to
Ray, who never studied. The library was a new habit for Sarah. Her new habits,
developed in the face of university applications and graduation from community
college, replaced the ones she and Ray had cultivated together. I stood and
watched and in their frustration they ignored me. I was a voyeur to their
arguments like I’d been a voyeur to their courtship.
“I don’t really wanna go
to the library, Sarah, ok? I’ll just go home or hang out with Melanie.”
“Fine, have fun getting
nothing accomplished. Apparently you guys are immune to boredom or something.
You never fucking do anything.”
“What’d you want from
me?”
“Don’t worry, I know
better than to ask.” Then she’d storm off, and Ray would remember I was there.
I decided the first
thing I needed to do was console Ray, and give good advice while I was at it. I
needed to be authoritative. I got a subscription to Psychology Today, which was full of words and data to use when you
want someone to think you’re right about something. My parents hoped I was
thinking about becoming a therapist. They wanted me to do something that could
give me a future after finishing my associate’s in art and design, which I was
only doing because it was what Ray wanted to do after we graduated high school.
I remember walking arm in arm with him down the gymnasium aisle in our hideous
purple robes and square graduation caps. His hair was ash brown and short then,
instead of turquoise and messy. Ray had been a head taller than me since I’d
known him. He strode through the gym towards our diplomas as I stumbled after, taking
two steps for each of his. Instead of
thinking about how I’d never have to return to that bullshit high school with
its total student body of eight hundred redneck kids who weren’t learning
anything, I thought, now, now, it’ll
finally be now. But when malnourished, tattooed Sarah stomped into our
first painting class sporting combat boots and unwashed black hair, my plans
were derailed.
On the days Ray and
Sarah were fighting, he and I went to the mall or drank hot cocoa at my house
alone together. I hadn’t had him to myself since we’d started college, since
Sarah and her mood swings took up all his attention. I told him it was good for
them to be apart so they could figure out what they wanted. I actually started
to think that Ray dating Sarah for those two long years was good. He would now
be properly heartbroken, feeling what I’d felt watching them collide, and he’d
have to turn to me, his best friend, for support. In those couple weeks before she
left, Sarah acted suspicious at first. The more shit Ray did to piss her off,
the more she tried to ignore me. Oh boy,
she thinks we’re sleeping together already, I thought. I clung to anything
that would make her look irrational. I thought I would need to present it as
evidence. I was young and bored and had nothing else to do with my energy than
try to reclaim a person who’d never belonged to me.
Cruising the country roads in my pick-up and painting
together at my parents’ kitchen table felt like a time warp back to high
school, when Sarah didn’t exist. I knew this time he was spending with me
(mostly me and my family, I’ll be honest) was causing more trouble than it was
curing, but I didn’t tell him that. Several times she called while he was at my
house, and before he ducked outside for privacy and better reception, I could
hear her screaming.
Back when we were friends, especially when I was feeling
particularly mean, I liked to remind Sarah of her place. I’d never been anything
more than a buddy to Ray, but for Sarah I created a different past, the one I
would’ve preferred to have been real. I’d talk about stories he’d told me, ones
that I knew she didn’t know, and over-emphasize their importance,
over-emphasize the fact that even though she was the one sleeping with him, I’d
known Ray longer. I told her that guys have a hard time expressing their
feelings or comprehending the significance of past events. I told her that I
was a lot like a guy and had those same problems. The more I constructed myself
as male, as one of Ray’s man friends, the more she trusted me. She’d respond
with furrowed brows, cringing as if I’d hit her. “No, he never told me that.”
And I’d say “oh” and feel like a priest, turning a meaningless tidbit of
information into something crucial. I knew this wouldn’t hurt her if she didn’t
trust me, and I knew she only trusted me because she was prettier; there was no
danger of me stealing Ray, so I shouldn’t have been threatening. My friendship
with Sarah was built on the fact that she was so much better-looking than me
that we couldn’t compete. She was out of my league.
A week before Sarah was
to move into her dorm at Eastern, I invited her and Ray over to hang out at my
house, my parents’ house, so my mom could cook for us, and we could go for a
last late-August swim before my dad closed the pool. I had the nicest house of
the three of us, and I invited Ray and Sarah over all the time. Children of
divorce, they loved my mom’s cooking, loved my parents being in the same room
without wanting to kill each other.
They were having one of their fights. I could
practically sense their arguments. It released some kind of chemical in the
air, displaced lots of molecules. You could feel it. They were waiting on the
wood deck for me to come out bearing fresh-washed towels and fresh-squeezed
lemonade, both courtesy of my mother. They didn’t stop their arguing in time
for me to pretend I hadn’t heard them, to pretend I wasn’t a topic of
discussion.
“Melanie.” Sarah turned
to me and I froze, a feeling that reminded me of Kate telling me I should watch
who I called fat after a meaningless remark I made in a McDonald’s
drive-through; Kate telling me dark colors were a better choice for me when I
wore yellow; Kate telling me if I got up an hour or two earlier and put in some
effort she’d teach me how to put on make-up. Sarah was scary when she was mad.
I pulled an expression that I hoped made me look clueless. “Don’t you fucking
play dumb with me.” She bared her teeth like a predator. She wore nothing but a
black bikini and I could tell that she’d lost weight. Her ribs were heaving.
“What’re you talking
about?” I tried to sound defensive. Ray stood there like a deaf and dumb idiot,
with a slack-jawed expression, as if he didn’t have any control over this impending
doom.
“Don’t fucking play dumb
with me. You really think I wouldn’t know? Did you really think I wasn’t gonna
figure it out?” She turned to Ray and shoved him into the deck railing. “You
want her more than me, you fucking jackass? What the fuck is wrong with you
two?” She started crying and looked so, so thin, her spine jutting out like she
was some kind of dinosaur. For once I wasn’t self-conscious about the fatty
bulges in my one-piece. She left, taking Ray’s car and leaving her clothes
behind. At dinner my parents pushed food around on their plates and talked
about work. Ray and I hardly said a word to each other, and they didn’t ask
where Sarah had gone. We ignored the empty plate at the table.
By the time Ray and I actually went on our first date
Sarah was long gone.
