When
I was a little girl. I got a ball for my birthday, it was before I knew there
were other things to want and get. So, I was happy. It is the only photo of me
being happy opening a gift on record. Once I knew what there was to want and I
developed wants, I opened things and made a frowny face. No one could satisfy
my wants because they would require you to be more open, more affectionate,
more loving, more generous, more funny, more of a trouble-maker, less shut down
and actually someone else entirely. I think of birthdays as a day where you get
let down, the disappointing truth is, I just want more than the known world has
to offer. Growing up we were poor enough that my mother made our dolls and made
us clothes sometimes. I think that i never knew we were poor because my dad was
buying oriental rugs for $10,000, but when I think about it now, I go, it's
kind of like all our money went to that and we really didn't have much for regular
living stuff. Not that i really ever went hungry, but we were supposed to ask
for food and i was always too shy to ask. I went hungry a lot. I told myself
not to be hungry. That's kind of what I feel like today. The list of
disappointments, choices in men who couldn't love me but were happy to pretend
to but didn't see me for what I am, but never actually going for boys/men I
actually liked. I let myself get chosen because I was old-fashioned. But, it
was like only the scavengers could find me, never someone with their shit
together. So, it was a series of men sort of like my father, who were good on
the inside but was too wrapped up in trying to make a future for us that he
didn't spend that much time with me---nor unless it was a holiday were they generous.
My father is Scottish and very focused on money and how much everything costs,
so we had a few games and the reasons we were given for not getting real
barbies was because of the cost. There are a few memories of my father I'll
talk about now, because on my birthday I think of many things that are great
losses to me. My father is still alive, but I count him among things I have
lost that I can't really get back and when I think of it, I don't know if I
ever really had him at all. I like to think so. I was definitely his favorite.
I knew that much, but he was scared of the world in a way that I was not. He
was interested in cults and meditation and strange ways of eating. But, when I
was a little girl he sang with me and taught me to sing. He drove me in our
giant car---(a Cadillac? I can't remember only that it was brown) to visit a
goat he kept on a farm out in Sylmar. We lived in Franklin Hills, so that was a
very long way to drive. We sang songs and talked about the universe. I loved
the stars and he told me what he knew of them. He told me "Johnny
Boy" stories of his struggles and near misses with death when he was just
a kid trying to help support his poor family in Maryland. My father went to
work when he was fourteen. Like him I went to work when i was fifteen, but
worked for every penny I ever had. Allowance? I don't remember it. I think we
washed cars or mowed the lawn for money. I am tired. i have worked that whole
time. Nothing was ever easy for me. I always struggled. I was told I couldn't go
to college because my father got sick and was in the hospital and my mom was
afraid of making ends meet, so at 20 I dropped out of UCLA. My dad was always
there, he just had some problems that equaled yelling and made me scared to
talk to him. When I was 12, it was the last time I gave him a massage and he
tried to tell me he was special, but I felt that even though he thought I was
special, to keep telling me would make me never try for anything. I kind of
told him to lay off and he did---only he laid off forever. I think my dad loves
me very much, but might be a little scared of me. I can't explain to him
entirely why I am still scared all these years later, but there was a lot of
pain and absence and deprivation. I felt unloved. All my other friends had necklaces
or some kind of jewelry, but we didn't have jewelry. We didn't spend money on
things like that. I always wanted some shiny jewelry from Tiffany's to make me
feel like I was loved. It never ever happened. But, not that they aren't
generous now, not that they don't give me money during the holidays, there is
just a period of years that happened where they hated me. I never really got
over it. One time my father and I went jogging around Marshall High and I was
walking on a handrail on the top of some stairs and I fell backwards. I think I
was 5 or 6. My dad grabbed me and saved me. I remember knowing he had saved my
life that day, but I miss the things we used to talk about. I miss the before
the psychotic break he had. I miss him just being fun and happy. I miss him.
Here's the time to say it. Maybe it will give you insight on the reason I am
like I am. But, my father has never called me on the phone. NOT EVER. I'm am
broken because of that in a way I don't expect you to understand. People always
try to say---oh me too---my dad never calls. But, my dad has NEVER called. Nor
has he asked me anywhere. I have to ask him. I guess there is a pattern that
was set up a long time ago about the little bit men can give me. The
withholding of affection. The me being expected to know how a person feels.
