~This story originally appeared in The Iowa
Review (2010)
Ally
and I went through our felon-dating phase in November. My felon had served a
few years for embezzling 200,000 dollars from his software company. His brown
hair was starting to gray, and he kept it parted down the middle, longer in the
front, like a style from a fashion magazine. He had the most perfect eyebrows I’d ever seen,
beautifully shaped, with only a single stray hair between the brow and the
eyelid of his right eye. I read his facial expressions solely by the way his
eyebrows changed. I noticed them especially when he’d smile at me from my bed,
one arm bent at the elbow and resting behind his head, watching me pull a clean
T-shirt from the top drawer of my dresser. He could’ve been a model. When I
told him this, he closed his eyes and said nothing for a long time. Finally,
“There are disadvantages.” He picked at the loose elastic in the waistband of
his boxer shorts. I didn’t know what to say. Instead, I turned on the radio. At
least Ally’s had stolen a car.
Before
that it’d been surfers, brothers, just eighteen months apart. It was a
disappointment, Ally and I dating two guys who were related. We wanted their
childhood stories to be separate, so that she and I would have something to
talk about after they left, when we sat at our plastic kitchen table eating
microwaved bowls of tomato soup.
The younger one was mine. I watched the
way his eyes often followed his older brother around the room. Even if it were
Ally or I who was speaking, he was looking at his brother, watching for cues. I
wasn’t even sure if he realized he did it. When we were all together, I’d hide
my mouth with my hands so he couldn’t see the way I smiled at this. It was
sweet. But his tan was better than mine. His stomach was tighter, more toned.
He looked at himself a lot in the mirror, but I don’t mean to say that it was
like dating a girl. He just made me feel self-conscious as he watched me pull
off my gray linen pants and my black tank top.
Before summer ended and the breeze that
blew in off the coast made it too cold to sit outside without a blanket or a
sweatshirt at night, we gave the brothers back to the ocean. They were too
distracted. Their hair was always stiff. Their sandy boards sometimes knocked
things over on our porch. We liked them better when they weren’t pulling the
neck strings of our white bikini tops, when they were silent and alone and
facing a wall of blue and then becoming the blue itself, maneuvering the exact
angle of the foot or the arm, striking a perfect balance above the shifting
water.
Ally and I never tried that again, dating
brothers. We resisted even when we met the Golby twins one night in October
while we were making margaritas down at Pacific Beach, and they offered to take
us to La Vache for dinner. They thought it was so cute the way the two of us
had similar names, Ally and Andi, as if we’d planned it. We really liked the
mirrored spaces between their front teeth, but even that wasn’t enough.
We might not have dated the felons,
either, but they won us over playing pool at Rocktavio. They bet beers against
each other, and we liked how easily they laughed, how they never got angry or
mean about losing. Still, Ally and I
broke up with them before Christmas. Some years we liked having boyfriends for
the holidays, significant others to bake cranberry-walnut bread for or to sit
with in the living room on Christmas Eve, drinking White Russians and wrapping
gifts. But some years Ally and I preferred to skip the whole anxious mess and
spend Christmas day at the movie theater, each buying a single ticket and then
theater-hopping for the rest of the day. Our record was four movies one after
another—then we got tired of suspending disbelief and had to go home, where we
knew what to expect.
Ally and I both did it on the same
night—the break-up. We were afraid. We imagined the felons would become
violent, that they’d produce a shank from their white, athletic ankle socks or
the hem of their ribbed, sleeveless undershirts. The shank would be assembled
out of our own kitchen utensils. We imagined that they’d threaten to track down
our families—my baby sister in Los Angeles, Ally’s mother in Morro Bay—that
they’d reach across the kitchen table for Ally or the couch for me, and choke
us. We imagined hiding beneath my queen bed and dialing 911 while an entire
gang of criminals surrounded the house with machetes or assault rifles. But our
felons did not put up a fight. Ally’s even cried.
I
first met Ally on an elevator at Saint Christopher’s Hospital. She was wheeling
a cart of food trays up the fifth floor where I worked, Medical Oncology. I was
a few minutes late for my receptionist shift, but I stuck my hand out to catch
the metal doors before they shut. “Thanks,” she said over the squeaking wheels
of the cart. “Ellen still in 502?”