After Sarah tornadoed in and out of my living room, the
last time I’d ever see her, I had to tell him. Ray and I were sitting on the
couch and watching cartoons, but he wasn’t paying attention. His worried
expression—wrinkled brow, lip chewing, nail biting—was new to me. Normally,
he’d sit sprawled out, leaning sideways against throw-pillows, but now he was
hunched over, head in his hands. He kept sighing and rubbing his eyes. These
were Sarah’s anxious mannerisms, not his. We heard a car pull into the
driveway, and looked at each other, confused. It was too early for my parents
to be home. The car door slammed, the sound ripe with anger, and I turned off
the TV. I knew it was Sarah. We heard her stumble up the front steps and she
threw the door open, doorknob thudding against the wall.
“What the fuck is wrong with you two?” She wasn’t
screaming, but a scary tone had entered her voice. She looked like electricity
was running through her, a live wire.
“Sarah,” Ray said, cautiously, the way you talk to
soothe injured animals. She ignored him and pounced on me, dragging me down
onto the living room carpet and shoving her cigarette into my neck.
“Who the fuck do you think you are, you fat fucking
whore? I’ll fucking kill you.” Now she was yelling, her lips touching my ear as
she held me down on the floor. She was shaky, stuttering, like a circuit
shorting out.
“Get out of my
house,” I moaned, trying to wriggle out of her grasp. Ray grabbed a fistful of
her hair and dragged her off me. I was disgusted with my own cowardice, but
finally he got to be my hero. He was saving me, just as I’d imagined he would
if it came to this, to choosing her or me. He pulled her back out the open
front door. I crawled to the window to watch them cussing and fighting in the
front yard. Sarah broke free of Ray’s grasp and lunged at him. Ray was thin,
but outweighed her by at least thirty pounds. He blocked her, shoved her away
from himself and into the pine tree next to my driveway, with more force than
he probably meant to. She landed in the grass and pine needles at the foot of
the tree and gasped for breath. She pushed herself upright, wiped her mouth on
her sleeve, and then started screaming at Ray again. “You fucking woman beating
asshole. You see this, Mel?” Sarah made eye contact with me through the window,
calling me out for the voyeur I was. “This what you want, you goddamn fucking
whore?”
He hadn’t hurt her bad enough to stop her rage, but how
much was she running on sparks of fury? Was it like how if you shoot a raging
gorilla, it can still destroy everything in its path before its body realizes its
dead? Would she have bruises tomorrow?
“Get out of here,” Ray yelled. “I can’t believe you just
hurt Melanie like that.” He came back inside, locked the door and drew the
curtains. We heard what sounded like heavy glass breaking against a car door.
Afraid she’d destroy my truck, I parted the drapes enough to peer out and saw
smashed pottery in the driveway, a dent in the red hood of my beloved pick-up.
She apparently didn’t have anything else to throw and got into her own car,
parked crookedly in my front lawn, and left. Ray was leaning against the front
door and looked nauseated.
“Ray,” I said, crying on my living room floor and
clutching the burn on my neck. “I love you. She’s known it all along. I want to
be with you. You’re my best friend.”
“You’re my best friend, too, Mel.” He got antibiotic
ointment and Band-Aids out of the bathroom cabinet and dressed my wound. The burn stung, but I was more shaken up than
injured. I’d never seen anyone so unhinged.
I think she would’ve really hurt me if Ray hadn’t been there to stop
her. I was bigger than her, but she scared me too much to fight back.
“Will you just stay here with me?” I asked when Ray
started to get up.
“Yeah, I will.” We sat next to each other on the
periwinkle carpet until my parents got home.
Ray didn’t talk to Sarah anymore after that, as far as I
knew, and I stopped feeling guilty; her violence made it too easy to justify my
behavior. I made Ray saving me from her into a declaration of love.
So we tried going to a movie together, not like we used
to, but like I wanted us to from then on. Kate wasn’t there to criticize me,
but she also wasn’t there to help me pick an outfit or put on a little makeup.
I chose a navy dress with black tights and flats. Dark colors. Don’t wear heels
if you can’t walk in them. He picked me up from home and my hands were shaking
when I slid into the passenger seat. “You look nice,” he said, and I blushed.
“Thanks.” I kept waiting for him to say something else,
looking up at him every time he cleared his throat or shifted in his seat, but
there was no conversation on the half-hour drive from the middle of nowhere to
the movie theater. I figured most people were nervous around each other on
their first date, but something of our chumminess had disappeared. We didn’t
joke about ridiculous radio commercials or stop to get candy. The cigarette
dangling from his lips could remind me of no one but Sarah. He flicked it with
his thumb so hard I was afraid it was going to fly out from between his fingers
and hit me in the face. He put his arm around me at the theater, but I felt
like the random strangers around still only thought we were friends. I felt
like an imposter.
On the ride back he said, “I had a nice time tonight,
Melanie.” Ray rarely called me by my full name.
“Me too.” When he dropped me off at home he kissed me
half-heartedly on the lips. I thought that kiss was chivalry rather than what
it really was—disinterest. I imagined our relationship wasn’t going to be all
about sex which, being a delusional virgin, was how I had decided to write off
him and Sarah. The excuse let him off clean, a blank slate for me to scribble
my future onto.
It got harder for me to maintain the charade as Ray
became more elusive. With Sarah gone I didn’t know who he was hanging out with,
but it wasn’t me. I tried to hold his hand in class a couple times, but then he
started skipping more than he ever had before. I knew our classmates were
probably wondering, scoffing, why would he leave that hot chick that
disappeared for her? I tried to
rationalize. They’re supposed to guess that I’m a better person than she is.
They’re supposed to guess that my friendship with Ray is so strong, so mutually
great, that her malnourished and visible stomach couldn’t compete, in the end.
What I miscalculated was that this moment wasn’t the end, even though Ray and I
had been so close for so many years. We were only twenty, and weren’t anywhere
near the end, and I was going to have to wait longer than I had the patience
for.
I could usually pull Ray out of wherever he was if I
invited him over to my family’s home. Sometimes I wondered if he liked my
family better than me. He even let me hold his hand in front of them, which is
the only way I could attempt to explain both my recently weird behavior and
Sarah’s sudden absence. I now realize that Ray’s only real connection to me was
that I provided the family he lost when his parents split up. I didn’t want to
just tell my parents that Ray and I were together, partly because I didn’t
completely believe it yet, and partly because I was afraid it would jinx me.
Thank God neither of my parents was home that day Sarah’s car skidded into our
driveway, fucked out of her mind on pills and jealousy. I didn’t tell them what
the burn on my neck was from and hoped they assumed it was a hickey.