But, I never do know. That's the thing. That's why every birthday, I know I've
made good on a life that could be crime filled. I've been the better brighter
smarter star. But, when there isn't love from family, what really do you have
to work with? So, to all of you who are sick of me dating men who don't live
anywhere and don't really love me anyway or don't have cars I submit---Some
boyfriends have had the four story house, but I didn't feel love from them
either. You can say I have a blind spot. But, I am fully aware of what I am
doing. I am not closed off or shut down. Recently I decided to go towards people I want--- to tell the people around me how I feel. I did this recently to someone I really cared for, he isn't sure if he can give me anything back, but in my life that means no---and while I take no hard, it made me feel alive to tell someone that I love them anyway. Happy Birthday to me.
my daily journal of things that happened before I knew about being adopted and a ward of the state.
February 24, 2012
February 18, 2012
My Brother's Keeper
There is a door. I am on one side.
You are on the other. Standing in your checkered vans. I can see you standing
there, not knowing what to do. You are afraid. You are staring at your father.
My father. Someone is bleeding. The kitchen floor is covered in glass. My brother is crying and trying to clean up. He is only eight. I don’t
know why it happened any more than you do. This isn’t about that. I can’t tell
you why. Some things just happen and we stand there and watch. If I had been
older, I would have helped, but I didn’t know what to do then. I am there too.
You can see me if you look. I am covered in blood. It is on my school uniform.
Mother is gone. I don’t know where she is. I look at you. I catch your eye and
I know you will save me and I will save you. It’s just how that I don’t know.
It’s just how that I can’t imagine. It’s just how that will take me out of this
world.
But, I am still with you now. I am
here now. Please take a look at me. Remember my sweet eyes, because they will
look at you with love. Remember how I smell, because it is that you will miss.
Remember my skin and my smile born out of longing. In the darkness, you hold
things to yourself. We call that love. I loved the broken thing. My father. I
held his broken parts in my hand like so many flowers disintegrating into dust.
I knew it would happen. That’s the other part. I knew it would happen, but I
couldn’t stop it. When we were
watching it. We knew it would change us, but not how. The how is what I’ve
forgotten most. The pact I made with you and with myself is still there,
unbroken and unflinching. You will say it was me. I will agree. I am the
culprit of our deviance. I am sorry, dear brother. I am sorry, my father. I am
sorry, my mother. It is this thing. This hatred of choices, I carry, but cannot
put down. If I were to put them down, what would happen? Love could come in the
door like a butterfly.
After the end, you will say you saw
it coming. But, you didn’t. You held me in your arms and loved me. I didn’t
want it to ever end, but I had to go to school. The girls’ school with witches
posing as nuns. Their hatred changed me too. Wrapped in normal clothes with
pinned back hair, I look like the rest of them. You will say I was the best,
but I wasn’t, I was just angrier than they were. She was my friend. Katie
Santini of the mother on the couch and the playboy magazines where we asked the
questions of sex and ate cookie dough. When Katie stood in line with us, the
mother nun, Mary-Catherine asked Katie why she was fat. It started then. The
anger. I never told you, I beat Katie with a lunch pail until she was bleeding
and crying. Blood was on her uniform then too and we became the arbiters of one
another’s pain and forgiveness. I put the pills I found into the holy water and
watched while everyone got sick. Sick from lack of spirit within themselves.
Sickness that felt like love. It still does.
School was closed, but no one ever
found out who did it. It wasn’t so bad, no one was permanently sick; I just wanted
the nun to stop being so mean to Katie. I guess I was wrong. Still, I would
never take it back. It was as satisfying as any thing that you can do and get
away with.
My brother, you came to my room
when I was only thirteen. I was in bed, my smile was innocent, but you knew I
was not. It was before I knew. You crawled into bed and we lay like that
against all things holy. Against god. Against hatred. Against our violent home.
Your arms were like paradise. Something I did know about, but wanted to. You
smelled my hair and I cried for hours and shook the shakes of longing. How can
you say it was wrong? You can look at it and say for genetic reasons. The
propagation of species it is wrong. I will believe you. That’s what they did on
my father’s side. That’s what made our uncle retarded. A genetic flaw. But, you
touched me softly and told me I was beautiful. You told me my secret name:
angel water. You whispered a cobweb I couldn’t get out of and now, we are here
and deciding the future. Well, one of is.
When---or I should say before the
day when I went to the other side. I stood before you like a shimmering candle.
You ate me with your eyes and told me you found another girl. I knew it would
happen. I’m not sorry. In fact, as long as you think so, I will yearn for a
life we can be proud of for both of us. But, I am lost now. I cannot explain to
Katie who I am crying over night and day. I cannot explain that it is my own
brother. There are consequences for that, with no forms of sympathy.
“In one way, longing kills us all,”
you said under the Jacaranda trees lying on those sharp pointy things at 3 am.