“I think so,” I said, but actually I had
no idea. I couldn’t keep the patients straight day-to-day, the old women with
their gauzy hair and green hospital gowns blurred together. I was surprised
that Ally, who worked for food service, knew even one of them by name. It
seemed impossible to keep track, as many as she saw while she made her rounds.
“Yesterday she threw her lunch tray at
my face,” Ally told me. She lifted fringed bangs the color of wet sand off of
her forehead with an index finger and showed me the purple-green skin above her
left eyebrow. She paused for some kind of dramatic effect. “I like her. She’s
got a lot of life left in her.” Later, the two of us met down in the cafeteria
for Diet Cokes.
Not long after, we moved in together. We
picked a house on the beach that was only falling apart a little. It had been
painted blue, but the wood underneath showed through in places, so the house
looked bruised, like it still had some healing to do. We rented it from a
divorced fifty-something, and Ally flirted with him while we signed the
agreement so he’d cut us a break and give it to us for $1,400 a month.
A few weeks in, with stacks of unpacked
boxes still lining the dim hallway, Ally found me upstairs as I stood half in
and half out of our shared bathroom, blow-dryer in hand. She was still in her
pajamas. She wet her toothbrush and told me to grow out my hair. “Guys like it
better long, it reminds them that they’re the man.” She tugged at the damp ends
of my brown hair, which fell an inch from my shoulders. “Plus, sometimes they
like to pull it.” She pointed to my blow-dryer. “Can we share this? I left mine
at Derrick’s, and I don’t think I’m going to get it back.” She looked down into
the sink and laughed in a way that sounded hollow, like she was still searching
for the funny part. “I’m always giving away my things.”
In the mirror, I tried parting my hair
on the other side. “Of course.”
Ally taught me other things too: To pair
a short skirt with a conservative blouse, because it left something to the
imagination; she said that when I did my make-up, glitter didn’t matter, but to
make my eyes smoky instead, to play up their darkness. “You’re lucky,” she told
me one day when we’d crammed ourselves into a dressing room at Kohl’s, “you
look so exotic.”
My mother never taught me these things.
She didn’t come from Ally’s school of leave-a-little-to-the-imagination. She
combined all of it—the short skirt, the revealing, silky top, the gold
glittered eye shadow, the tallest heels she could match from the scatter across
the floor of her closet.
A nurse from the pediatric ward who used
to spend her breaks on my floor, chasing around some doctor who had an affair
with her for about three minutes, once told me this: Adults are likely to break
a bone during a fall because they automatically tighten their muscles, but most
children under the age of three will not. They don’t yet equate pain with
falling, so they don’t tense their bodies as they rush to meet the ground. They
haven’t learned that falling hurts. Because of this, a broken bone in a toddler
usually indicates abuse. The child isn’t afraid of the pavement or the
staircase, but she will stiffen at a loud voice or a raised hand, understanding
what’s to come.
I
met a man in the checkout line at Walmart in the spring. He was wearing a green
shirt with an embroidered guitar on it. I liked the color—like mermaid scales.
I was buying 2% milk and cold medicine for Ally. This was in April, after the
surfers and the felons, after my and Ally’s Christmas, after another man too, a
nurse from Saint Christopher’s who worked the night shift. Ally was dating our
neighbor Grant by then, but he was showing little expertise in sick-girlfriend
care.
“You shouldn’t drink dairy when you have
a cold,” Green-shirt said. I snapped my head in his direction.
“Yeah, I know,” I said, defensive. I
found myself regretting that I hadn’t come from work but from folding load
after load of my and Ally’s clothes at the Laundromat. I wished I were wearing
my hospital scrubs, a give away that I might know something about being sick.
It didn’t matter that I was just the receptionist. I listened to things the
nurses said. “The medicine isn’t mine.” Then I noticed he was cute.
“For your boyfriend?”
I exaggerated my annoyance, fluttering
my lashes as I rolled my eyes up toward the white, fiberboard ceiling tiles.
“That’s a lame pick-up line,” I told him. I smiled my real smile and let him
see that my two front teeth on the bottom were slightly crooked.
His name was Antonio. When he walked me
to my car, he carried my shopping bag. He asked me if Can I take you out sometime? was a better pick-up line. Then he
asked if it wasn’t too much trouble, would I mind giving him a lift to his
apartment so he wouldn’t have to ride the bus.
