The connection that killed space between us as children once again wakes me in the early hours, only now I don't want to be there with you. I hear your heart pound. Your dread rigidifies my muscles. Is the numbness that prevents me from running mine or yours?
I curled up on the bench seat and laid my head in your lap. It was only two in the morning. We still had four hours before your mother got up for work and you had to be home.
"You'll always belong to me, even when we're old and married and you have wrinkles around those pretty eyes of yours," you said.
"You'll forget about me one day," I said. "Someday you'll be busy coaching ball, or troweling back some archaeological site and I won't be anywhere around."
You cupped my chin in your palm and brushed my bottom lip with your thumb. "What we have isn't about marriage or love or being together. We both know that."
Your tears fell on my face. Neither of us wiped them away. We knew they belonged there, in that moment, acknowledging the truth.
"How will we know?" I asked.
"It'll just happen on its own. We'll drift to other places. I don't worry though. You always with me in here." He pointed to his head.
"We're dreamers," I said.
"We're poetic souls, rhythms of the calypso. We need that yearning and not knowing at the same time. That's what will get us through life. That's what will keep us coming back to one another whether in life or in thought."
Anxiety washes over my body like the sea. The bedsheets grit against my skin. Your heart pounds in my ears, rushed, rhythmic like bare hands on the leather pad of a drum. My tears fall, wet the reed on my horn, and we play a duet.
Saturday, December 15, 2007
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Silence
"You have to find a balance between the music and me," I tell my husband. "I won't be lonely. I won't go to that place again. You have no idea what it is like sitting at home every weekend with the children while you are out playing music."
He tries to mask the smirk that bares his teeth but the black night hanging over the country road isn't dark enough to hide what I've become accustomed to seeing.
"Every time we have this conversation it comes back around to the same question. Do you want me to quit?"
His grip tightens on the steering wheel. My oldest son's sleeping head falls softly against the door in the backseat.
"I don't want you to quit. I know you need to play. The only reason it comes to that question is because you make it. You make it black or white. Not me," I say.
"Okay, babe." He shuts down, maybe because he knows I'm right, or because he isn't ready to go there, or maybe because he doesn't believe it isn't me doing this.
I know loneliness doesn't ride on the back of silence. With the children asleep in the backseat, and the gentle jostling of the truck rocking my body like a Bill Withers vocal, words that will be written, never spoken, form in my mind.
You're away even when you're at home. You want to hit the snooze button again and again so your mind can chase a dream shared between old friends. I've never had dreams, only memories of a time when I could hold the pit of another in the palm of my hand and be loved for it.
I think you believe I'm asking too much when I'm only asking for just enough.
You don't like to read about intimate moments I shared with others because you know that you aren't creating them with me. You need a dream. I need a memory.
He tries to mask the smirk that bares his teeth but the black night hanging over the country road isn't dark enough to hide what I've become accustomed to seeing.
"Every time we have this conversation it comes back around to the same question. Do you want me to quit?"
His grip tightens on the steering wheel. My oldest son's sleeping head falls softly against the door in the backseat.
"I don't want you to quit. I know you need to play. The only reason it comes to that question is because you make it. You make it black or white. Not me," I say.
"Okay, babe." He shuts down, maybe because he knows I'm right, or because he isn't ready to go there, or maybe because he doesn't believe it isn't me doing this.
I know loneliness doesn't ride on the back of silence. With the children asleep in the backseat, and the gentle jostling of the truck rocking my body like a Bill Withers vocal, words that will be written, never spoken, form in my mind.
You're away even when you're at home. You want to hit the snooze button again and again so your mind can chase a dream shared between old friends. I've never had dreams, only memories of a time when I could hold the pit of another in the palm of my hand and be loved for it.
I think you believe I'm asking too much when I'm only asking for just enough.
You don't like to read about intimate moments I shared with others because you know that you aren't creating them with me. You need a dream. I need a memory.
Monday, December 10, 2007
Beautiful People
There is a place between my gut and my heart that hunches my shoulders whenever it longs to connect on a deeper level. I've used the strumming of a guitar or the tone of a voice to relieve the guard around my emotions.
But then it isn't enough anymore and I'm left raw, hands cupped, holding vivid images of people from my past.
It isn't easy to touch them in my mind alone, and sometimes I wonder if I am supposed to remember them at all. It doesn't seem right that I should relive pieces of their lives without consent. But I guess we all do that. I'm not as separate as I think I am.
_________
"You don't belong among pretty things," he told me.
I kissed the patch of white skin below his eye.
He picked up the guitar and stretched the skin that had been grafted onto his hand sometime before I met him. I spread my legs across the thin plaid fabric on the couch and tucked my feet under his crossed leg. It was Saturday night and we had nothing better to do than hide in his house with our demons.
A voice like rain drizzling on a parked car filled the living room. He tried to tuck a loose dreadlock behind an ear that wasn't there. I relaxed and let a damaged spirit escape a beautiful body.
This had to be the place I was born...in a house where neither of us cared if the lights were on. He was physically scarred, carrying a dead wife and child in his heart. I hid my damage behind flawless skin and taut muscle.
I needed to show my ugliness. He needed to feel beautiful sitting next to someone else.
But then it isn't enough anymore and I'm left raw, hands cupped, holding vivid images of people from my past.
It isn't easy to touch them in my mind alone, and sometimes I wonder if I am supposed to remember them at all. It doesn't seem right that I should relive pieces of their lives without consent. But I guess we all do that. I'm not as separate as I think I am.
_________
"You don't belong among pretty things," he told me.
I kissed the patch of white skin below his eye.
He picked up the guitar and stretched the skin that had been grafted onto his hand sometime before I met him. I spread my legs across the thin plaid fabric on the couch and tucked my feet under his crossed leg. It was Saturday night and we had nothing better to do than hide in his house with our demons.
A voice like rain drizzling on a parked car filled the living room. He tried to tuck a loose dreadlock behind an ear that wasn't there. I relaxed and let a damaged spirit escape a beautiful body.
This had to be the place I was born...in a house where neither of us cared if the lights were on. He was physically scarred, carrying a dead wife and child in his heart. I hid my damage behind flawless skin and taut muscle.
I needed to show my ugliness. He needed to feel beautiful sitting next to someone else.