In the middle of Franklin Hills, Los Angeles smells like wet leaves. “Dead to
the world,” you said about our parents, when we would sneak glimpses of the moon
and pretend it would be okay. The thing that would never be. I loved you then
as I love you now. I remember your smile and the gap filled grin. When I look
into your eyes I have no fear of the future. But, it is in your eyes that I see
my own death. I do see it. I do not look away. I don’t welcome it. I love this
world more than anyone. I love the taste of oranges in the summer and the
laughter of my father when he makes me taste watermelon juice. I’m supposed to
like watermelon, but I never do. He laughs at me and tells me about the
universe. It is in his laughter that my own madness grew.
I told you about the grey-blueness
of them. In the mirror, you see it too. I stand alone at first and look at my
naked body. I am beautiful. You come in beside me and looked at me. It felt
like forever. Watching and waiting for the other to make the move that no one
could say no to. In my eyes though, we both see my father. You got lucky, you
got eyes from the devil, so we can see one thing, but not our own father. “The
devil is better to be with you than away from you,” you say. When the devil is away from you, you
can’t see what he is doing. If he is in your bed, then you know. You can feel
it. The cause of your humanness being opened bit by unstoppable bit.
In time I know you will forget I
was ever there, in the ways I was. You will remember things like drinking
orange drink from McDonald’s and keeping that a secret from our parents. You
will think of our babysitter, the one who taught me to French kiss, the one who
taught us how dirty a crank caller could really be. You will think of me while
undressed with your wife and you will feel guilty. No one will be what I was to
you. It’s my voice that you won’t be able to remember and you’ll want to.
You’ll try for months to find that one tape I made when I was in school, but
you won’t find it and my voice was on nothing else. You’ll think I left because
of you. That’s not the reason I’m going. The reason is not you at all. The joy
my body felt for knowing you, made this life sweet. The reason I am leaving is
I can’t make sense of not loving anyone else and I can’t make sense of what
happened to my father. That is why. I can’t make you believe it though. You
will think it is because we did the forbidden thing. I want you to know, my
darling brother, that you gave me the one reason to stay. Like oranges and the
yellow bird or childhood or the speed of roller skates. The innocence isn’t
lost if I say it. In the innocence I found you. The blood from father and the
madness is stuck in my mind forever though. The only time I ever forget it, is
when you look at me and smile and say, “I want what you want.”
Say goodbye to my beautiful pink
dress that glows in your mind. Say goodbye to words on paper that fill me up or
leave me breathless. Say goodbye to sitting in churches and cursing God. Say
goodbye to Valium’s pull and the hot sex of the bar-room floor. Say goodbye to
air and its glorious filling of the lungs. Goodbye to the sting of whiskey.
Goodbye to an after the gym cigarette. Goodbye to my fair city, filled with
more beauty than I can name. The list of things I will miss should include my
mother, and it does. Her voice and the dolls she made me when she couldn’t
afford to buy them. The list of
things I love is too long and to say them all would cheapen what they mean to
me. My last thought was not about the mundane. My last thought was of you and
your warm hands on my skin and the look in your eyes holding me captive and of
my father bleeding on the kitchen floor.
February 17, 2012
By All Human Measurements
When I was a yellow bird. I sat
high in the jacaranda tree amongst the velvety periwinkle flowers. They looked
good against my feathers. I was small then. At least by all human measurements.
In bird world, I am as I should be. All feathers and down and attitude. My
mother died in the mouth of a cat. I saw it go down. She was looking for
crumbs, for me. I was too young to know the difference—as in what I would have
been like had I a mother to raise me. I don’t know if you saw me eating or
heard my song, but I was there day after day watching you in your plastic
play-pool with the sponge shoved in the crack to keep the water in. your mother
made fun of your watermelon belly and you cried. You looked in my direction
when the girl who did that bad thing to her belly button started screaming and
bleeding. You didn’t know why you had to play with the girl. Far apart eyes.
Dull voice. Blood everywhere. But like all things, there are no reasons, not
when it comes down to it. I sang you a song the day your dad was taken away for
thinking he was Jesus. The song was the best I had—you didn’t hear it, you were
explaining the universe to the ambulance guys, vying for attention. Showing
them how normal you were. But, you weren’t normal. Later, after
you knew me, I came to watch you from the tree above your bunk bed, but you
didn’t look out. You told your mother, “I’m never wearing dresses again,” but
she didn’t see the impact—not like I did. I saw you steal cheese from the
fridge and wipe the knife clean. They had put locks on things and you were
starving. I saw you the day you ran out into the middle of the road screaming
naked wanting to go to gymnastics class. Your mother laughing at your
nakedness. It made me want to be a dancer.