“My car’s in the shop. I’m getting the
timing belt replaced.”
I laughed as I unlocked his door. “I
don’t really know what that means.”
After that, I saw him almost every day.
Antonio and I said things we wished our mothers and fathers had said to each
other, so when the telephone rang while we were kissing on his couch, I
whispered, “Let the machine get it.”
When there was a break in the kissing,
the part when I leaned back to look at his face, to remind myself that his eyes
were brown, the part when he touched a finger to the ridge of my collarbone, I
told him about the coke dealer I’d dated a few years ago. The MirĂ³ painting
hanging above Antonio’s couch reminded me of him—the thick black lines leading
nowhere and then crossing back over themselves, the spotted blues and greens
that almost formed a recognizable shape but then didn’t.
“I didn’t know what he did when we first
met. But by the time I figured it out I liked him too much for it to matter.”
Antonio leaned back against the arm of
the couch. “That’s dangerous,” he said. He was sweating. I told him a story
that I didn’t usually share, that I hadn’t even thought much about since coming
to San Diego. The first time I ever drove drunk was when the coke dealer and I
were dating. I was nineteen to his twenty-eight. We had gone to his favorite
bar, Bellow’s, where the coke dealer knew a bartender who served me four vodka
cranberries without ever making eye contact with me.
After the drinks, the coke dealer took
me to his Ford in the parking lot. He slid his hand over my jeans and along my
thigh, and I leaned back in the seat, feeling sexy and drunk, desired. After
sex, he sent me home. The drive back to my mother’s was twenty-five minutes. I
groaned in protest and let my head drop hard against the passenger-side window.
“Just stay between the lines and go the
speed limit,” he said. “You’re golden.” Then he turned the key in the ignition
of his truck, and the engine hummed, vibrating the cab.
I told Antonio, “I woke up in my bed and
wasn’t sure how I got there. So I called things off the next day.”
He said, “That guy’s an asshole.”
I nodded and closed my eyes, so I didn’t
have to watch him watching me anymore, so we could go back to kissing without
lingering on a story a sad girl might tell.
The
thing is, I told Antonio a lie. That next morning after the night at Bellow’s,
after waking up disoriented in my bed, my jeans on but my shirt off and my skin
and my hair and my comforter smelling of smoke, I did not call the coke dealer
and break-up with him.
The relationship had actually lasted for
another two months, until I heard from a girl we both knew that the coke dealer
was sleeping with someone else. That’s when I stopped calling him.
After that, I’d see him around the city
sometimes when I was running errands—getting gas or buying groceries—and he’d
nod to me as if we were barely acquaintances, like I’d never sat in his kitchen
while he made us grilled cheese sandwiches at three in the morning, like I’d
never seen the mole on his left inner thigh or learned all of the best lines to
his favorite Saturday morning cartoons.
When
I like a guy enough, I make him wait awhile for sex. This is one of Ally’s recommendations,
something my mother never taught me. I made Antonio wait five weeks and then
one night when he came over after his shift at the coffee shop, I pushed a
condom into his palm and then locked my fingers in his. He looked at the carpet
and grinned, and I jumped onto him, wrapped my legs around his waist and kissed
him, like you might see in a movie when two people are acting like they’re in
love.
Antonio carried me upstairs. I was
nervous, and the spot behind my knees started to sweat. The place where our
skin met—the freckled underside of his forearm, the backs of my legs—became
slick. The mattress made no sound when he laid me on the bed. For a while we
just kissed, and this was my favorite part: He undressed me slowly. He left his
clothes on at first, something the surfer never would’ve done. The cotton of
his shirt rubbed against the taut skin that covered my ribcage. He kissed my
stomach, ran his tongue over my hip bone, where there was a tattoo of a
ladybug, for luck. I got that tattoo last year with Ally. The ladybug for me,
and on Ally’s right shoulder were her father’s initials and the date his
motorcycle crossed the yellow line on 101.
Before Antonio even took off his
khakis, before he even needed the condom I’d slipped into his hand downstairs,
he focused only on me. I kept my eyes shut and imagined that Antonio was a
giant and I was no bigger than Thumbelina. I balled the comforter up in my
fists, squeezing so hard that the joints in my fingers ached. I tried not to
hear my own uneven breathing.