Saturday, December 8, 2007
Purging
The pain starts in my heart, presses against the back of my teeth like
the morning after. I want to walk. I want to hear my Vans slap the
pavement, feel broken bits of blacktop grind under my feet, but I
can’t. The children are sleeping. The coffee pot is set for 5am.
He wants me to come to bed with him. I’m not me tonight.
Sometime after supper she danced around me, brushed her fingers across
my thigh and begged me to let her in. In the front of the house, the
box springs give under his weight and I stare at the computer chair.
My emotions are dull, analyzed, and understood. I let her into the
hollow to run like a wild stallion. From behind smudged black eyes the
feelings dart, dodge, never meet head on. She takes them from others
without knowledge - theirs or hers. And I want that back. I don’t want
to understand. I want to feel desperate, consoled, abused,
loved…..real.
She seeks salvation from winding roads and dirty white tiles; collects lies in amulets and broken boys in an old green backpack.
I let her sleep with me tonight. She lifts their faces out of that
backpack, strokes their hair, touches her cheek to theirs but the pain
doesn’t come.
The children are sleeping. The coffee pot is set for 5am. And I don’t want to be my own savior.
the morning after. I want to walk. I want to hear my Vans slap the
pavement, feel broken bits of blacktop grind under my feet, but I
can’t. The children are sleeping. The coffee pot is set for 5am.
He wants me to come to bed with him. I’m not me tonight.
Sometime after supper she danced around me, brushed her fingers across
my thigh and begged me to let her in. In the front of the house, the
box springs give under his weight and I stare at the computer chair.
My emotions are dull, analyzed, and understood. I let her into the
hollow to run like a wild stallion. From behind smudged black eyes the
feelings dart, dodge, never meet head on. She takes them from others
without knowledge - theirs or hers. And I want that back. I don’t want
to understand. I want to feel desperate, consoled, abused,
loved…..real.
She seeks salvation from winding roads and dirty white tiles; collects lies in amulets and broken boys in an old green backpack.
I let her sleep with me tonight. She lifts their faces out of that
backpack, strokes their hair, touches her cheek to theirs but the pain
doesn’t come.
The children are sleeping. The coffee pot is set for 5am. And I don’t want to be my own savior.
Sixty-Seven Cents
The best place to find money was outside the coffee shop early in the morning. Herded through a maze of nylon rope, people quickly get their morning fill and squeeze through the door. A young lady, about the same age as myself, stood outside the door, balancing a cup of coffee and her change in one hand, and opening her bag with the other. A coin hit the ground next to her pointed-toe high heel, and rolled to a stop next to the waste basket.
Her pause was brief. She checked the time on her watch. A dribble of coffee ran down her jeweled fingers. Time worth more than a dropped coined, she zipped her bag and walked off. Regardless that it wasn’t stealing, I waited for the clicking of her high heels to fade into the morning traffic before picking up the dime.
Unlike the coffee shop, The Golden Nugget was alive. Clusters of fried egg dotted the carpet beneath a highchair. Silver spoons clinked on the rims of lidless ceramic mugs. Linda waved me to the counter.
"Coffee this morning?" she asked, uprighting the mug before I could answer.
"I’m three cents short," I said, scraping a piece of crusted muck off the pale countertop.
"No you’re not," Linda said. She slid three pennies out of the Styrofoam cup beside the register and dropped them onto my napkin.
"Thanks, Linda. I don’t know why so many people line up in those upscale coffee shops. I’d take great service over gourmet coffee any day."
"Eh, let them stay there, for all I care. I have enough people rushing me around, and they don’t have to be anyplace," she laughed.
Occasionally, I caught men watching Linda as she shuttled around the dining room, whisking up bits of food and straw wrappers with a little broom and dustpan. I wondered if they recognized her from the photograph that hung above the payphone at the strip club like I had. She got out before the pole and the drugs wrecked her body and mind. If I could shuck off some of my pride, I would ask her how she did it.
"Thanks for the coffee, Linda." I pushed the coins across the counter.
"That’s your change. Hang onto it for when you really need it."
"I don’t want you to get into trouble, Linda. Just take the money." I pushed it back her way.
"I don’t need it. You do."
"Will you accept a collect call?" the operator said.
"Yes."
"Jordan, I’m ready to come home," I said into the phone. "I don’t have enough money to buy a bus ticket."
"How much do you have?" he asked.
"Sixty-seven cents."
Through the graffittied payphone booth, I saw the strong hands that had once held Linda above the dance floor, while her body arched before paying men, wipe scrambled eggs off a highchair.
Her pause was brief. She checked the time on her watch. A dribble of coffee ran down her jeweled fingers. Time worth more than a dropped coined, she zipped her bag and walked off. Regardless that it wasn’t stealing, I waited for the clicking of her high heels to fade into the morning traffic before picking up the dime.
Unlike the coffee shop, The Golden Nugget was alive. Clusters of fried egg dotted the carpet beneath a highchair. Silver spoons clinked on the rims of lidless ceramic mugs. Linda waved me to the counter.
"Coffee this morning?" she asked, uprighting the mug before I could answer.
"I’m three cents short," I said, scraping a piece of crusted muck off the pale countertop.
"No you’re not," Linda said. She slid three pennies out of the Styrofoam cup beside the register and dropped them onto my napkin.
"Thanks, Linda. I don’t know why so many people line up in those upscale coffee shops. I’d take great service over gourmet coffee any day."
"Eh, let them stay there, for all I care. I have enough people rushing me around, and they don’t have to be anyplace," she laughed.
Occasionally, I caught men watching Linda as she shuttled around the dining room, whisking up bits of food and straw wrappers with a little broom and dustpan. I wondered if they recognized her from the photograph that hung above the payphone at the strip club like I had. She got out before the pole and the drugs wrecked her body and mind. If I could shuck off some of my pride, I would ask her how she did it.
"Thanks for the coffee, Linda." I pushed the coins across the counter.
"That’s your change. Hang onto it for when you really need it."
"I don’t want you to get into trouble, Linda. Just take the money." I pushed it back her way.
"I don’t need it. You do."
"Will you accept a collect call?" the operator said.
"Yes."
"Jordan, I’m ready to come home," I said into the phone. "I don’t have enough money to buy a bus ticket."
"How much do you have?" he asked.
