~This story was previously published in Puerto del Sol (2003).
When I met Robert
he was crazy, going five million directions at the same time. I followed him
down each and every path, trudging right along behind him all the way, stomping
all the way back. The whole thing was
super-fast—like one of those Matchbox car snap together loop-de-loop tracks.
By the end of the
first month, he was moving in. Into I
don't know where because there sure as hell wasn't any space in my
one-bedroom. He seeped into nooks and
crannies, into cracks, poured himself into the divots in the linoleum floor,
reaching down and throwing some roots into the thin gaps between my
floorboards. He took hold. And it worked, you know?
It was saturation
point, mind you, month one. But I just
keep taking and taking. That's how I
learn. My friend Vivette tells me, she
says, ‘Susan, you're like a motherfucking sponge.’ She says I'm one of those big ones you use to
clean the tub with or the hood of your car.
I'm a sponge waiting to soak it in.
All of it. Whatever it is. Vivette says it's her job to come along and
wring me out.
So there's Robert
seeping into that, and reaching into this.
And there I am sitting on the couch with my legs wrapped up underneath
me, watching him. I'm sipping my coffee
with two hands, holding the mug like I'm cold.
I'm watching him watch the football game he always has time for even
though it always seems like he never has time for anything.
I'm staring him
down, watching him go five hundred million ways, and that's just sitting
still. He's eating pretzels and opening
a beer. He's shuffling some papers from
work. Robert sells life insurance. He's good.
He says it's because he understands people. He's alternately reaching out and squeezing
the back of my neck. I sip my coffee
again. I've been staring at him for five
minutes straight and he hasn't once made eye contact with me. He has the phone beside him. He's trying to get through to his brother in
California, but the line's busy which means that Danny's on the internet. So Robert is going every which way, then he
yells--jumping up--"Touchdown!
Yes."
He flips to the Discovery
Channel, because he's also watching this thing on frogs, then to MTV, the Food
Network, then he looks right at me looking right at him like I'm the only
person in the world. There's some woman
frying little chunks of ham in a skillet on TV.
The woman is smiling and saying, "Believe me. It works," as she stirs the naked chunks
with a big wooden spoon.
Robert says,
"Babe. Let's talk. Remember when we would sit up listening to
the trains? Remember that? Let's talk like we did back then." He looks at me for what seems like a long
while but is probably just a second or so.
We don't say anything. Just
stare, smiling.
He turns back to
the game. He mutters, "Face
mask. Call it, call it."
He presses redial
on the phone.
I say,
"Okay, let's do that." He
makes eye contact with me again, looking like he's making sure this is really
important.
"Okay,
Babe. How's your new job? How's that going?"
"Fine,"
I say.
I stretch out my
legs so they're on top of his legs. I
wonder if this all leads up to sex.
Then I say,
"I was wondering what you planned on doing for Christmas this year. I mean, coming up. Do you want to try and spend it
together?"
"Yes, I
do," he said.
He looked at me
then like that was all he had wanted to get to in the conversation. Christmas.
Months off. And my inquiring
about it.
Robert smiled
then. I remember the little squinty
lines under his eyes and how I thought he just worked too hard, too hard at
everything. And we did have sex later. I remember it all. Robert had it all in those
minutes--everything together in his head, a neat bundle--tied and stacked,
alphabetized and collated. Later,
something changed. All the interesting
rough edges smoothed themselves out. But
then, right then, he was beautiful.
We had sex, and
the sex was good. How could I to see
Jesse around the corner of my life?
Jesse in the next few days saying hi and touching me on the arm. His smell lingering. How was I to see Jesse and me talking
together so many late nights while Robert was off working? Jesse calm and magnetic. Jesse.
Well.
"Two at
once?" Vivette said, "Two at once.
What do you think? You're gonna
divide like an earthworm? Dear, like you
have time for this kind of thing. Like
you even know how to have an affair. Come on."
And she was
right. I was very bad at it.
I would call
Robert and tell him I was going to be home late, then I would feel guilty and
call Jesse and cancel my plans with him, then I would be alone and horny,
wandering the streets. I did a lot of
shopping in those months--spent a lot of time by myself for theoretically
having two at once.
I was so sad, and
every so often, Robert would have his beer halfway to his mouth or he'd be
heading out the door all coat tails and pleated pants and he'd stop. Stop, look at me, and say, "Susie, do
you feel loved?"
And of course
that would make me turn away, blushing and mumbling--pulling on my lower
lip. It would make me rush him out the
door or get him another beer, depending upon the situation. Because I knew what I was about to do even if
no one else did. I was going to take a
nap, take a bath--long and hot, then I was going to call Jesse.