The Loneliness of a Body
The Loneliness of a Body
Your arms are a casket
white tulips; money;
mouthwash
they push me into a garden
where ghosts keep us
they push me into a garden
where ghosts keep us
from being ourselves
I dig my hands through wet
earth and find your father’s skull
vine-wrapped with a dead bat
sticking out of his eye-hole
I dig my hands through wet
earth and find your father’s skull
vine-wrapped with a dead bat
sticking out of his eye-hole
I suggest I sit in a
saucer of milk
or drag you with a chain
You ask me to come back
on a day when you are living,
but nothing lives, not like the dead
I stare into the sky
one hand on my grand-mother and one hand
You ask me to come back
on a day when you are living,
but nothing lives, not like the dead
I stare into the sky
one hand on my grand-mother and one hand
on your chest --- the
stars are wondering
if your piercings indicate
slave or
master
What else is there, if we can’t talk
about the things you hid---
lovers in closets, man--
but, your girl found me, told me
you wouldn’t fuck her
I am not yours now
and that fact is endless
and that fact is endless
February 15, 2012
February 4, 2012
Becky Fisher--Know It All
Becky Fisher opens her eyes and
takes off her little eye mask and she goes, what time is it baby, only baby
isn’t here anymore, baby is living with that ugly slut, the one with the chin
job and the suboxone habit. Becky isn’t angry, Becky likes a big empty bed, one
where dreams lived and died. Becky is feeling happy, she takes one happy blue
pill every night at 7 and then another when she wakes up at 7. 7 to 7 she calls
it. They make her not feel stuff. It’s part of her master plan, the part where
by not feeling she can stay on planet earth with all its ants and weird clothing made for special purpose sex. The pill's side effect makes the air
smell of butter and makes being quiet almost like sleeping in the arms of someone that loves you but won't say it. Becky takes a blue one
without water or any hope in a future. Becky Fisher can get through heartbreak!
Becky fisher is All American. She was a cheerleader her big boobs bouncing so
far up her chest they called her Torpedos. She remembers them fondly, now she
is old and they aren’t big like that, they are small hanging on to her
starvation frame for dear life.
Why did Conor lie
about his broken cock and tell her that it didn’t look as much like a tomato as
like an eggplant? And why did this make Becky actually go the Ralphs even
though she doesn’t even shop Ralphs, she is a Whole Paycheck kind of girl to
see one. Becky goes to the produce and chooses one out. A giant throbbing
Eggplant, not the Japanese one either, but the ugliest fattest one she can find
and she goes home and waits for Conor. Did it look like this Conor? Did it
happen with the girl on the trapeze, the sex nerd? Is that what you forgot to
tell me? Because now here we are. Like this. Me with my perfect pussy hole and
my mouth that knows what to do but look at you, yours is BENT. Not right angle
bent, but hurty kind of bent a bent that doesn’t make physical sense unless you
have a giant pussy hole which I don’t, mine is small. Remember the story about
the children’s speculum?
Becky
was not calm. Becky tried to remember the therapy session that made her feel
better, the one where Becky got mad and instead of saying the same thing no one
could ever help her with Becky just peed in her pants right there. She peed
right through those little shorts that she had cut because she was featuring
her thighs now that she was far away from her sexually repressed parents. And
speaking of being far far away from sexual repression she had taken a female
lover, that’s right---trying it on, just to see if she liked fisting better
than cocks, only she was built too small so she never ever got to even try.
Becky said, I’m a pillow princess and wouldn’t know what to do and plus it
grosses me out. If we were both dudes then maybe because I like cock, but you
cannot judge what God is not judging. Unless HE is and then we are both fucked
anyway and Becky Fisher showed that girl the door and tried not to mention her
giant chin hit her in a way that was painful and worse than that was the
accent. Who has a gay irish accent anyway?
Becky
Fisher was All American, she had good breeding, a genetic lineage that she
could follow to the Hearsts on one side and then there was the white trash
bacon side. That was the side that seemed to pick her boyfriends.
Becky
Fisher landlords stole her bike and she called the cops and told them, if you
don’t come now, someone will die. I have a knife and everything, but they
didn’t come. Instead a little
Mexican named Sergio came. He tries to give Becky her bike back through the
door, but she has her period and if he comes any closer she’s going to kill him
with the knife. Never mind it’s a paring knife. For apples. Sergio is smiling.