"Sixty-seven cents."
Through the graffittied payphone booth, I saw the strong hands that had once held Linda above the dance floor, while her body arched before paying men, wipe scrambled eggs off a highchair.
White Wicker and Wrought Iron
He stood on the front porch and professed his love in a long winded curse. The words, ready to be spat, sat on my tongue. I took it in; the white wicker, the wrought-iron railings, the gardenias, and shook my addiction.
The wind burrowed under the hairs on my arms, created a cold the shivers couldn’t disperse. Had it been that long ago that I left myself to the elements, walking into the hot damp of a New Orleans’ summer night? Yet again, I found myself exposed, my life lugged around in a green backpack, orbiting to the only place I knew to go when the moon hung low in the sky.
"You shaved your head." I hung my bag on the hook above the arranged row of sneakers.
"What do you think?" Van rubbed a hand down his smooth head to his sleepy eye.
"Makes you look too tough," I said. He looked splintered. The untreated curls had always masked the self-inflicted pain behind his eyes.
He arched his back, stretched his lean belly muscles. "You’re a softy under all that garb," he chuckled. "I’m going back to bed. There’s towels in the bathroom if you want to shower." Van followed me to the back of the house and swatted me on the rear before dodging into his room.
I stripped my clothes and dropped them to the floor. I stared at the long skirt, the tights, the torn Sonic Youth tee; studied them, then scooped them up and sat behind the door. I mixed them into the pile of jerseys and ribbed white tanks, tucked the tights under a pair of Girbaud’s.
Van cracked open the door. I shrunk against the wall in embarrassment.
"Crys?"
"Yeah?"
"I’m glad you’re home." The door shut.
In the shower, scrubbing the numbness from my skin, wincing with soap in my eyes, I whispered, "Me, too."
I rolled Rico to the cold side of the bed before getting in.
"Did you dry your hair?"
"Sort of," I lied.
"Get the towel." he pushed himself up and leaned against the headboard.
I sat between his legs, covers wrapped around our waists, while he rubbed the length of my hair between the towel.
"Will I see you in the morning?"
I picked at a loose thread on the quilt I made for him two birthdays ago. "I need to be here a while."
He wrung my hair out in the towel one last time before dropping it over the side of the bed. Under the covers, my nose pressed into the pillow, a soft kiss lingering on the nape of my neck, I thought about the white wicker, the wrought-iron railings, the gardenias, and saw them for what they were; chipped, rusted, and wilted.
The wind burrowed under the hairs on my arms, created a cold the shivers couldn’t disperse. Had it been that long ago that I left myself to the elements, walking into the hot damp of a New Orleans’ summer night? Yet again, I found myself exposed, my life lugged around in a green backpack, orbiting to the only place I knew to go when the moon hung low in the sky.
"You shaved your head." I hung my bag on the hook above the arranged row of sneakers.
"What do you think?" Van rubbed a hand down his smooth head to his sleepy eye.
"Makes you look too tough," I said. He looked splintered. The untreated curls had always masked the self-inflicted pain behind his eyes.
He arched his back, stretched his lean belly muscles. "You’re a softy under all that garb," he chuckled. "I’m going back to bed. There’s towels in the bathroom if you want to shower." Van followed me to the back of the house and swatted me on the rear before dodging into his room.
I stripped my clothes and dropped them to the floor. I stared at the long skirt, the tights, the torn Sonic Youth tee; studied them, then scooped them up and sat behind the door. I mixed them into the pile of jerseys and ribbed white tanks, tucked the tights under a pair of Girbaud’s.
Van cracked open the door. I shrunk against the wall in embarrassment.
"Crys?"
"Yeah?"
"I’m glad you’re home." The door shut.
In the shower, scrubbing the numbness from my skin, wincing with soap in my eyes, I whispered, "Me, too."
I rolled Rico to the cold side of the bed before getting in.
"Did you dry your hair?"
"Sort of," I lied.
"Get the towel." he pushed himself up and leaned against the headboard.
I sat between his legs, covers wrapped around our waists, while he rubbed the length of my hair between the towel.
"Will I see you in the morning?"
I picked at a loose thread on the quilt I made for him two birthdays ago. "I need to be here a while."
He wrung my hair out in the towel one last time before dropping it over the side of the bed. Under the covers, my nose pressed into the pillow, a soft kiss lingering on the nape of my neck, I thought about the white wicker, the wrought-iron railings, the gardenias, and saw them for what they were; chipped, rusted, and wilted.
O You
O you whom I often and silently come where you are that
I may be with you,
As I walk by your side or sit near, or remain in the same
room with you,
Little you know the subtle electric fire that for your sake
is playing within me.
WW
He called the first time at 10:30pm. "I followed you to the club Saturday night. Those kids are weird." Why the hell was he calling me?
"You aren’t one of them," he noted, an impressive observation.
"Why do you think that?" I asked, pushing the flowered sheet to the end of the bed with my feet.
"The way you lean against the wall, speaking to no one yet reading them all. I can see it in your eyes. I’ll bet they are beautiful without all that crud around them."
Up on one elbow, I looked down at the black smears on my pillow. "You’re an ass."
The Priscilla curtain clung to the back of the rotating fan. "Wanna pick me up?"
"Um, sure. I’ll be there in twenty." He didn’t ask for directions.
The watermill that greeted visitors and the homeward bound at the front of the apartment complex had been hit again. The foam shimmered beneath the spotlights at the base of the fountain.
I stretched out in the grass, pulled a Camel from the waistband of my black mini, and cursed the mudflap girl on my Zippo. Out of fluid again.
The blue Lincoln turned onto the street, lights off. He made the circle, opening the passenger door before bringing the car to a complete stop. "Where you wanna go?"
I saw only the whites of his eyes and the braids twisting from the top of his head like the tree branches in winter. "Wherever, Baby."
The streetlights cast shadows across my fish netted thighs. I tapped the smoke against the armrest until he offered a light.
He drove a couple of miles away to the park, unbuckled my seatbelt, and pulled me to the middle of the seat. Taking my chin in his hand, he looked me in the eyes, and before kissing me said, "Next time wash that crud off your face."
I wasn’t his regular any more than he was mine yet we had a sickness for each other that killed time. After the shows every weekend, I scrubbed the black putty eyeliner off my eyes, and he lied to his girlfriend about going straight home.