Jesse was an
artist and because of that when I first met him he was almost always free. He was also always poor. So I'd stop over his place with some
take-out. He would outline his next
project for me. He made huge sculptures. They were so big he never actually got to
construct any of them. He called it a
post-modern dilemma. He just spent all
his time drawing up plans, making lists of how to affordably purchase his
supplies, rent equipment. This caught on
and soon he had his lists and plans framed and displayed. The gallery opening was called “Jesse Works
on Progress.” He got a couple big
grants, and he was on his way.
After Jesse made
it, the attraction started to sputter.
"Why is
it," Vivette asked, "you can't love a man who has it
together?"
I told her I
couldn't love a man headed in only one direction.
"You like
this twenty million directions and never up?
Okay, okay," she said, "Go back to Robert. Whatever, whatever. Stay, stay with Robert. He never even knew anything was wrong. He never even knew you were gone. That's what you want? Go back, go back."
So I did.
But I still
wandered the streets a lot. Shopping way
too much. Buying little presents for
everyone I knew.
Vivette's
apartment is big and clean. Very
modern. Vivette hates her
apartment. She would much rather be at
Robert and Susan's. Robert and Susan's
place is cluttered and jammed with stuff:
recycling waiting to be taken to the curb, half-full beers, half-full
coffee cups with pleasant mounds of mold floating on top. There's artwork on the walls, sketches by
friends, stuff from magazines. Pictures
of Robert and Susan looking happy on vacation.
Their apartment smells like heat and wood and spices and Kitty, their
cat. Vivette goes there often, or at
least she used to. Until lately. Robert.
The soft smiles, the touches. The
night they stayed up talking until two while Susan visited her mom out of
town. Smiles. Touches.
Vivette had
called him up because she was lonely, just back from Des Moines, and because
she knew that he would be lonely with Susan out of town. Robert said, "Sure, yeah. Come on over.
I'll cook us dinner."
After they'd had
the second bottle of wine, Robert started talking about Susan, how hard it was
to figure her out. "She's just so
complicated, you know? It's like she
wants everything and nothing--or she wants everything to look like nothing. Or maybe it's just that she doesn't want to
see any seams. I don't know. I try really hard.”
"Oh Honey,
Susan is a hard one. But she's special,
you know? She's just very difficult to
figure."
The mistake that
Vivette made was moving her chair closer to Robert's. The mistake Vivette made was being alone for
too long. The mistake she made was
touching his knee and then watching him watch her. The mistake was that she knew exactly what he
was thinking right before she smiled back at him. The mistake was she saw his face when it was
all over, how it cracked and faded into regret.
She saw how his face looked at hers thinking, how could you do this to
Susan?
Robert was the
same thing all over.
All over
again. All over.
The cash registers rings and there's a high
pitched jingle of a bell as Edna cranks a lever back and the drawer opens,
coins sloshing in their bins.
Fluorescent lights. And Edna
always behind that register. Bright red
lipstick, perfume. The All-Nite
Diner. She's there chewing gum. Her nails a dull red--her hair, which should
have gone gray--red. The red of her hair
clashing with the red of her nails, the red of the red checkered floor, the red
of her lips, her customer's chapped hands.
Edna piles her
waitresses into these black and white uniforms.
White shoes that squeak on the squeaky clean floor. And there's the smell of fall, then winter,
then spring, then summer seeping through the slamming screen door. Again.
Bam. Again.
Vivette works
there. The floors shining and
polished. The smell of Ajax when she
opens up for the morning shift. The
smell of eggs frying, and bacon. After
that, all the people going to their jobs.
And Vivette there to help them on their way.
She doesn't know
exactly what happened. She tried
hard. She smiled. Jack.
Jack. Big.
Broad. Nice. He was nice.
Vivette was drawn to him, his early a.m. breakfasts, his
construction-site arms, his neck.
"Hey
Vivette, you're my sweetie aren't you?"
And Vivette would
blush and move closer to him. Move in
with something strong and steel in him drawing some magnet in her.
Jack would laugh
his bright, loud laugh. His eyes
sparkling. Vivette didn't know what to
do with him.
There were dishes
clanking and the sound of customers.
Chrome, vinyl. Green booths
outlined the floor. Ceiling fans, and
that door, after Jack let it slam on his way out.
So I was feeling
restless and dissatisfied. Vivette said
maybe I should get my ass in gear and do something about it. So I looked for a new job, asked Robert if
maybe we could take a yoga class together, even though I was afraid everyone in
the class would have on black turtlenecks and leotards. I didn't tell Robert that though. We put on some sweats and went over to the
community college gym.
When we walked in
all the people reflected off the shiny floor looked like one of us. Everyone looked out of shape but happy, and
even the instructor, Mrs. Whitefield, looked more like she'd bring a Jello
salad than cous-cous to a potluck. I
relaxed. I just did what Mrs. Whitefield
told me to. I breathed in; I breathed
out. I reached as far as I could but not too far. I looked over at Robert stretching his head
not even halfway to his knobby knees. He
had a look on his face; he was determined.