That dick shouldn’t be smiling. Becky says, what the fuck? Why were you born
you mother fuck. Becky isn’t very smart when she gets mad. Anyway, She says
show me the bike you ass-fuck. How dare you? Your children are going to die of
eye cancer. Then he steps back from the door, he’s getting the picture that
Becky is crazy. Step away you mother fuck. you’re gonna die. WALK AWAY. Becky
is lost, screaming, red so that her eye mask to help eye fatigue are falling
off ruining the look she had and completely destroying the relaxation the box
promised. She puts down the knife and opens the door and brings the bike
inside. She goes to her phone to look at the big giant perfect penis her friend
sent her. She looks at it like a child would look at a teddy bear and she
becomes calm. Who knows calm Like Becky Fisher. Becky Fisher knows what to do,
she wrote affirmations that tell her so. Becky Fisher is pretty. Becky Fisher
is not embarrassed for liking a big cock. Becky Fisher makes money. Becky
Fisher is skinny. Becky Fisher has style and class and then the door rings.
Becky
is like now what, and then she goes to the door and it’s just the UPS guy, he’s
got her straightening iron the one she’s been waiting for. The one that Gwenyth
Paltrow used when she was pretty before she got old.
February 3, 2012
PAPA, CACA, DOO DOO, WEE WEE
Today I created something, it's called, "Put this oil on your pussy lipgloss." It's my very first product. I'm hoping it will sell well and that I can share my wealth with those people who have been nice to me and withhold it from the people who have been mean to me in the attempt to make themselves feel better about their own mediocrity, lack of loyalty and cowardice. This story isn't for you ridiculous people. This story is for the rest of you.
START: When I was a kid, my neighbor's father said I was a bad apple. My neighbor's name was Michael Soma--for the life of me I can't remember his father's name and for the sake of things it doesn't matter. Michael Soma hung out with me and my friend Tom Maher. We were always together as kids. Michael's father said I was bad because I was the one that told about a snake that didn't exist---which I only said because me and Michael and Tom were ALONE and didn't want to be bothered by adult people or other kids that we thought were dumb. Our cave was our cave and we were being quiet and telling our dangerous secrets of the Witch Coven that existed in Lakeside and how on most nights I could feel a demon trying to steal my soul directly out of my chest. We had been trying to figure out what to do about the demon. I had been up all night praying. My mother bought me worry dolls who I whispered the problem of the demon to, and they were supposed to handle things in the night. But, they didn't. The demon stayed digging into my chest--trying to steal my soul.
If you ask many kids at the lake---I was not the only one having night terrors, demons and witchery happening to me. Most of the kids start their stories by saying--i know you are going to think I'm crazy, but I swear this thing really happened. All of us spoke like that. Those friends at the lake had secrets that were loaded with the supernatural. I believed in God, but also that a devil worshipping cult near by could hurt us. We were all superstitious--not just me---and if you didn't believe an arrowhead could kill you, we didn't want you around. Michael had a whole collection of them but we didn't talk about what that meant.
Michael's father said I was bad because Tom chucked a rock at me and I chucked one back and his rock didn't do anything, but my rock chipped his front tooth. Michael's father said I was bad because were were playing catapult off a bed wherein Tom and Michael would sit on my feet and I'd be laying down with my knees bent and fly them across the room and of all the times we took turns it was Tom that broke his arm when I sent him flying. Lisa Douglass is a bad apple. That should go without saying. I wasn't actually the one that talked about sex and how to spy on our parents and then report back, but I was blamed for it. And even though when we were older I was the one who mashed the coke into my floor just to see if anyone would take the dare to eat it directly off the tile and no one would--I still shared with everybody. I knew what friendship was.
But, Michael--the son of the dad who called me a bad apple-- used to pee on his own dog. His dog's name was Pudgy--he was a doberman pincer. Michael would chase him saying PAPA, CACA, DOO DOO, WEE WEE and then unzip his fly pee on Pudgy. He did this a lot. After Michael died, I saw him once in a dream. He was wearing eyeliner, speaking to a baby cat. Telling it what he wanted. "I want love. I want kindness. I want obedience." The baby cat ignored him and just licked his face over and over as to make the rest of the dream people uncomfortable. I tried to speak to Michael but he held up his hand and said, "Not now, Lisa. My dad said I can't talk to you anymore."
Before Michael died and years after I moved away from the lake and was living with my sister (or had she moved out?) off DeSoto, Michael came to visit me. He came with Tom Maher. They were there. I was on drugs, in bad shape and didn't know what day it was. They drank wine coolers with me or whatever I had back then. Maybe Bacardi 151. They lay on a bed, that for some reason was in the middle of the living room. We laughed like we had always laughed, making fun of ourselves and people we knew. We fell asleep in each other's arms, dreaming of somewhere safe.