He used to tell me I wasn’t created equal…that there was something about me that frightened the shit out of people.
I dreamt of him the other night….sitting at the park, legs stretched out beneath the picnic table, listening to me ramble about a picture I’d seen of Egyptians shooting up, and woke up wondering what it is about me that scares the shit out of people.
Theme
"I read your latest journal while you were gone." He leans back in the computer chair, brings up his legs, and rests his head on his knees. "I don’t know whether to puke or take your face in my hands and kiss you."
Immediately my mind scans the pages of that journal grasping for the pictures that go with the words.
"I don’t know what to tell you, Cory. I wrote it like it was. That is all I can do."
"I feel dirty, Crys. I feel like I stepped into a very scary place that I don’t want to leave. I’m so sorry I invaded your privacy but I had to let you know that I did it."
"I’m not upset that you read it. It’s that reaction I feared the most, the reaction from you." I curl up in his lap knowing the only way to remedy this is to let him hold me.
"It’s hard for me because I know them, even with the changed names. The chipped blue escort, the shelter house….I know your life because I was there. But I was left with this feeling that I’ve been sleeping next to you all these years and I never knew. I never asked. I couldn’t know."
I run my finger down the inside of his palm, willing myself to let him purge instead of making excuses for what I feel.
"Our lives are so interwoven. Not too many people have what we have because the background isn’t there. But that is also what makes it so difficult for me to read. I can picture Denny’s and the yellow Triumph and…..why did you make him out to be so caring? I know what you felt when you wrote ‘Road Trip’. You were shamed. You had taken yourself from Chicago and you were getting out. Then you walked back to him. I know this. I think I would have sensed it even if I didn’t know the background but I know this."
I slide my bare feet under his leg and twist my hair up into a knot. "You don’t get it. We all did what we had to do back then to feel special. You did it too with the guitars and the bare chest and the singing. You needed attention from girls and praise from the boys. You wanted to be known. You did what you had to do. I wanted to be loved."
"It’s my pride, Crys," he sighs. "It is difficult to read about you sharing an intimate moment with someone else. It repulses me, not you, the thought of it happening. How would you feel if I wrote about a passionate moment from my past?"
A smile breaks on my face dimming the blue light on the monitor. "I think you’ve forgotten your past," I smile down at him. "You slept with half my friends."
"Fair enough," he laughs. "Our lives can’t be separated. The history is too deep. I realize this."
I take the baby out for a walk and think about how I was sucked into that life, how at thirteen I ended up dancing in the middle of a house in Howell while two twenty year old men sat on a mattress playing ‘Simple Man’ on acoustic guitars.
_____________
Before bed, Cory wrapped his arms around my waist and told me not to hold back because of his pride or mine. It was a time, a life that many kids shared but no one understands. Maybe that’s part of the story I need to tell.
Immediately my mind scans the pages of that journal grasping for the pictures that go with the words.
"I don’t know what to tell you, Cory. I wrote it like it was. That is all I can do."
"I feel dirty, Crys. I feel like I stepped into a very scary place that I don’t want to leave. I’m so sorry I invaded your privacy but I had to let you know that I did it."
"I’m not upset that you read it. It’s that reaction I feared the most, the reaction from you." I curl up in his lap knowing the only way to remedy this is to let him hold me.
"It’s hard for me because I know them, even with the changed names. The chipped blue escort, the shelter house….I know your life because I was there. But I was left with this feeling that I’ve been sleeping next to you all these years and I never knew. I never asked. I couldn’t know."
I run my finger down the inside of his palm, willing myself to let him purge instead of making excuses for what I feel.
"Our lives are so interwoven. Not too many people have what we have because the background isn’t there. But that is also what makes it so difficult for me to read. I can picture Denny’s and the yellow Triumph and…..why did you make him out to be so caring? I know what you felt when you wrote ‘Road Trip’. You were shamed. You had taken yourself from Chicago and you were getting out. Then you walked back to him. I know this. I think I would have sensed it even if I didn’t know the background but I know this."
I slide my bare feet under his leg and twist my hair up into a knot. "You don’t get it. We all did what we had to do back then to feel special. You did it too with the guitars and the bare chest and the singing. You needed attention from girls and praise from the boys. You wanted to be known. You did what you had to do. I wanted to be loved."
"It’s my pride, Crys," he sighs. "It is difficult to read about you sharing an intimate moment with someone else. It repulses me, not you, the thought of it happening. How would you feel if I wrote about a passionate moment from my past?"
A smile breaks on my face dimming the blue light on the monitor. "I think you’ve forgotten your past," I smile down at him. "You slept with half my friends."
"Fair enough," he laughs. "Our lives can’t be separated. The history is too deep. I realize this."
I take the baby out for a walk and think about how I was sucked into that life, how at thirteen I ended up dancing in the middle of a house in Howell while two twenty year old men sat on a mattress playing ‘Simple Man’ on acoustic guitars.
_____________
Before bed, Cory wrapped his arms around my waist and told me not to hold back because of his pride or mine. It was a time, a life that many kids shared but no one understands. Maybe that’s part of the story I need to tell.
Wasted on Her
Two pair of hairy legs hang out the back of the escort. My heart drops, floating on the contents of a forty ounce. Jenny isn't here.
I toss my bag onto the seat behind their heads and crawl in. Jeremy rolls to his side, exposing a welcoming nook. "Where's Jenny?" I ask. He gathers my hair in one hand and pulls the bundle tightly, seeking a bare bit of neck to rest his cheek. "She's with Mosh Boy."
"Look what I found in her pack," Adam says, unzipping her pack. The front flap opens, and a new copy of Mein Kampf tumbles out. His eyes stare us down until Jeremy boots it out of the car, its contents too filthy to touch.
I want to shred the image of her in Mosh Boy's arms, eyes open in fascination, hanging onto his hate the way she used to suck Whitman's free verse from my mouth. Jeremy's bones feel sharper. I try to sit up but he pulls me closer, digging his fingers into the soft flesh under my halter. "Let it be us tonight. Not her, too. She doesn't deserve this."
She does deserve this, lodges in my throat, but it's all or nothing with Jeremy. Tonight would be nothing.
Adam's mom left the hall light on for us. He waves us to his room before disappearing up the stairs to let her know we made it home.