Antonio built the tension within my
body, then stopped, moving away to kiss a tan line or the place just above the
bend of my knee where I’d nicked myself shaving that morning. He paid careful
attention to the tremors in my legs, to the tightening and un-tightening of my
thigh muscles, so that by the time he finally let me come, for a moment I felt
like everything else was gone from the room—or maybe like I was what had
disappeared.
If
I’m being honest, I don’t always like sex. By the third month, I’d begun acting
when Antonio dimmed the lights. I said things like, “I’ve been thinking about
sucking your cock all day,” when really I’d been thinking about whether or not
I should cook the chicken in the fridge or order Chinese for dinner.
Ally doesn’t understand about the
acting, but we have a lot of conversations about it. Ally’s mom wasn’t like mine. Ally’s mom didn’t ever wear high
heels or jean skirts, and she didn’t keep a string of boyfriends whose names
and faces I could no longer catalogue. But she did keep one after Ally’s father
died. That boyfriend was Thom, and as Ally’s mom got older, Thom took what he
needed from Ally instead.
That was a long time ago, and Ally
doesn’t really talk about it. What Ally does talk about is how most of the time
she wants sex to hurt. This is what she was telling me when we sat outside on
the porch swing a few mornings ago, early, before the summer heat made us too
lazy to get out of bed for the day. We had a carton of orange juice between us,
and we were waiting for Antonio to come pick us up and take us to breakfast at
La Casa de Waffle down on Laurel. Ally craves hash browns pretty much all the
time.
She put her bare foot on the railing and
rocked us in the swing. Her toenails shimmered opaque purple in the sunlight.
Then she said that when she had sex with Grant, she begged him to go harder, to
hurt her. “Sometimes I cry, and he just won’t.”
I tried to imagine Grant naked and
sweating on Ally’s pink, plaid bedspread, probably wanting to stop right then
but her fingernails were digging into his back, scraping symmetrical rows of
tiny crescent moons into his skin. Ally said that sometimes she wanted him to
fuck her so hard he made her bleed.
She shifted on the wooden bench,
bringing one knee in toward her chest. She pushed against the railing with her
other foot. She said, “Sometimes I need a man to have sex with me, do you know
what I mean?” Needed it. Like a fix if we were the kind of girls who did a lot
of drugs, or like a craving—the kind that made Ally and I drive to Wendy’s at
two in the morning after we’d smoked a little bit of pot or had a couple of
beers. But I didn’t know. She looked away from me when she talked, so I stared
at the back of her head. She needed to dye her hair again.
I couldn’t think of anything to say
after that. I raised the carton to my lips. The juice was warm by then, a
little too sweet. Sometimes I didn’t mind sex, the way a man pressed his whole
body against mine, the way he wrapped his arms around my shoulders like if he
let go he might become lost, the way I could tell if he meant it or not because
he would look me right in the eyes while he was coming. Sometimes I even liked
it, but I didn’t need it the way Ally said she did, the way a man needed it.
Most of the time, I was doing it for them.
Without meaning to, I’ve given the
smallest pieces of myself to the men I’ve dated. I wonder which ones they’ve
chosen to keep after they’ve gone, which parts of me they’ve found left on
their dressers or underneath their beds, or pulled from the lint catcher in
their dryers.
The felon will remember that I
wasn’t good at making eye contact. He’ll remember that every time I told a
story about my mother, I looked away. He’ll also remember that when he pointed
it out, I was surprised anyone would pay attention to this small
action—something that in the five years since I’d left home, no one had ever
noticed, including me.
The surfer will remember that I
painted my nails bright orange all summer, that I was a strong swimmer but a
tiny bit afraid of sharks, that I didn’t like to be carried into the ocean.
The nurse from Saint Christopher’s
will remember me for being the only girl he ever knew who liked dark beer—black
and tan, specifically.
The man I met the night my car got
towed from Fifth Avenue will remember that I wore too much make-up. That I
laughed too long after he told a joke. That when he offered me a cigarette, I
couldn’t help but wrinkle my nose when I shook one out of the pack. I asked him
to light it for me, since I didn’t smoke. It didn’t matter. He never called.