So after Ray had skipped class for an entire week, I
called him. I left a message on his voicemail asking him to have dinner with my
family, coaxing him out of hiding. For some reason it didn’t occur to me that
he might be talking to, or even seeing, Sarah. The day when she tried to kill
me, when he dragged her by her hair out of my house and knocked the wind out of
her in my front yard, I didn’t see sadness or concern. I saw in his expression
that she’d finally crossed the line. She’d finally done something so crazy that
her giant green eyes and waif figure didn’t matter anymore.
He came over for chicken parmesan, salad, homemade
dinner rolls, and zucchini cake. After dessert, he sat next to me on the couch.
“Do you wanna go to a movie or Denny’s or something?” he asked, putting his arm
around my shoulders. I nodded, goose bumps rising on my arms, delirious from
affection I’d been waiting years for. “But I don’t have gas, so can we take
your car?” I nodded again. I grabbed the keys to the pick-up, and was glad it
was too late and too dark to see the dent Sarah had left on the hood. It was
also too dark to see all the vacant businesses that could no longer pay for
neon lighting in their windows we passed on the way into Jackson. It was too
dark to see the whitetail deer always lurking on the side of road, prancing
across two-lane country roads where no one drives the speed limit, crossing to
adjacent cornfields. The orange end of Ray’s cigarette lit up his face when he
inhaled. When he inhaled it wasn’t too dark for me to see him staring out the
window into the blackness. I didn’t turn onto the highway when I was supposed
to and kept cruising the snaky back roads lined with fields of corn and
soybeans.
“What’s going on with you?” I finally asked, palms
sweating on the steering wheel.
“What do you mean?” he mumbled, lighting his second
cigarette, lighter clicking.
“Please, don’t just pretend you don’t know what I’m
talking about. Things haven’t been the same. Between us I mean.” Silence. I’ve
never met anyone so difficult to talk to, so able to slide out of any
conversation as if greased with Crisco. “Would you please just talk to me, like
you used to?” Creating the past I’d wanted to have had become a compulsion.
We’d never spent much time talking about our feelings. What we talked about was
dumb movies and our high-school classmates.
More silence and then: “I don’t know what I want.
Melanie, I’m sorry, but I’m just really confused right now. I miss her.” I
focused on the flood lights attached to cow barns that we passed every quarter
mile or so just to make sure I could still drive through my tears.
“Why don’t you just give us a chance? We’ve been such
good friends for so long, we know each other so well. We should be perfect.”
“I don’t know, Melanie.”
“She fucking
tried to kill me, Ray. She’s mentally unbalanced, ok? Is that the kind of
person you want to be with? Someone who goes around burning her own friends
with cigarettes?”
Silence.
“Melanie, half the time you made her feel like shit, ok?
She said you made her feel like she was never gonna be good enough for me.”
“I made her feel like shit? You’re the one who stopped
answering her calls like a week after she left, and the few times you did pick
up you always said, ‘I’m hanging out with Mel, I’ll call you later’ and never
did. You’re a fucking liar, too.”
We went around in circles, arguing. The cabin of my
pick-up filled with words and smoke, but we didn’t get anywhere. I couldn’t
twist Ray around my finger like I had Sarah. Maybe because he was a guy. Maybe
because he was a narcissist and so had too much confidence in his own ideas.
Maybe because I worshipped him so much I couldn’t fully believe he was wrong
about anything. We ended up in the huge, empty parking lot at JCC. It was
almost midnight on a Friday, all the buildings were dark and no one was there.
I turned off the car and looked at Ray. Even with his cigarette and his faded
blue hair, I loved him so much it ached.
“Won’t you just try to be with me?” I could barely get
it out through my sobs. “I love you.”
“I love you too, Melanie.” He kissed my salty mouth for
real for the first time. My heart beat so hard I couldn’t hear anything else.
The moment felt fake, partly because I’d been imagining what it would be like
for so many years, partly because watching too many romantic comedies had made
me feel that any outpouring of emotion was cinematic, and partly because Ray
was lying to himself and to me and I knew it. He felt up my thighs under the
hem of my dress and over my black tights. He swung my body to face him, lay on
top of me across the front seats, and pressed against me so hard I thought he
might be trying to crush me. I was trying to have my big romantic moment, but
before I really knew what was going on he was yanking off my tights and
unzipping his fly and even though his tongue was in my mouth I could tell he
was crying. I was stunned, not sure if I should just go with it and let this be
my really big romantic moment or if I should insist we stop, get a condom and
do it in a bed like normal people in a legitimate relationship. I let him keep
kissing my neck and I was dizzy and it got to the point where I couldn’t really
tell if we were having sex or not and finally I shoved him off and whispered,
“Stop.”
Ray zipped up, pushed himself upright in the passenger
seat, and lit yet another cigarette while I adjusted my clothes. We sat in the car, him looking out the window and me
looking at him, for what seemed like forever before he finally said something.
“I’m really tired, Mel. Will you take me back to your
place so I can get my car and go home?”
“Yeah, sure.”
When we finally got back it was almost two in the
morning, but I knew my parents were asleep and not worried. Ray and I always
used to stay out that late, talking and laughing and eating junk food and
making fun of whoever we’d run into. We sat in the car after I turned it off.
“Melanie, I’m really sorry.” He put his arm around my
shoulder and kissed the side of my head through my hair. He smelled like
cigarettes, but I suppose by that point I probably did too.
“I can tell you’re really confused right now, so I’ll
just give you some space, ok? Let you figure things out for yourself.”
“Yeah,” he replied, getting out of the car and searching
the pockets of his leather jacket for his keys. “I’ll see you later.”
He disappeared after that, and I should’ve seen it
coming. It was a long time coming. I didn’t call at first. Ray had dropped out
of classes by that point and I had stopped saving a seat for him. Listless, I
did terribly, but at least I showed up. Without him there, I realized how
little I cared about school. I tried to smother the suspicion that he was
talking to Sarah again. And when it didn’t die I told myself that reconnecting
with her would make him realize she was too crazy to deal with. Who she was
that day she pushed the ember of her cigarette into my flesh was the way I
decided to remember my former friend.
Two months of bullshitting art history exams and
painting fruit-bowl still lifes, but he was all I thought about. Finally, at
the end of the semester, I ran into him grabbing coffee at Denny’s, sitting in
our usual booth. Jackson is a small city, ever shrinking with the economy, and
I knew if I scoured our old stomping grounds I’d find him eventually. He didn’t
look happy to see me, but I sat down and made him fake it.