I want to talk about Jenny but Jeremy will tell me to let her go. He's never had anyone worth hanging on to, except Adam, and me. A wheeze escapes him as he sleeps. At seventeen, the nonfilter cigarettes are already turning his sweetness black. I untie the laces, tug the boots off his feet, and toss an army blanket over his thin frame. "Not us. Not tonight," I say to Jeremy, cupping his calf in my hand before turning to Adam.
The backyard limbs stretch and sway, beholding the moon's gaze. Arms reach out to me, drawing me down to the ground. Lips parted, he searches my face for those tears that were sure to come. Adam always knows.
He never minds the dampness on his back. I slide on top of him.
"Is this jealousy?" I ask, running my fingers through the crevices between his ribs. What I want is in his shirt pocket.
"No, just concern. She's not like us. She wants the thrill of being defiant. We are defiant."
Tugging his bottom lip open with my thumb, I lean over and blow the smoke into his mouth.
"It's all about what you need, whom you need, and knowing where to find it," he chokes out. "She's still searching for all of them."
I toss my bag onto the seat behind their heads and crawl in. Jeremy rolls to his side, exposing a welcoming nook. "Where's Jenny?" I ask. He gathers my hair in one hand and pulls the bundle tightly, seeking a bare bit of neck to rest his cheek. "She's with Mosh Boy."
"Look what I found in her pack," Adam says, unzipping her pack. The front flap opens, and a new copy of Mein Kampf tumbles out. His eyes stare us down until Jeremy boots it out of the car, its contents too filthy to touch.
I want to shred the image of her in Mosh Boy's arms, eyes open in fascination, hanging onto his hate the way she used to suck Whitman's free verse from my mouth. Jeremy's bones feel sharper. I try to sit up but he pulls me closer, digging his fingers into the soft flesh under my halter. "Let it be us tonight. Not her, too. She doesn't deserve this."
She does deserve this, lodges in my throat, but it's all or nothing with Jeremy. Tonight would be nothing.
Adam's mom left the hall light on for us. He waves us to his room before disappearing up the stairs to let her know we made it home.
I want to talk about Jenny but Jeremy will tell me to let her go. He's never had anyone worth hanging on to, except Adam, and me. A wheeze escapes him as he sleeps. At seventeen, the nonfilter cigarettes are already turning his sweetness black. I untie the laces, tug the boots off his feet, and toss an army blanket over his thin frame. "Not us. Not tonight," I say to Jeremy, cupping his calf in my hand before turning to Adam.
The backyard limbs stretch and sway, beholding the moon's gaze. Arms reach out to me, drawing me down to the ground. Lips parted, he searches my face for those tears that were sure to come. Adam always knows.
He never minds the dampness on his back. I slide on top of him.
"Is this jealousy?" I ask, running my fingers through the crevices between his ribs. What I want is in his shirt pocket.
"No, just concern. She's not like us. She wants the thrill of being defiant. We are defiant."
Tugging his bottom lip open with my thumb, I lean over and blow the smoke into his mouth.
"It's all about what you need, whom you need, and knowing where to find it," he chokes out. "She's still searching for all of them."
Bugs
It took five guys to load the jukebox into the back of JR's pickup. We had to switch club spots fairly often. Neighbors complained about the noise, the drugs, the kids weaving up and down the country road. It wasn't until that kid who wore the bullet around his neck wrecked and killed his girlfriend that the cops closed us down.
That day we were moving spots to a shelter house at the park. Five dollar cover to watch three bands. I took this seat on the ledge of the half wall where I could lean up against the wooden post and not risk falling through the top screened half of the building.
The kids filed in, black eyeliner sticking out of the top zippered pockets of leathers. The girls with lips perfectly outlined in black and hooker red lipstick smeared on the inside always stood in the middle of the room. Their eyes darted over the crowd, heads turning, looking for someone to claim.
The kids all knew me by name. They watched me dance. Occasionally a girl would come up and dance next to me, grinning like she was part of a party of two. Most of the time I just smiled, kept my distance, and nodded my head to the beat.
I sat in my corner all night watching these kids. Knowing that the following Monday I would be sitting at a desk at college and looking at the students there with the same amazement. They sported thirty dollar Chuck Taylors and wrote down a leather on their list to Santa just to look like the kids I saw every weekend; the kids who dreamed big but took pride in never finding a way out.
This night, a couple of kids showed up in brand new leather jackets, no fuzzy gray worn elbows, or broken zippers on the pockets. And the other kids laughed at them.
In my head, I thought of all people to be laughing, these kids didn't have a reason to laugh. They were stuck. They were stuck in a world of violence and abuse and dead end jobs and welfare and having kids before they were old enough to take care of them and they laughed because they were better than someone trying to fake into their world.
The thing was though, I came from wealth. I had the education. I had the means to get out and I was getting out. And they still, they always took me for one of their own. In my own way, in my own place at the back of the room or on the ledge, I was always one of them.
I don't know what they sensed in me. I rarely spoke. I kept to myself and my bottle. In my world, the time they shared it with me, I was never really with them. I knew I wasn't like them. I knew I wasn't like the kids at school. I knew that I would never find a mirror in any of them. But I loved them. Because they were there, and WITH me, and experiencing this part of my life that was real, alive.
Johnette's voice smothered my ears, my heart rose to my throat, and these kids closed their eyes, moving to this stirring from a voice that I felt inside myself.
That day we were moving spots to a shelter house at the park. Five dollar cover to watch three bands. I took this seat on the ledge of the half wall where I could lean up against the wooden post and not risk falling through the top screened half of the building.
The kids filed in, black eyeliner sticking out of the top zippered pockets of leathers. The girls with lips perfectly outlined in black and hooker red lipstick smeared on the inside always stood in the middle of the room. Their eyes darted over the crowd, heads turning, looking for someone to claim.
The kids all knew me by name. They watched me dance. Occasionally a girl would come up and dance next to me, grinning like she was part of a party of two. Most of the time I just smiled, kept my distance, and nodded my head to the beat.
I sat in my corner all night watching these kids. Knowing that the following Monday I would be sitting at a desk at college and looking at the students there with the same amazement. They sported thirty dollar Chuck Taylors and wrote down a leather on their list to Santa just to look like the kids I saw every weekend; the kids who dreamed big but took pride in never finding a way out.