Michael died from a shotgun his girlfriend/wife fired at him during a domestic dispute. I think they were high. His ashes are marked with a cross at the top of Sugarloaf---the mountain that overlooks Malibou Lake. I miss him a lot. He was always my friend.
January 13, 2012
Dear Caroline
Dear Caroline,
I don't know if you can hear me, now that you are dead, but on the thought that I might not know everything there is to know, I am going to take the chance that maybe you can hear me. Your friend Michael wrote to me today and said, "you don't know me, please call me, it's about CT. it's serious." It took me a moment to realize CT was you. CT equals Caroline Thompson in a way that I couldn't quite understand. So, I called the dude. The dude said you were dead. I listened and didn't know what to do. I called to coroner to be sure. I felt bad. I felt really really really bad. Worse than I've ever felt. Then I remembered Romeow. Where was he? Your cute cat. You loved that cat. Was he in the apartment? Did we have to go break in and save him? I didn't know, so I called the coroner back and kept calling back until someone answered. At some point in the early morning I realized that the coroner might have said they had a Caroline Liz Thompson, and on your blog it was Caroline Ruth Thompson. So, I called back, to see if they were wrong or if I was wrong or what. I asked about Romeow. Where was he? Could I save him or keep him and the whole time with all these phones going I knew your parents and your brother didn't know yet. I had already called Matt, your recent ex boyfriend. So recent that he had called me Saturday going I haven't heard from Caroline, do you think she's okay. I was like, yeah, we spoke she seemed cool. You said you were sad that you may have hurt him, but were really excited and happy. In fact, we spoke at 2 AM on Thursday morning and all you talked about was going to this poetry conference and grad school and about shopping with me at Betsey Johnson. (I had told you I put a dress on hold and was too sick to go pick her up..dresses are shes.). You told me you'd buy me the dress, to forget about the sale---the 50 percent off the 50 percent off sale--you'd cover me. You had it handled. I told you I was broke and you told me you'd pay if I agreed to come to the Chicago Poetry conference. We could room together you said.
We talked about our date. The night we went to Beyond Baroque to see poets read their work. You wore your cashmere hat and your lace up knee highs, your cashmere jacket. We shivered outside because the Beyond Baroque people had set up chairs outside. We were bored. It was supposed to be cool, but it bored us. You showed me a photo and told me you were sending it to Matt. You looked pretty, I can't remember what else about the photo---oh yeah--your ass. You sent a photo featuring your world class ass and we laughed to the point of crying. Then, you told me we should go watch him and see him do the comedy. But--before all of this, you and I had our date. Our date at Marmalade or whatever the hell that deli is called near Palmetto---that guy stalked us. He was wearing a white man hat. I can't describe him. Weaselly, like a pinched bunny face. I don't know. He walked in circles around us eating us with his eyes. You told me about your family and I started in on telling you my weird dating scenarios and weird sex fantasies. Then, White Hat man comes over and brings us a chocolate souffle and starts talking about himself. We stare up at him and don't care about him and his stupid story of his wife leaving him and NOW HE WAS BROKEN and did one of us want to pick up the pieces of the broken White Hat man? I made him tell me which one of us he wanted. Just say it, I said. He wrote his dumb name on a napkin---had to get up and walk all over the place to find a pen and we just sat there going, will this man ever leave us alone? Then he came back and set it in the middle of the two of us and then shamefully went away. IT TOOK FOREVER. That White HAT man ruined our date, but only for awhile. Then Beyond Baroque, then laughing till we peed. Then, we went to see Matt--in Hollywood. Matt performed--it was funny, but now you're dead and I'm real fucking sad. Matt became your boyfriend that night. You two became inseparable--it made me happy because I love both of you. There's more, but it mostly was about how talented you were and I'm not in the mood to do it more today. This isn't the end of you. I remember you. How could I ever forget, it's just that. WHAT THE FUCK? I love you and I miss you, that's all. It's rare that I meet a girl that's smart and charismatic and doesn't hate my fucking guts while pretending to be my friend. You were my real friend and i'm sick and sad that you are gone. Remember your Louis Vuitton bracelet? I saw it the day I went to meet your parents and Romeow was there and there was a moment he got out and your dad was overwhelmed in the car and we weren't supposed to tell because it would just have made him stressed. I grabbed Romeow and carried him back through the door and decided I'm getting a cat. So, me and your mom and you brother Jeff made our first secret. I'm getting one just like Romeow. I'm even putting the photo of us up, from when we were freezing. You look cute and I look shitty, but as vain as I am---this is for you. I love you.