“Hi. What’ve you been up to?” I asked, pathetic. “Have
you been sculpting lately? Or drawing?” I couldn’t think of anything else to
say. “I miss hanging out.”
“Me too,” he said, unconvincingly, looking at his mug
instead of me. “But I’ve gotta get going.” I followed him outside. I needed an
explanation.
“Where are you going? Where have you been?” I asked,
walking behind him toward his car.
“Listen Mel,” he
said, stopping in the middle of the frozen parking lot. “I went and saw Sarah
last weekend.” My first reaction was to wonder where she was, how he’d found
her wherever she’d been hiding. Our warm breath hitting the cold air made it
look like we were smoking. “I want to be with her, Melanie. I love her, ok? I
don’t know what else to say to you.”
“You’re ditching me. We’ve been friends for so many
years and you’re leaving me for that fucking anorexic whore who assaulted me in
my own home. Well, fuck you, you goddamn cocksucker.”
That’s what I said in my head, is what I would’ve said
in the movie version. In real life I just said, “Ok.”
“I’m sorry all this crap happened.” He hugged me, our
embraces muffled by two black pea-coats, then went to his shitty little white
Malibu and drove away without looking back.
Tangled Up In Blue
Ray and Sarah decided to go to the art museum because it
was free (suggested donation of five dollars, but suggestions are just
suggestions), and the art museum was a place where he couldn’t yell and she
couldn’t cry. It was a warm spring day in late March with clear skies and ample
sunshine. This was Sarah’s favorite weather, the temperature for optimum
comfort while wearing her faux-fur coat and high-heeled boots. No humidity to
ruin her hair and no sweat to ruin her makeup. She’d rather have gone on a walk,
but Ray didn’t share her pleasure in meandering. Besides, they needed social
pressure to keep them quiet.
The building was owned
by the University of Michigan. It was bizarrely divided between the older,
original section and a newer addition for modern art. The older half, where
they entered, was huge and stone with giant columns, while the newer half was
all glass, metal, and sharp angles. Sarah took a last deep breath of the
fragrant spring afternoon before entering. She and Ray had been to many art
museums together, and it’d always been a solitary date experience, another
reason she’d agreed to it rather than a walk or dinner. Sarah had met Ray
studying art at Jackson Community College. Actually, Sarah had met Ray and Melanie studying art at JCC. Sarah
liked to try to forget about Melanie’s existence. The three had quickly become
close friends fresh out of high school. The disappointment of not being
talented enough to get into a real art school was bitter, and people to share
that foul taste with helped.
After entering the
museum, she and Ray wandered into the first room on the right, with lame oil
portraits of Victorian aristocrats lining the walls. The violent, dark lines in
one black-and-white lithograph caught her eye. Called “Lion Devouring a Horse,”
the cat was all vicious claws and demonic eyes. The lion had between its fangs
a limp, dead horse with its tongue lolling out. Sarah smiled, envisioning
herself turning into a huge, powerful male lion and ripping Melanie to shreds
with her teeth.
Ray, Sarah, and Melanie
had been completely inseparable during their first two years at community
college. Ray and Melanie had known each other before, in high school, and
Melanie followed him everywhere, copying everything he did. Of the two women,
Sarah was more attractive, more reckless, and more passionate, so Ray had gone
after her first. He was tall and junkie-thin, dyed his messy chin-length hair
an assortment of colors, and wore black t-shirts he decorated with bleach
stains. His confidence—which Sarah later decided was narcissism—was
overpowering. He made girls feel they were lucky he was looking at them. The
most important lesson Sarah learned from Ray was that getting in deep with a
narcissist, letting him rub his opinion of himself onto you, was dangerous.
Sarah had thought she didn’t have anything to worry
about with Ray and Melanie’s friendship—he wasn’t supposed to be Melanie’s
type. Melanie was fat (well, she wore a size ten, but that was gigantic to
Sarah, who’d carefully cultivated her size nothing figure since middle school),
had terrible skin, and a vague mustache. Melanie was supposed to like
responsible slightly-nerdy boys she could take home to her Methodist parents.
By that Sarah meant Melanie was supposed to like any boy who would take her,
not sexy ones who drove too fast. Sarah’s shiny black hair flowed past her
waist; Melanie’s was lifeless, poufy and short. Melanie never wore any makeup,
while Sarah didn’t leave the house without powdering her pale cheeks and
artfully applying smudged black eyeliner. While Melanie could’ve used the help,
Sarah didn’t even need to wear makeup. Sarah wasn’t vain, she simply knew she
looked good. Looking good was what allowed her to trust Melanie in the first
place. What does it mean when a guy abandons a girl for someone uglier? Sarah
thought the only predictable thing about men was that they’re entirely governed
by their sexual appetites and desire for the most attractive woman who’ll have
them, and that one assurance she’d had to hang onto failed her.
Despite the constant
presence of Ray and Melanie—the three hung out every day regardless of whether
they went to class—Sarah couldn’t really stomach the failure of living at home
and going to a shit school. Ray and Melanie, on the other hand, hadn’t cared.
They didn’t really seem to give a shit about anything, which made Sarah feel
like an enormous snob in comparison, so she quit talking to them about wanting
to transfer. Most students at JCC said they were going to get their associate’s
and transfer, but the majority never even got their two-year degrees,
especially not the young ones. Sarah felt she was too old to be sneaking a
quickie in the laundry room while her mom was upstairs. Hell, she was too
fucking old to be living with her mother, but Ray never understood why she felt
that way. His oldest brother was still unemployed and living at home, and his
family thought nothing was unusual about it. All their classmates still lived
with their parents. The college was really just an extension of high school,
with more freedom to fuck up if you wanted to. When Ray giddily yanked Sarah by
her partially removed pants into closets while her mother was on the phone or
went outside to get the mail, she knew he’d never leave home until some girl
made him marry her.