This night, a couple of kids showed up in brand new leather jackets, no fuzzy gray worn elbows, or broken zippers on the pockets. And the other kids laughed at them.
In my head, I thought of all people to be laughing, these kids didn't have a reason to laugh. They were stuck. They were stuck in a world of violence and abuse and dead end jobs and welfare and having kids before they were old enough to take care of them and they laughed because they were better than someone trying to fake into their world.
The thing was though, I came from wealth. I had the education. I had the means to get out and I was getting out. And they still, they always took me for one of their own. In my own way, in my own place at the back of the room or on the ledge, I was always one of them.
I don't know what they sensed in me. I rarely spoke. I kept to myself and my bottle. In my world, the time they shared it with me, I was never really with them. I knew I wasn't like them. I knew I wasn't like the kids at school. I knew that I would never find a mirror in any of them. But I loved them. Because they were there, and WITH me, and experiencing this part of my life that was real, alive.
Johnette's voice smothered my ears, my heart rose to my throat, and these kids closed their eyes, moving to this stirring from a voice that I felt inside myself.
No Expectations
We ran across the gravel and into the graveyard, leaping over the rounded headstones in a wild dash to the corner by the woods. Lindsey, drunk and high, stumbled into the briars that shielded the trees from knife-bearing engravers like us.
After we settled into a circle, Adam unrolled the flimsy cigarette wrapper and took out the joint. Legs tucked under him, balanced on one hip, he dug the lighter out of his pocket. The smoke popped and snapped as he inhaled. A spark disappeared above him. I took a big hit and laid my head in the middle of the circle.
There she was, peeping out from behind the black clouds like a dancer's knees beneath her skirt. My eyelids fell. The cicadas were climbing out. I lay there, my body too alive to move, listening to their spiked legs rake against the bark at the base of the tree.
A hand palmed my belly. My ribs rose in staccato under the perspired warmth. "What do you think?" Jenny asked, her black hair shining white under the moon. "Mmm, about what?" I mumbled. "Driving to the club. Do you want to go or not?"
"I'm cool. Just pick me up later, okay?"
"Whatever you want, chicky. Come on boys. She's staying."
Feet shuffled. Mike Ness's croon faded away with the old chipped blue escort. Belly still warm from her touch, I thought about Jenny's room with the little pink flowered wallpaper, the vase of dead roses and moldy water sitting on her desk for at least the three years I'd known her. She was so naive, wanting to be what she wasn't….rich and thick, hurt and injured. She had a good life, a good family but wanted to come from destruction.
"Taste?" Adam asked, extending the bottle.
"I can't move," I grinned.
"Open up." He poured it into my mouth, a warm trickle ran down my neck. I tried not to gag from laughing, letting it slowly fill my mouth before swallowing the two shots.
"Why didn't you go with them?" I asked. He pushed me over to my belly, lying down next to me.
"Why didn't you?" Blade of grass between his thumbs, whistling at the night creatures.
"Didn't need to," I plucked the spear of grass from his fingers and gave it a toss.
"Me neither."
That closeness with no expectations. There isn't a word to describe it. The occasional innocent brush of skin on skin that we fear, hide from as adults but crave as teenagers. Locking eyes and not turning away. Heart pounding in your head knowing you won't dare move and ruin the moment. It isn't sex. It isn't love. It's intimacy. It's coming as close as you can to another living being with no expectations.
After we settled into a circle, Adam unrolled the flimsy cigarette wrapper and took out the joint. Legs tucked under him, balanced on one hip, he dug the lighter out of his pocket. The smoke popped and snapped as he inhaled. A spark disappeared above him. I took a big hit and laid my head in the middle of the circle.
There she was, peeping out from behind the black clouds like a dancer's knees beneath her skirt. My eyelids fell. The cicadas were climbing out. I lay there, my body too alive to move, listening to their spiked legs rake against the bark at the base of the tree.
A hand palmed my belly. My ribs rose in staccato under the perspired warmth. "What do you think?" Jenny asked, her black hair shining white under the moon. "Mmm, about what?" I mumbled. "Driving to the club. Do you want to go or not?"
"I'm cool. Just pick me up later, okay?"
"Whatever you want, chicky. Come on boys. She's staying."
Feet shuffled. Mike Ness's croon faded away with the old chipped blue escort. Belly still warm from her touch, I thought about Jenny's room with the little pink flowered wallpaper, the vase of dead roses and moldy water sitting on her desk for at least the three years I'd known her. She was so naive, wanting to be what she wasn't….rich and thick, hurt and injured. She had a good life, a good family but wanted to come from destruction.
"Taste?" Adam asked, extending the bottle.
"I can't move," I grinned.
"Open up." He poured it into my mouth, a warm trickle ran down my neck. I tried not to gag from laughing, letting it slowly fill my mouth before swallowing the two shots.
"Why didn't you go with them?" I asked. He pushed me over to my belly, lying down next to me.
"Why didn't you?" Blade of grass between his thumbs, whistling at the night creatures.
"Didn't need to," I plucked the spear of grass from his fingers and gave it a toss.
"Me neither."
That closeness with no expectations. There isn't a word to describe it. The occasional innocent brush of skin on skin that we fear, hide from as adults but crave as teenagers. Locking eyes and not turning away. Heart pounding in your head knowing you won't dare move and ruin the moment. It isn't sex. It isn't love. It's intimacy. It's coming as close as you can to another living being with no expectations.
Road Trip
The sweetness of the corn mixes with musty soybeans and sticks to my skin. One-stop towns decorate the open fields with marquee signs announcing births, engagements, and six piece chicken buckets for $4.99. Every town is my home.
"Do you want that?" Heath nods.
I turn the Billy Idol ‘Rebel Yell’ cassette over in my hand and think what a silly question. We haven’t had a cassette player in months. I’d have to stash it in the saddle bags for later. "That’s okay." I drop the cassette into the bin.
The lady behind the counter smiles at him, at his thoughtfulness. "Ya’ll have a good night," she calls out.
"Thanks. You do the same," Heath waves before guiding me out the door by my waist, inches away from the plastic case tucked into the band of my jeans.