The coke dealer will remember that I
loved grape bubble gum and that I called more than he wanted me to. He’ll have
a pair of silver earrings that my mother gave me that year for my birthday, and
he’ll keep them in a dish on his dresser where he throws loose change, and then
when he moves to a new apartment he’ll throw them away.
When Antonio leaves, he’ll keep a
blue sweatshirt that I once left in the back of his Honda. He’ll remember the
tremor in my voice the night we sat on the balcony of his apartment, our
fingers twined so tightly that there was no space left between our touching
palms, and I talked for the first time about the way one person can need
another. He’ll keep three cards I wrote to him and then tucked under his pillow
or beneath one of his windshield wipers, so that he can look at the slant of my handwriting and the
way I sign my name. He’ll remember that once after calling my baby sister I got
off the phone and cried all night because I missed her.
The
swing stilled, and Ally put one arm around my shoulder, her warm skin sticky
against the back of my neck. We heard the sound of tires breaking on asphalt,
and Antonio pulled up in front of our house and honked the horn twice. The
noise was too sharp in the quiet July heat. Ally stood and slipped on her
flip-flops. I screwed the cap back on the carton of orange juice.
It used to be that Antonio would
walk to the door when he picked me up. Now he mostly waits outside and honks.
When we got in the car, he turned down the music a few clicks but said nothing.
I kicked off my sandals and propped up my feet on the dashboard. I gathered my
hair into a loose ponytail—it’s gotten pretty long—and pressed my toes against
the cool windshield as we turned off our street. Behind me, Ally hummed a
different song than the one on the radio. Antonio swatted at my thigh. When I
pulled down my feet, I saw the smudges I’d left on the glass, a hazy outline,
just the idea of what each foot looked like before it had gone. I saw that
eventually I’ll give away piece after piece of myself until I’m stripped bare,
and I wondered what kind of a man will want me then, what I’ll have left to
offer him.
*****
THE STORY BEHIND THE
STORY
In
Pam Houston’s Sight Hound, Dante—the
most wonderful and empathetic dogs of all the dogs that have ever been—says, of
his beloved human Rae:
I wanted her to
see that the only life worth living is a life full of love; that loss is always
part of the equation; that love and loss conjoined are the best opportunity we
get to live fully, to be our strongest, our most compassionate, our most
graceful selves.
It’s undeniably true, of course, that the only
life worth living is a life full of love, and that love starts with the self
and spreads outward. To give ourselves permission to be loving—or loved—to pull
from an internal well of empathy and grace, we have to have already dug the
well. The girls in this story are maybe starting to be on their way, but still
they have so much to uncover.
I think one of the hardest things about
choosing to engage with love in a daily, ongoing way is that is requires an
incredible amount of vulnerability, and that’s terrifying. But just as what
that smart pup is trying to teach his human, the willingness to open ourselves
up to the inevitability of loss is the same willingness that allows in the love.
These girls are so hungry for that, but in my experience it takes a lot of
trial and error before we each figure out how to build a community made of the
right people, how not to let others take from us because they confuse
compassion with weakness.
At any point that Ally or Andi feels
close to finding what she needs, she pulls back. Part of this is—I hope
smartly—out of protection, but part of it is a deficiency. These girls are
afraid. The deepest love in this piece is between the two of them, but by the
end of the story all of the disappointment and rejection and failure to connect
finally begin to look the same—and that includes not only the string of men that
Ally and Andi have dangerously started using as guideposts by which to define
themselves, but also their own friendship as well.
This is not, I suppose, a particularly hopeful story,
though I like to think that in the moments beyond that last car ride, Andi and
Ally are able to lean on each other in those shaky times of need and eventually
find what it is they’re looking for.
*****
ABOUT KIRSTEN
CLODFELTER
Kirsten Clodfelter is
the author of Casualties, a chapbook
of short and flash fiction exploring the impact of war, published by RopeWalk
Press in 2013. She has contributed fiction and nonfiction to The Iowa Review, Brevity, Narrative Magazine,
Hunger Mountain, and Green Mountains Review, among others. Clodfelter
is the Series Editor of At the Margins, a weekly review series with a focus on
small-press publications at As It Ought
to Be, where she regularly contributes social commentary.
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