I knew he was going to relax. He
looked over at me and smiled like he could see me for more than a second at a
time.
Something cold
and scary tingled at my spine. It didn't
go away no matter how long or far I stretched.
Vivette hadn't
had a date in over a year, and she was losing her shit. She was walking the streets and hearing in
her head, Crazy Vivette. In
hushed tones, of course. Crazy
Vivette.
And that's when
she cashed the savings bonds. That's
when she knew she was leaving town. She
was going to search for what--she didn't know.
She simply knew it was time to con her grandpa's car out of his name and
into hers. It was time to get on the
road: slush, ice, whatever. She was off.
And for some reason Des Moines made music play in her head. Soft, sweet music. Des Moines.
Des Moines. Vivette knew Des
Moines would hold all the beauty that hadn't ever come her way.
The morning she
left rain fell onto the gray snow that covered everything. Five a.m.
Vivette drove through the muffled town, by the hardware store and then
the All-Nite on her way out. She stopped
in the nearly empty lot outside the diner and honked twice. From inside, Jack lifted his head,
waved. He didn't know it was her--it was
dark out. He was waving to his own
blurry reflection in the window and to the sound of possibility beyond. Her headlights searched the diner's smooth
side, and Vivette was gone, icicles hanging from her mudflaps, her suitcase at
her side.
Susan has bought
a little present for Vivette's return from Des Moines. She walks up to her
door. Second floor, brass knocker.
Vivette
answers. They hug and walk into her
clean living room, sit on the hard futon-couch behind the glass coffee
table.
Susan says,
"I think I really fucked up this morning."
Vivette says,
"How? What? Could I at least get a welcome back or
something?"
"Oh hey, I'm
sorry. Welcome back. It's been so lonely here without you. Really, welcome."
"Thank
you."
"I told
Robert he does too much for me. I told
him that I just couldn't keep up. And I
can't. I can't keep up. And I meant it. I really did.
But I have to admit, when he started a bath and made me some coffee;
when he got out of bed and turned up the heat, I wasn't complaining."
Vivette nods.
"Anyway, I said
he did too much for me right before the whole soap incident."
"Soap?"
Susan nods as she
takes a small sip of the tea Vivette had waiting for her, "Robert was
brushing his teeth and shaving at practically the same time. I swear.
Anyway, he was flossing and smoothing on deodorant and reaching for the
toenail clippers and whatever else he does in the morning, and he turns to me
and says, 'What's this?'"
"What was
it?"
"Soap. Okay?
Right. This might be stupid. Well, then he holds up another bottle from
the cupboard and asks the same thing.
And I say soap again. And then he
opens up the cupboard door the whole way.
He says, 'Is all this stuff soap?'
And I say, ‘Yes. Yes, Robert, it
is.’"
Vivette sets her
cigarette on the ceramic ashtray on the coffee table. She moves the little wrapped present Susan
has brought off to the side and says, "But it isn't really, is it? I mean.
It isn't all soap."
"No. Of course not. There's lotion and Q-tips and all kinds of
shit in there. He knows that. But it was the way he stopped everything else
and looked at me, then the cupboard, then me like he was seeing me for the
first time ever. It was like he was
considering for the first time ever all the shit he had done for me and all the
shit I hadn't done back. You know,
garbage, cat litter, dishes."
"Oh come
on. What are you talking about?"
"I do
stuff. But really, he does so much these
days. He is really trying to
change. I mean, he's always there for
me. And me--well twenty percent. I've never considered what my end of the deal
is supposed to be in this relationship.
I mean, maybe I'm twenty percent but it's probably more like
fifteen."
Vivette shrugs.
"Remember Harold? He told me he
just couldn't care enough. That's what
he said. He just couldn't care enough to
stay in a relationship for any kind of haul."
"Jesus,"
Susan said, looking at her thumbnails.
"Maybe I'm Harold."
"No,
no. That wasn't my point. Go on."
"Okay,"
Susan says leaning forward, "So I said it was all soap even though it
wasn't technically true. And then he
said, 'Well, why?' You know, by that
time he was pushing things around in the cupboard, trying to read labels and
decipher what was what. The thing is I
saw him seeing me naked there in the tub with my breasts bobbing and shoulders
that really haven't seen a push-up in months.
I told him it was important for me to have a lot of soap."
Vivette lights
her second cigarette and exhales. "Honey, guys don't understand those
kinds of things. Soap. Powder.
Bras. They’re all a mystery to
them."
"I know, I
know. But he was standing there. And all I could see was myself alone for the
rest of my life. I mean, it was so
fucking quiet right then in the apartment."
"So what
happened?"