Sarah began feeling uneasy about her friends a couple
weeks before moving into her dorm. Sex
with Ray had suddenly lost its previous intensity. No sex in the back of the
car, no sex after getting high, no making out in hallways. Ray was tall, as thin
as Sarah was, but stronger than he looked. His skin was pale and soft. He moved
with that strange confidence men have that their bodies are going to do exactly
what they want without the effort of concentration. Sarah could fake that kind
of bravado, but most of the time she stepped gingerly, hesitated, never sure if
her body would listen to her or not. Ray’s ego made his body look sexier than
it actually was. It used to take all of Sarah’s willpower and several cigarette
breaks to stop her from jumping his bones in the middle of painting class, but
by the time Sarah was packing to leave, Ray had become disinterested and didn’t
bother to hide it. He’d also started spending more time with Melanie, sitting
next to her instead of Sarah in class and hanging out with Melanie on the
weekends without Sarah. She’d had a few tearful conversations with Ray about
her suspicions, but talking to Ray never went the way she wanted both because
he artfully dodged agreeing with her about anything, and because she couldn’t seem
to explain herself. Ray wasn’t good at dealing with her when she was being emotional,
so he’d only patted Sarah on the shoulder and told her not to worry, talking
circles around her until things she’d thought were concrete truth became
feminine delusions.
Eventually Ray and Melanie quit trying to hide it. Their
excuses became increasingly feeble and then stopped existing. The first weekend
after Sarah moved to Ypsilanti she drove home to confront Ray and Melanie,
neither of whom had answered her calls or returned her hysterical messages. She
found them at Melanie’s as she knew she would, sitting on Melanie’s parents’
couch, holding hands. It would’ve been less insulting if she’d found them
parked in some field somewhere, fucking in the back of Melanie’s red pick-up, rather
than to find them sitting on the couch pretending to be so legitimate. Sarah
was furious and lonely and disoriented and didn’t care that she was about to
act completely bat-shit. She threw open Melanie’s front door without knocking,
Marlboro burning between her claws.
“What the fuck is wrong with you two?” she screamed. Sarah
grabbed Melanie by the shirt and dragged her down on the periwinkle living room
carpet, burning her neck with the cigarette. “Who the fuck do you think you
are, you fat fucking whore? I’ll fucking kill you.”
“Get out of my house,” Melanie screeched from under
Sarah. Ray grabbed Sarah by her hair and dragged her into the front yard. She
lunged back at him, but he blocked her and shoved her hard into a pine tree.
Sarah fell onto a bed of needles.
“You like fucking that fat slut better than me you
stupid jack-ass,” Sarah didn’t know what she was saying, so much pure hatred
was pouring through her she couldn’t control herself. It felt like a demonic
possession. It felt good.
“Get outta here. You just hurt Mel, you fucking psycho.”
He went back inside, locked the door and drew the curtains. Sarah screamed
unintelligibly for a few more minutes and got back in her car. She grabbed a
ceramic rose Ray had made for her off the dashboard and smashed it on the hood
of Melanie’s truck. It didn’t leave the huge dent she’d hoped for, but
scratched up the paint enough that Melanie would have to look at it and
remember why it was there. Driving back to Ypsi she was afraid she’d swerve off
the road and more afraid that she didn’t care.
Sarah was still lost in
“Lion Devouring a Horse” when a large tour group consisting mostly of elderly
people came into the room. Ray and Sarah slipped out while the guide discussed
the rise of portrait and landscape painting. Deciding to skip the rest of the
first floor— which at a glance appeared only to have more oil paintings of
people who looked like George Washington and scenes of westward migration
complete with stagecoaches and savage Native Americans—they climbed a curving,
granite staircase. Ray stopped immediately at the top to stare at some of the
university’s ample collection of Tiffany glassware. Sarah like painting and ink
drawings, but Ray was obsessed with pottery, glass-blowing, and sculpture. The
pieces he was observing were metallic blues, greens, and purples that resembled
the feathers of a peacock.
Sarah’s life seemed to deteriorate after she transferred
to Eastern Michigan University and moved to Ypsilanti, a time when she thought
her life would be truly beginning. She hadn’t gotten into the art school, but
planned to study art history, do art in her spare time, and suck up some of the
creative energy that would surely accompany living in a city. Ray and Melanie
hadn’t completed their associate’s degrees and had nothing better to do, so
they kept taking classes at JCC, contentedly living at home with their parents
and siblings like overgrown children. Sarah decided they were idiots, but she
couldn’t stop missing Ray, was tangled up in him. The more she thought about
it, the more she believed that the reason she couldn’t get free was as much
because she was addicted to his flesh as because she loved him. Sarah was
jonesing for Ray’s skin, for Ray’s smell, for Ray’s weight holding her down,
but losing Melanie also hurt. She realized she couldn’t trust her own judgment and
it made her feel insane. She questioned herself about every decision she made,
avoided talking to anyone because she was sure she’d pick out the people
holding knives and crossed fingers behind their backs. She had taken Melanie’s
advice so seriously, almost religiously, but she now understood that Melanie
had hated her from the moment she walked into freshman painting class and
locked eyes with Ray. Melanie had only put up with Sarah, had only feigned a
relationship with Sarah, in order to keep Ray stitched to her side.
On the drive home from Melanie’s, Sarah swore to herself
that she would never see either of them again. But Ray called, apologized, and
said he wanted Sarah to stay friends with him and Melanie. Sarah told him to
fuck off, but hung up wishing he was there. Ray was an expert at shifting
blame. Now if she missed either of them she would have to remember that Ray
said they could’ve been friends if she hadn’t acted like a psycho. Sarah’s
grief was so intense it frightened her. She reasoned that it was the perfect
time for the break-up to happen, that she could make new friends at EMU and
forget Ray or Melanie ever existed, but her body shut down. Blood vessels
popped in and around her eyes; she stayed in bed for days on end, and threw up
everything she ate. She got so sick she had to drop out midway through the fall
semester—she was failing all of her classes and hadn’t made friends anyway.
Since she was no longer a student, she had to move out of the dorms into a tiny
studio apartment for winter semester. She thought the solitude of living on her
own would be better for her mental health, but she never enrolled in classes.
Sarah got a job at the Starbucks, which was more
degrading than she’d imagined it would be, and bought art supplies but never
used them. She dreaded going to work even though she was only there twenty
hours a week, scarcely enough to pay her rent. Sometimes she’d spend all
morning persuading herself she was too sick to make frappuccinos, but she ended
up making herself go. She dealt with the
horrible Bob Dylan covers that made her wonder if ruining a beautiful song
could be made punishable by death; why couldn’t they just play the original?