The bugs are violent outside of town, stinging my cheeks, but the darkness pushes us forward. I bury my head into Heath’s back, hunched over, the corner of the cassette case jabbing my belly. Left hand on my thigh, shoulders spread broad, he windshields for me.
He steers the bike onto a dirt path. I dismount and follow him a ways off the road. My legs, tired from the long ride, tremble as my boots shuffle over the rutted ground.
The moon spots us from straight above. There’s no point in setting up the tent. Farmers rise early. The first whir of pickups passing and Heath will wake. I climb into the sleeping bag with him, resting my head on the chest that had become my pillow. The scent of oil and wind is intoxicating.
Lying together, the sleeping bag zipped tight, I ask the dreaded question, "Where are we going tomorrow?" My fingers play with the flesh hanging over his belt. At least he isn’t drinking as much.
"I don’t know. Keep heading south for a while. D.T. has a place for us in Florida. He has a buddy who owns a bike shop. I need to find some work. Our funds are getting low."
"I could always dance somewhere. Just for one night." Just saying those words coats the back of my tongue with bile.
"I told you….never again. And I mean it." He sucks in his gut. The flesh disappears beneath my fingers. "Why do you even bring that up?" His eyes slit and he drops his arm to the ground which was as far away as he could get in the confines of the flannel wrap.
I fumble for the zipper on his blue jeans, letting the crickets speak for me. Their incessant, involuntary cries for companionship fill my ears and I know there isn’t any other language I know how to speak.
"Do you want that?" Heath nods.
I turn the Billy Idol ‘Rebel Yell’ cassette over in my hand and think what a silly question. We haven’t had a cassette player in months. I’d have to stash it in the saddle bags for later. "That’s okay." I drop the cassette into the bin.
The lady behind the counter smiles at him, at his thoughtfulness. "Ya’ll have a good night," she calls out.
"Thanks. You do the same," Heath waves before guiding me out the door by my waist, inches away from the plastic case tucked into the band of my jeans.
The bugs are violent outside of town, stinging my cheeks, but the darkness pushes us forward. I bury my head into Heath’s back, hunched over, the corner of the cassette case jabbing my belly. Left hand on my thigh, shoulders spread broad, he windshields for me.
He steers the bike onto a dirt path. I dismount and follow him a ways off the road. My legs, tired from the long ride, tremble as my boots shuffle over the rutted ground.
The moon spots us from straight above. There’s no point in setting up the tent. Farmers rise early. The first whir of pickups passing and Heath will wake. I climb into the sleeping bag with him, resting my head on the chest that had become my pillow. The scent of oil and wind is intoxicating.
Lying together, the sleeping bag zipped tight, I ask the dreaded question, "Where are we going tomorrow?" My fingers play with the flesh hanging over his belt. At least he isn’t drinking as much.
"I don’t know. Keep heading south for a while. D.T. has a place for us in Florida. He has a buddy who owns a bike shop. I need to find some work. Our funds are getting low."
"I could always dance somewhere. Just for one night." Just saying those words coats the back of my tongue with bile.
"I told you….never again. And I mean it." He sucks in his gut. The flesh disappears beneath my fingers. "Why do you even bring that up?" His eyes slit and he drops his arm to the ground which was as far away as he could get in the confines of the flannel wrap.
I fumble for the zipper on his blue jeans, letting the crickets speak for me. Their incessant, involuntary cries for companionship fill my ears and I know there isn’t any other language I know how to speak.
Lake Michigan
That night we wet our feet in Lake Michigan, right before we were arrested, I was going to tell you that there isn’t always a lesson to be learned in sorrow. Sometimes we create our own pain. You wouldn’t have believed me though. You never did listen when I tried to tell you life didn’t have to be so hard.
I realized that night we wouldn’t work out. From the back of the patrol car I watched you throw your body onto the concrete beside the five foot marker, manipulating the officers into giving you what I wouldn’t.
Later when they visited, the fresh officer asked if it was the drugs or if you were always that way. I assured him it was the drugs. Then the doctor asked if I wanted to go to the shelter. I told him I didn’t, but you know I was never very good at lying.
I realized that night we wouldn’t work out. From the back of the patrol car I watched you throw your body onto the concrete beside the five foot marker, manipulating the officers into giving you what I wouldn’t.
Later when they visited, the fresh officer asked if it was the drugs or if you were always that way. I assured him it was the drugs. Then the doctor asked if I wanted to go to the shelter. I told him I didn’t, but you know I was never very good at lying.
The Memory Sprig
I went for a jog this morning with the baby. It was still dark out. I knew we couldn't stay out long but we both enjoy the air, even when hung with a wet chill.
The herb garden is desolate in the winter. It saddens me. In late fall I walk past, slightly brush my leg against the greens and the last scents of summer cling to the air. I grew up on an eighty-three acre farm in Kentucky….yellow two story house, black shutters, windows open until nine in the evening.
I spent my childhood in the woods. My father used to wake me early in the spring and take me out on the rounds. He hunted with the boys, but with me, he passed down his own father's passion for all that grows. He taught me how to watch the mayapples, how to have patience like the delicate morels anxiously waiting to rise up from under expanded leaves. He taught me to be mindful, unselfish, to take only a few and leave the rest for the animals that depended upon the mushrooms for survival.
The trees and plants that grew in those woods received more time and patience from me in childhood than anyone or anything I've met since.
Something caught my eye when I jogged past the edge of the garden this morning, green, rising up from under the dry leaves. I pushed the baby to the edge of the garden. His cheeks were flushed, blue eyes wide. I lifted the leaves, exposing a small bundle of lemon thyme. I plucked a sprig, and carefully covered the bundle with bedding. I rubbed the tiny green leaves between my fingers and held it to the baby's nose.
"Smell, babe."
He took it from my hand and stuck his tongue to it. Lips protruding, possibly a dim recollection of summer forming in his mind, he tucked his hand under the blanket, enclosed in it, the dying sprig.
The herb garden is desolate in the winter. It saddens me. In late fall I walk past, slightly brush my leg against the greens and the last scents of summer cling to the air. I grew up on an eighty-three acre farm in Kentucky….yellow two story house, black shutters, windows open until nine in the evening.