"I said,
'Thanks for ruining my bath. Thanks for
making me paranoid. Thanks for pointing
out the soap problem, Robert."
Susan looked at Vivette. "I
mean there really is soap everywhere. I
have a lot of soap. So kill me."
Vivette says,
"I have tons too."
"I hate it
that he tries so hard to understand me now.
He just tries so hard at everything.
He didn't used to do that."
"He does try
really hard. You're right," Vivette
says as she walks to the kitchen and back to the couch again with fresh cups of
tea.
Susan whispers,
"He said, 'It's distracting.' I
heard him say it from behind the door as I walked down the hallway. And you know, then I heard him rinsing the
goddamn bathtub. I heard him rinsing the
tub. I just started to cry."
"Oh dear,
it's okay. It's just a bad day, really,"
Vivette says touching Susan's shoulder.
"You know, I
don't want to be happy anymore. I mean,
I just want him to say, 'No. I won't do
it.' Whatever it is. 'I won't rinse out the tub. I won't fix the lamp.' But instead I ask if he wants any more coffee
when he walks into the kitchen. And do
you know what he said?"
Vivette looks at
Susan. "He said, no thanks."
"Right. Of course.
He said, 'No thanks. I've got to
get going, Susan.'"
"I told him
though. I said, 'You know, Robert. All women have a lot of soap. We all do.'
I thought I needed to tell him that.
That it won't change. That part
never really changes."
Vivette stubs out
her cigarette. She taps the present to
the edge of the coffee table and tips it into her palm. She absentmindedly shakes it and then pulls
on the red ribbon. It falls away from
the box. As Vivette opens it she says,
"It's soap, right?"
Susan nods and
says, "He looked at me then. You
should have seen the way he looked at me."
*****
THE
STORY BEHIND THE STORY
The copy of Puerto del Sol with my story “Slow Fire Pistol” inside arrived at
my house a few days before I left for a four-week residency at the Ucross
Foundation. I decided to bring it along in case one of the other residents
asked to see some of my work. It was a last minute decision. I threw the
journal into my bag, got into my car, and drove from Pittsburgh, Pa. to Ucross,
Wyoming. Fun.
I’m a pretty organized person.
Ask anyone who knows me. Sometimes I’m called a control freak; other times I’m
called a border collie. I can generally keep my shit really straight. But I was
really nervous about Ucross. It was my first residency; I didn’t know what to
expect from the place or the other artists.
The landscape was breathtaking
and when I saw my studio I said (out loud), “I’m not worthy.” I unpacked my
coffeemaker and my flask, my index cards and books and journal and computer, my
hiking boots. My plan was to write a novel. I had drafted 50 pages of a story I
was excited about. I thought I could really make it into something long. Before
this, I’d mainly published only very short stories. Stories under 1,000 words.
I’d spent most of my career writing flash fiction. Even “Slow Fire Pistol” was
a crazy-long endeavor for me.
I turned on my computer, went
clicking for the story I wanted to expand. Ready to get to work. Nowhere. I
pushed in the CDs I’d brought with me, figuring I had just saved it there.
Nope. I looked for a hard copy, no. Called my husband to look for a hard copy.
Nothing. The story had vaporized. (To this day, I have never found any version
of this story.)
There I was with four free weeks
to write in the middle of the high plains of Wyoming without the story I wanted
to work on. I panicked a little bit, sure. I paced for a while. At one point I
opened the copy of Puerto del Sol and
reread “Slow Fire Pistol.” This time through the character Vivette started to
interest me in a new way. I had a vague idea of why she’d gone to Des Moines
when I wrote the story, but then, I said to myself: Why Des Moines? I decided
to explore that part of the story, the part you don’t see in the short story
here.
The story of Vivette became the
story of my debut novel Reconsidering
Happiness published some years later. The characters Robert and Susan also
show up in the novel in slightly different form. I wrote a full first draft
while in residence. It was an exhilarating and productive creative experience.
My fellow residents threw a little party to celebrate when I hit 60,000 words.
*****
ABOUT SHERRIE FLICK
Sherrie
Flick is the author of the flash fiction chapbook I Call This Flirting (Flume, 2004) and the novel Reconsidering Happiness (Bison Books,
2009), a semi-finalist for the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award. Her flash
fiction appears in many anthologies including Norton’s Flash Fiction Forward and New
Sudden Fiction. Her stories have been published widely in journals such as North American Review, Ploughshares, Quarterly West, Northwest
Review, Prairie Schooner, Puerto del Sol, and Booth. She has received grants and fellowships from Sewanee
Writers’ Conference, Ucross Foundation, Atlantic Center for the Arts, PA
Council on the Arts, and PA Partners in the Arts. She lives in Pittsburgh and
teaches in Chatham University’s MFA program.
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