She dealt with the fact that the Ramones’ “Rockaway Beach” CD was for sale at
the counter next to the new Maroon 5 album. She asked the customer’s names,
scribbling them on the green-and-white cups with a black Sharpie to make the
customers feel as if they were getting a personal, small-business experience
despite the fact that they were purchasing five-dollar coffees from the Walmart
of caffeine addicts. The smell of the Sharpie stuck to her fingers no matter
how many times Sarah washed her hands. The snobs from Ann Arbor with their
designer bags jacking up on coffee before work or class kept refilling their
Starbucks loyalty cards and trying to devise ways to make mochas less
fattening.
Sarah caught Ray’s eye from across the marble room. He
was standing in front of another pottery display. The quiet, sacred space of
the museum was calming. Here she was allowed to look pensive and frown into
space without strangers asking if she was all right. Ray flashed her a
crooked-toothed smile. She smiled back, and remembered the same dirty grin from
countless times he’d lied to her. Though she now associated it with his lies,
the smile itself was charming, almost boyish. One wouldn’t expect a grungy,
serious-looking boy to smile like that. When they’d first met, that smile,
those small and misshapen teeth, made her heart turn over. It had been there all
along, was perhaps his most common expression, but Sarah had noticed the deceit
behind it for the first time when she managed to corner him about Melanie.
“You guys are both acting really weird, Ray, and I want
to know what the hell’s going on.” She’d started strong; she wasn’t going to
let his sentences tie her up like usual.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about. We’ve been
friends for a really long time, but you’re my girlfriend, okay?” They repeated
several variations of the same question and answer before he cracked a little.
“What about her? How do you know what her motives are?”
“Well, you know, she hasn’t had any boyfriends and I can
see why she would have feelings for me. We’ve been friends for awhile and we
know each other really well. But honestly, no matter what she’s feeling,
nothing’s gonna happen between me and her, okay?” He turned Sarah’s
insecurities into Melanie’s fault. Sarah was gagged and bound.
Three months after Sarah attacked Melanie, Ray turned up
again, breaking the Starbucks-crying-Starbucks-crying monotony of Sarah’s
winter no-semester. His ratted black Converse, pouty lips, and tobacco stained
fingers broke her heart and made her crazy with lust. He said he wanted to try
to make things work between them, but Sarah couldn’t, and didn’t want to, get
over her jealousy. She couldn’t, and didn’t want to, figure out what his
motives were. Sarah thought Ray had mostly come back because she was better in
bed than Melanie. It was as if he wanted to make a sick fusion of the two women,
combining their characteristics into some kind of ideal girlfriend.
Sarah replayed the early February afternoon Ray finally
had shown up so frequently that she no longer had any idea what had actually
happened and what she’d exaggerated. She only knew she’d acted opposite of the
way she’d rehearsed. Sarah didn’t remember what the weather was like that
afternoon because she hadn’t left her apartment since her last shift at
Starbucks three days earlier. He showed up on the doorstep of her apartment building
and pushed the buzzer over and over for twenty minutes until she buzzed him in.
Ray probably knew that she’d spent the morning moping and the afternoon crying;
he definitely knew she was there, even though no lights were on. In her
depression, Sarah had granted Ray the supernatural power of being able to know
what she was doing at all times. Sarah had a half-hearted impulse to run to the
bathroom and put on makeup before he reached her floor, but then remembered she
was incapable of running.
The way depression had ruined her body was at first
terrifying, then fascinating, and finally only frustrating. Leaving the
building felt like running a marathon. Getting off the floor to push the buzzer
had exhausted her—a bad sign, since she’d intended to fight. Sarah was only
five feet tall and barely weighed a hundred pounds, having dropped weight
steadily since she’d left Jackson, but she’d always believed in the cartoon
mantra, It’s not the size of the dog in
the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog. She thought her fury
would strengthen her at the last moment. She thought she could call on the rage
in her genes: her father had almost killed a man. Sarah told that story like a
cowboy looking for street-cred; Yeah, my
daddy smashed that asshole’s brains in with a golf club. She imagined her
father’s semen boiling in her blood, granting her the gift of homicide. Sarah
knew every object in her apartment that could be used as a weapon, and which
one she’d pick, depending on where she’d be standing at any given moment in
their argument. But Sarah didn’t react before Ray put his arms around her, a
gesture of affection and restraint.
Ray picked Sarah up easily with her arms pinned at her
sides and carried her to her bed. He was rail-thin, but over a foot taller than
her. His confidence always intimidated Sarah too much to defend herself. He’d
walked into her apartment that day knowing she’d sleep with him. He’d cut his
hair in the style of a fifties greaser and dyed it black since she’d last seen
him. She loved James Dean and knew Ray had done it on purpose, to let her
pretend he was the tortured, chivalrous Jim Stark. Corny as it sounded when she
thought it, she knew it was true, but she also knew the prominence of her spine
and rib cage would turn him on just as much. While she’d only changed out of
her salt-and-mucus-stained pajamas when she had to be at work, underneath she
always wore her sexiest lingerie, hand-washing it in the kitchen sink each
night, in preparation for just such an occasion, even though she’d told herself
she wasn’t going to allow it to happen. There were tiny red dots that looked
like puncture holes around her eyes from crying face-down on the floor, but she
still shaved her legs every day, just in case. Ray undressed her so quickly she
doubted he’d noticed her matching bra and panties, or her shaved legs. Sarah
felt as if she was going to suffocate underneath him. I must be weaker than the last time, she thought, struggling to
catch her breath as he pushed against her with increasing pressure.
Lying next to Ray while he slept, Sarah could feel where
on her body bruises would form the next day, gingerly touching her hips, ribs,
and breasts with her fingers. When he started snoring, she climbed out of the
damp sheets to have a cigarette, leaning out of her window, hoping not to set
off the smoke alarm or wake Ray. She’d smoked since high school; she’d taught
Ray to smoke. Now the habit steadied her hands when she couldn’t keep food
down. Made her forget she was hungry. Someone once told her that menthols were
the worst for you, that the delicious mint flavor was created with miniscule
shards of glass. She couldn’t remember who’d said it, and was pretty sure it
was a lie, but she liked the image of glass in her lungs, the way the menthol
freshened her breath after vomiting, and the feel of the alliteration on her
tongue when she asked gas station cashiers for Marlboro Menthols—it sounded
sexy, like Marilyn Monroe. Sarah wondered whether Marilyn Monroe smoked
menthols, then realized that she hadn’t thought about Ray in two entire
minutes, longer than she’d gone without thinking about him for months, even
though he was asleep in her bed.