I spent my childhood in the woods. My father used to wake me early in the spring and take me out on the rounds. He hunted with the boys, but with me, he passed down his own father's passion for all that grows. He taught me how to watch the mayapples, how to have patience like the delicate morels anxiously waiting to rise up from under expanded leaves. He taught me to be mindful, unselfish, to take only a few and leave the rest for the animals that depended upon the mushrooms for survival.
The trees and plants that grew in those woods received more time and patience from me in childhood than anyone or anything I've met since.
Something caught my eye when I jogged past the edge of the garden this morning, green, rising up from under the dry leaves. I pushed the baby to the edge of the garden. His cheeks were flushed, blue eyes wide. I lifted the leaves, exposing a small bundle of lemon thyme. I plucked a sprig, and carefully covered the bundle with bedding. I rubbed the tiny green leaves between my fingers and held it to the baby's nose.
"Smell, babe."
He took it from my hand and stuck his tongue to it. Lips protruding, possibly a dim recollection of summer forming in his mind, he tucked his hand under the blanket, enclosed in it, the dying sprig.
Why Not?
'Alone And Drinking Under The Moon' by Li Po
I want to surround myself with people who have nothing better to do than be with me, no demands, leave your baggage at the door.
At nineteen, I quit college. I tossed my knee high Doc Martins, a green hoodie, and Whitman's 'Leaves of Grass' onto the pile of cassettes in the front seat and drove south.
Nothing changes in rural western Kentucky; the picket fences get a fresh coat of paint, dead dogs are replaced with replicas, pickups powder into rust next to leaning gray barns. It would be the same when I returned.
The house sat two acres off the highway. The front porch sagged. The shingles turned over like leaves before a storm. Cindi smeared blackberry juice on the front of her shirt before wrapping her plump arms around my waist. It wasn't home, but if you are going to squat for a while there's no place better than in the kitchen of an old friend.
The barbecue began the next evening. He strutted through the smoke like a warrior after victory. He didn't need game, or lines. One look in his black eyes and you knew he had never once doubted he was beautiful.
We hid behind the barn.
"How long are you staying?"
"A week, a month, never leaving, I don't know," I said, spinning before him.
He reached out for my hand. "You're beautiful."
"What does that have to do with how long I'm staying?" I mumbled into his curls.
He laughed at me. "I'll call you a toad if you'd rather I did so."
I stood there, biting my lip.
"Do you want company?"
"Tonight?" I asked.
"While you're here."
"Why not?"
I just want to be with people for no good reason.
Amongst the flowers I
am alone with my pot of wine
drinking by myself; then lifting
my cup I asked the moon
to drink with me, its reflection
and mine in the wine cup, just
the three of us; then I sigh
for the moon cannot drink,
and my shadow goes emptily along
with me never saying a word;
with no other friends here, I can
but use these two for company;
in the time of happiness, I
too must be happy with all
around me; I sit and sing
and it is as if the moon
accompanies me; then if I
dance, it is my shadow that
dances along with me; while
still not drunk, I am glad
to make the moon and my shadow
into friends, but then when
I have drunk too much, we
all part; yet these are
friends I can always count on
these who have no emotion
whatsoever; I hope that one day
we three will meet again,
deep in the Milky Way.
I want to surround myself with people who have nothing better to do than be with me, no demands, leave your baggage at the door.
At nineteen, I quit college. I tossed my knee high Doc Martins, a green hoodie, and Whitman's 'Leaves of Grass' onto the pile of cassettes in the front seat and drove south.
Nothing changes in rural western Kentucky; the picket fences get a fresh coat of paint, dead dogs are replaced with replicas, pickups powder into rust next to leaning gray barns. It would be the same when I returned.
The house sat two acres off the highway. The front porch sagged. The shingles turned over like leaves before a storm. Cindi smeared blackberry juice on the front of her shirt before wrapping her plump arms around my waist. It wasn't home, but if you are going to squat for a while there's no place better than in the kitchen of an old friend.
The barbecue began the next evening. He strutted through the smoke like a warrior after victory. He didn't need game, or lines. One look in his black eyes and you knew he had never once doubted he was beautiful.
We hid behind the barn.
"How long are you staying?"
"A week, a month, never leaving, I don't know," I said, spinning before him.
He reached out for my hand. "You're beautiful."
"What does that have to do with how long I'm staying?" I mumbled into his curls.
He laughed at me. "I'll call you a toad if you'd rather I did so."
I stood there, biting my lip.
"Do you want company?"
"Tonight?" I asked.
"While you're here."
"Why not?"
I just want to be with people for no good reason.
Perfect Timing
The singer's boot heel pounds the stage. My hip rocks, skirt swirling around my knees like smoke rising from a cigarette left in an ashtray.
Bottle to my lips, I watch the people at the table next to me instead of the empty dance floor. The girl with the shell necklace slides her feet out of her sandals and wraps them around the boy's leg. His eyes follow the curve of her neck while he talks to the man who grimaces with each sip of imported beer.
Tell me, Baby. The singer backs off the microphone. You got to tell me what's going through your head. The melody lures me onto the dirty white tiles.
He thumbs his bass, eyeing the crowd, watching their reaction as I ride the voice I've heard so many times at home.
I need you to tell me.
Barefoot on the front porch. He coaxes the swing back and forth, a silent bass accompanying his guitar.
What's it gonna be?
Lights of the highway hidden behind the cornfield. I catch the screendoor with my foot, two glasses of iced tea in hand.
You gonna come back home
Stop in front of the swing. Wait for the rock forward.
and stay with me?
Ten years. Perfect timing.
Bottle to my lips, I watch the people at the table next to me instead of the empty dance floor. The girl with the shell necklace slides her feet out of her sandals and wraps them around the boy's leg. His eyes follow the curve of her neck while he talks to the man who grimaces with each sip of imported beer.
Tell me, Baby. The singer backs off the microphone. You got to tell me what's going through your head. The melody lures me onto the dirty white tiles.
He thumbs his bass, eyeing the crowd, watching their reaction as I ride the voice I've heard so many times at home.
I need you to tell me.
Barefoot on the front porch. He coaxes the swing back and forth, a silent bass accompanying his guitar.
What's it gonna be?
Lights of the highway hidden behind the cornfield. I catch the screendoor with my foot, two glasses of iced tea in hand.
You gonna come back home
Stop in front of the swing. Wait for the rock forward.
and stay with me?
Ten years. Perfect timing.
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