Lisa
December 8, 2011
It's Christmas--Time to Feel Shitty
Dear Christmas,
As a fan of you even though you don't really give us as much as you promised from all the advertisements and the sly looks from parents, teachers, friends and wherein we always end up penniless and scrambling to pay rent because we don't want to look stingy and we know we aren't stingy, but WE HAVE NO MONEY THIS YEAR OR ANY YEAR---but still don't get what we really want---we'd like to ask for a raincheck. Can we put off this year until some time in the unforeseeable future years from now when we will be out of school and out of debt with better jobs and a happy cat at our feet---and not barely scraping by? We don't want to be rude because we know you are all chocolate santa-y, furry costumes over fat bellies and we are not supposed to be weirded out that we eat santa, so we don't ever speak about it. We just bite off his head and then ignore the part where we eat his chocolatey insides. Tongues inside eyes rolled back. Are we really not supposed to be afraid if an intruder in our homes FAT and dressed like santa with red and white rascally patches up and down his arms and on his bloated from drinking too much Santa juice on his face (without the gift we have been praying to the lord Jesus for)? WE, as a nation are creeped out and hate those weird squeaking toys that get caught in a child's hair as much as you do. We are not ignorant! We just want to eat our toffee silently on our couches and check out for a while in a sugary coma all our own. We don't want to go to consumer heaven wherein we are applauded for our taste and lack of taste and whispered about as in we are too good to be true or in turns so stuck up that we are the only one on planet earth with such audacity to buy such a perfectly silverlake cool gift that means nothing and does nothing. We don't want to wear sparkly dresses or glittery makeup and pretend not to be sad. This year, Christmas, we'd like to give you the give of honesty. You suck and have always sucked except for that one year where there was an ACTUAL BIKE in our living room. That year where our disappointment was not palpable to our poor trying hard but too poor to do anything about it in the RIGHT way families. Had they just said they were poor, we would have understood--but they were trying to be rich in thought if not in action. So, Christmas, we'd like to break up with you. You don't do it for us in any of the ways we need it from you. You don't ask us out, you don't come over when we tell you to, you are a tease who promises sparkly happiness that never manifests. We are done. You were never as good as we imagined you to be and that makes everyone feel sad and shitty when they have nowhere and no one. What of the homeless---they don't get to go anywhere or the right present either. They are lonely--and Christmas makes them lonelier. So, Christmas, Goodbye and good-luck. As always, we will try to stay away from you because you are bad for us, but you will invade our every waking moment, just like you do every year. We are your whores with our skirts up and no fight in us left. You suck and we all think so. The end.
Signed,
Your Bitches
November 18, 2011
The Hidden
I am a plastic Mexican Jesus
on a dashboard
a cold hard mold with seams where
doubts grow
I am imbued with the faith of a child
with a father who works for nothing
and sits on the couch with sex eyes
I am the daughter Carmen
with swollen lips and see-through
dresses
who stays away after school
so she won’t have to play that game
I am the thin plastic frame that
sits on your bathroom sill
watching what you do when no one is
around
But I am not whatever you are
and that’s the main thing
October 24, 2011
Killing Dolls
At
night, the man who lives next door makes fires. We can hear him making them and
smell the bitter burning of the little green twigs he gets from the kid with
the Afro and the comb in his hair. The comb is purple, which my older sister,
Renee says makes the Afro kid gay as pink ink. Our neighbor rolls the little
twigs in papers and lights the ends of them. He puts them to his lips and
chokes them down. He hurts himself on the coughs and we don’t know why and we
don’t care why. He laughs and laughs shoving Fire Flavored Cheetos into his
mouth and spitting out orange, but no one is there, just he is, the Afro with
the comb and the baggies already left so it’s just the dog, Gracie. Renee says
she can read the Cheetos bag, but I can’t see far enough to know if she’s
lying.
Every night when
we remember to, we watch that coughing guy through our window get undressed and
try to guess where his old wife went. “She must be in the crazy bin,” Renee
tells me. “Remember when she chased that girl with licorice?” But, I don’t
remember—all I remember is —she was very very very old---so old that whatever
used to be a woman was now a man----- and sometimes when people get old they
get a smell that tells dogs they are dying and I bet she had that smell and now
she lives in the deep earth with the rest of the bodies. We try not to think
about her underwear or her naked sagging body, whenever we do we laugh and roll
around on the floor because you can’t think of old people naked, it’s too much
like thinking of god going to the bathroom. I
never tell my sister how the old wife died, because death is one of those
things that has superstitions attached and to say it will make it happen. But,
I tell Renee about the ghost and how the ghost tells me what our parents do in
that bed of theirs. Renee makes me shut up by chucking dolls at me as hard as
she can. I hide my face with my pillow, but I peek out and see my Cindy doll’s
head go flying. Renee says it’s an accident, but there are no accidents. She
kills my dolls on purpose. We are fake sisters. Real by birth. Fake by
everything else.