Sarah left Ray to admire the pottery and walked around
the second floor, a large loop with a hole in the middle so you could look down
to the floor below. Even in better times, their museum visits had been
solitary, each drifting to the objects that most interested them. Sarah came to
a small section of Impressionism, and her stomach turned upon seeing the small museum’s
only Monet: “The Break Up of the Ice.” Blues, greens, whites, and grays blurred
together close up, but when viewed from a few feet away, she saw a lake in the
winter. Monet was what Sarah had been dreading and hoping the museum wouldn’t
have. Monet was Melanie’s favorite artist; she collected prints and
knick-knacks of his work and tried with the best of her community college
training to paint like him. Sarah would never be able to see a Monet without
thinking of Melanie. In a different life, Sarah would’ve liked the painting,
and that’s what infuriated her most—Ray and Melanie had taken not only her
health and her self-esteem, which were to be expected, but also this beautiful
painting she’d never be able to love.
Ray came up and stood next to her in front of the Monet.
He looked for a second, said nothing, and moved ahead of her, clockwise around
the circle. Sarah’s tears made the painting look dreamier and vaguer than the
artist had intended. Ray disappeared into one of the storage spaces for the
museum’s pottery and small sculptures, and she left him to cross into the
modern half of the building. The floor changed from tile to wood, and the
ceilings got higher. Some renovation was going on in the first room she
entered, but the next held what was always Sarah’s favorite part of art
museums, the African art. She loved the terrifying tribal masks, colorful
textiles, and bone necklaces. She could never create it with any authenticity.
Maybe she should just be a scholar, but dropping out of school in depression
wasn’t so good for that plan. Her favorite pieces were a red-white-and-blue
bull-head mask and a warrior mask with a pig nose, rectangular teeth and a
grass beard. Sarah imagined herself donning one of the terrifying masks in
preparation for battle. If she had a warrior mask to hide behind, to provide
the illusion of strength, maybe she could finally stand up to Ray.
Sarah was ecstatic Ray had come back, and she hated
herself for it. Ray started visiting almost every weekend. Sarah knew he was
still sleeping with Melanie and admitted it to herself Monday through Thursday.
Thank God she’s so ugly no one else is
sleeping with her, which reduces my chances of catching some sexually
transmitted infection or something, she thought. The only promise she made
to herself that she managed to keep was not to tell Ray she loved him during
his visits. She chanted a mantra of do
not say I love you, do not say I love you, in her head through the days Ray
stayed with her. Her tongue was the only part of her body she could control.
She ran the water in the bathroom when she threw up after dinner and smoked her
cigarettes out the bathroom window so he wouldn’t smell the regurgitated entrée
on her breath. This was the happiest she could remember being in over a year.
All previous moments of happiness were so distant they felt fake, like a lie
she’d told or something she’d seen in a movie and decided to incorporate into
her own past.
Sarah checked to see if Ray had caught up with her
before moving out of the room. Not a word had been spoken between them since
they’d crawled out of bed and left her apartment, but here they could pretend
the silence wasn’t rooted in hostility. She stepped into a secluded corner to
catch her breath, which always seemed to be getting away from her, and there
was an African sculpture tucked next to the elevator, as if whoever had put it
there only wanted handicapped people to see it. The label informed her that the
three-and-a-half-foot tall man carved of dark wood was a nail figure of the
Vili people of Congo. The man’s entire body was covered with dozens of rusty
nails and other sharp, metal pieces piercing the wood. He was called a nkondi;
a human nganga priest could use the nkondi to detect and punish witches,
criminals, and other wrong-doers. Sarah imagined herself in shamaness costume,
hair teased out, muttering incantations and impaling Melanie with hundreds of
nails and shards of scrap metal.
From her corner, Sarah saw Ray examining the African
masks and joined him without bothering to show him the nkondi. By mutual,
unspoken agreement, they skipped over the Asian art, climbed the stairs to the
modern section, and split up again. Here the ceilings were even higher, letting
in light from the floor to ceiling windows. There were stark sculptures
consisting of either many sharp angles or flowing, circular edges and a strange
assortment of paintings, with at least one example of each important style
developed in the twentieth century, lining the walls.
Ray walked around the sculptures while Sarah stayed near
the walls to look at the paintings. Some were boring canvasses filled in with
solid colors, corresponding plaques describing the artists’ intent in great
detail. The Picassos with their crazy, swirling colors were the best pieces in
the place. His portrait of Francoise startled her, a fierce woman, all eyebrows
and pursed lips. The plaque said that the real Francoise had a strong
character: “Her forceful nature is conveyed by the intensity of her gaze and
the erectness of her posture.” Francoise had two children with Picasso and
after he left her she said that, though it was what she was best known for, she
had done much better things with her life than pose for him. Sarah stared into
the painting, willing herself into it, wishing she were Francoise.
Shelter from the
Storm
My daddy almost killed a
man. Why I take pride in this story I don’t know. He tells it to me to drive
home the inconstancy of the female sex. He’s always had a temper, anger to
blame on someone else. His weapon of choice was a golf club, something a movie
mobster would kill someone with, which you’d know was appropriate if you knew
him.
So I told you there was
a girl, which is always the case in this kind of story. This girl had an old
boyfriend who’d beat her to a pulp on a regular basis when they were together.
The low self-esteem these kinds of women have is like an insect-zapping lamp
for men. My daddy liked the idea of a woman he’d have to protect.
He was with this girl at a bar in Detroit they liked.
The owner of the bar was a huge pussy, my daddy makes a point to say. They’re
drinking, having a good time, and suddenly the ex shows up. He bellows
pathetically outside for a little bit and the pussy-ass bartender won’t call
the cops (but honestly, this is Detroit, and the cops have bigger fish to fry
than some asshole crying about the girlfriend he can’t hit anymore). So the
boyfriend makes a big scene, takes a brick and starts smashing up the girl’s
car. The pussy bartender is worried, this could slow down business and get him
in trouble, and so he and the girl start pressuring my daddy to go do something
about it. My daddy, being machismo with a capital M, won’t listen to reason
when his manhood is involved.
So he goes out to the parking lot to try and get rid of
the guy, who by this point had banged up the girl’s car pretty good. Daddy
tried to reason with him, but got a brick chucked at his head. So Daddy went to
his car and pulled out a golf club, wrapping his callused hands around the
cold, smooth metal. His rage about the million different injustices heaped on
him in his life makes him dangerous to fuck with, which of course the
ex-boyfriend didn’t know. He swung for his two dead parents, for being stuck in
a dying city, for drinking too much, for his five itinerant and broken
siblings. Daddy reared back with that club and beat the guy into the asphalt
until he was almost dead.
That same rage is in my DNA, passed to me from him. It
couldn’t be diluted by my mother’s kindness and love and I’m glad that it
wasn’t. It gets me higher than any drug, grows me sixty feet tall, gives me
fangs.
When I ask him who won
the fight, Daddy shows some humility and says neither of them did. Daddy hurt
the guy a lot worse than he got hurt (which is still a win in my book), but
Daddy had to spend the night in jail, got fined a whole bunch, and had to go to
court-ordered anger management classes that didn’t help worth squat. Daddy
didn’t have any money back then, so it was bad that he had to pay the big fine
and take time off work to go to those classes. He doesn’t know what ended up
happening to the guy, but if he would’ve died they would’ve tracked Daddy down
and gotten him into more trouble. I assume the guy was fine and don’t really
care if he wasn’t.
But here’s the punch-line, here’s the point of the
story: a little while later the girl broke up with Daddy and got back with the
boyfriend. The lesson he wants me to take from the story is, women suck. The
lesson I take is, if my Daddy would do all that for some slut and his machismo,
imagine how much he would do for me, which makes me think I don’t have to be
scared of anything.
You’re Gonna Make Me
Lonesome When You Go
We were lying in bed in
Sarah’s studio apartment in Ypsilanti. I’d never been in a studio apartment
before. I liked how everything she had was in one room, plus a bathroom. I felt
safe, something that could only be called love making me warm, lulled close to
sleep. It was grey and raining. In the moments when Sarah felt like she was in
love with me she said, that’s the kind of thing that turns my heart right over.
“Let me ask you a question,” she said. “But I’m going to
pee first.” I listened to her urine hitting the toilet water, then the flush.
She crawled back under the blankets and lit two cigarettes at once. When she
reached for the pack, the Bob Dylan lyrics tattooed under her breast stretched
across her washboard ribs: tangled up in
blue. She handed a cigarette to me and I watched both ashes inch closer to
the green print that said Marlboro.
I thought of a story Sarah’d made me read, the one about
the soup taster who smokes three packs a day and can’t taste the soup anymore,
her taste buds wrapped in tobacco, and has to quit cigarettes to keep her job.
In the story, the narrator tapes her right pointer and middle fingers together.
It wasn’t as good as the other one, Sarah’s favorite about the teenage girl and
guy who fall in lust and he cuts x’s into her mosquito bites with a razor to
stop them from itching. I only read when Sarah made me.
“Did you know you were going to ruin our friendship like
this?” she asked, referring to Melanie. I brushed her hair back from her face
onto the pillow and kissed her pale cheek. I wished I could live in that apartment
with her, never ever leave that one room, but was too afraid to ask, too afraid
she’d say no.
“Do you miss her?” she asked.
“Why do you ask me
questions when you don’t believe a word I say?”
She didn’t have an
answer.
If You See Her, Say Hello
The tattoos started
shortly after I moved to Petoskey, the piercings a little later. I got the tats
and piercings, self-mutilations my sister called them, when I was upset. They
hurt, and I wound up engraving whoever or whatever had been upsetting me in my
flesh.
Here’s a list of them,
so you can see how bad it got. A black and white outline of the god Shiva, who
had no relevance in my life whatsoever—I don’t even practice yoga—on my thigh;
the words “liar” and “evil” behind my ears so everyone would know my
psychological problems and so I could make my psychological problems look cool;
a lightning bolt on my ribs that I still had to lose twenty pounds to be able
to show anyone; the stereotypical angel’s wings on my back (while some people’s
actually look real, mine were cartoonish and dumb); a sleeve of every tattoo
cliché including anchors and skulls and flowers on my right bicep; some Latin
that I forget the meaning of on my wrists; a psychedelic-looking eye on the
back of my neck to warn people that I was watching them even though I couldn’t
possibly be watching them and my hair covered it most of the time anyway; and
perhaps the most honorable one, my mom’s favorite flower, an orange tiger-lily,
tramp-stamped on my lower back. That’s just the tattoos. I had two rings
through my lower lip, two rings through my nose, one through each of my
nipples, one through my left eyebrow, and about twenty in my ears, including
gauges that were always growing.
Nicole came to pick me up in her fifteen-year-old purple
van that reeked of cigarettes. I almost spent more time in that van than in my
house. There was a trash can between the driver and passenger seats that was
constantly overflowing with McDonald’s wrappers, Slurpee cups, and empty cigarette
packs. In the back were piles of clothing, more trash, but no one ever sat back
there, anyway.
Nicole peeled out of the
driveway, tires crunching on gravel, and tossed me a tiny round plastic
container. “Mel, check this out.” Watermelon OMG incense; not for human
consumption. It didn’t really smell like watermelon, but that wasn’t the point.
“This shit will get you fucking blown,”
she said. I hated the high you get from K-2, but did it anyway, trying to
punish myself for a million different things.
“Cool.”
We stopped at the Seven-Eleven to get Slurpees.
Mostly what I was up to
when I wasn’t getting tattoos was sleeping around with loser,
working-class-hero-type boys I met in pathetic bars that served one brand of
beer, just to say that I could. Just to say that some guy besides Ray would
fuck me. And also smoking a ton of synthetic marijuana, even though it
supposedly could make you crazy enough to eat some homeless man’s face off.
Mostly it was cheaper than pot, and got you three times as high three times as
fast. The thing about K-2 is it makes you straight fucking depressed and angry
at yourself for no reason. I smoked it with people who I said were my friends,
but really we just wanted other people to get fucked up with. They had tattoos
and piercings, too. We came out at night and slept all day. Old people and
summer tourists avoided us on the sidewalks because our presence spoiled their
scenic vacations.
We drove to a small
parking area that looked out on Lake Michigan. This spot would’ve been crawling
with tourists in the summer, but it was November and cold. Nicole broke open a
Marlboro, tapped some of the tobacco into her roller on top of the K-2, and
rolled up a joint. After only two hits the world was spinning. She started
rambling on about something, but I couldn’t pay attention to the words.
My wrist tattoos seemed
to be crawling, the cursive, meaningless Latin sliding around like snakes up my
forearms. Across the water one of Petoskey’s famous sunsets was painting the
sky, orange then pink. I watched until I couldn’t keep my eyes open, then
listened to cold waves slap the rocks.
No comments:
Post a Comment