My babysitter
comes every week without fail and tells us weird stories about the drugs she’s
taking. She talks about boys more than anything else, the ones that like her,
the ones that used to like her, the ones that got stolen out from under her,
the ones she keeps secret. Today she is wearing a tight shirt without a bra.
Her makeup looks like it should be on a teacher, not a fifteen year old. She
wears platform shoes and a tiny skirt. I know she is trying to look sexy, but
she looks more like a cartoon. Her
name is Maureen McAdams. My mother always refers to people by their first and
last names. Jim McAdams this and Maureen McAdams that. My mother tells mean
stories about Maureen that we aren’t allowed to repeat. My mother tells us that
Maureen got suspended for drinking and blowing on a boy. My mother tells us
that Maureen is going to end up dead in a dumpster someday, like the girls we
hear about on the 6 o’clock news. My mother tells us whenever someone tries to
give us candy to run like hell or we are going to be cut up and die on the
hillside like the girls on TV. Renee says, “Then you should buy us candy,
mother, don’t put our lives in jeopardy.”
Maureen walks us
to Vendome Liquor so we can gorge our faces on chocolate and other things our
parents don’t allow. Maureen lights cigarettes and chokes them down with a pose
like if she were in a movie you’d think she was about to get run over. Renee goes inside to steal stuff. She comes out with way more stuff than
the money would buy. Chocolate balls, milky ways, Recees Peanut Butter Cups,
Suckers and Blow-Pops. Green flavor is my favorite for the suckers and Renee
never remembers and only brings the ones that stain your mouth red. Cherry, Strawberry and Raspberry. She
always makes up a lie that she used all the money when really she pockets it.
She always gives me some so I don’t tell.
Maureen cries on a
payphone telling it, it doesn’t matter if she’s not allowed, she’ll do what she
wants. Renee and I are burning up in the hot sun so hard we take off our shoes.
Renee takes off her top because she doesn’t care who sees. She walks around all
puffed out like hookers do. I’m embarrassed and pretend I don’t know her, the
street is right there, cars see, and god sees. If I stay close to the Vendome
doors, I can feel the air conditioning every time they open and shut. So, I do
that. It makes a loud sucking noise, I smooth my feet over the rubber mat with
the little ridges. I’m wearing my reversible red-bandana on one side denim on
the other side halter top. When I get bored of the door thing I go to the
sidewalk in front of the parking lot and rub my feet over the little blackened
gum circles on the sidewalk and I’m going to myself, I wish I had sunscreen now
I’m going to be sunburned and my mom will get mad and yell at me and hate me
again. She’ll see my sad and raise it.
Maureen takes
forever on the phone, and we’re bored. Life seems to take forever when someone
you want to talk to is on the phone. Renee jumps on top of the wall next to the
parking lot and pretends she’s in the Olympics—“LOOK, I’m on the balance beam,”
she screams. Then she does a cartwheel and Maureen almost has a heart attack.
“Don’t do that again!” Maureen says to my sister and Renee just looks at her
with hate eyes.
The
fright of it makes Maureen stop crying and get off the phone like a magic trick
and Renee puts back on her shirt and we walk all the way to McDonalds to get
orange drink and fish filet. She is going against my mothers orders to feed us
apples and peanut butter from Quinn’s and I tell her we aren’t allowed but she
says I’m a tattle tale and if I tell my life will be stupid and for nothing.
Later,
Maureen comes in my bedroom and takes me to the TV room. She tells me she has a
date with a boy and she wants to try something on me. She asks me if I mind. I
say, why me, why not Renee. She says Renee’s too old even though Renee is only
a year and a half older than I am. She says it’s a special kind of kiss. A
French one. She says she has to try it because she has another date and has to
look like a professional. Then she puts her tongue in my mouth and moves it
around. I am sicked out and think this is bad. I’m bad and she’s bad.
“Was
it okay?”
“It’s
just gross, that’s all.”
“But,
do you think I’m doing it right?”
I
didn’t know but it seemed unfair that I had to be the one and it was full
confirmation that god didn’t love me. I could see it was really important to
tell her something nice so she could be happy like when my mother asked if she
was pretty and I would say yes even when she looked tired.
“Are
you supposed to put your tongue in? That seems weird.”
“That’s
the frenching.”
“Well,
I guess it’s okay then.”
I
got back in bed with my sheets with stars and moons and galaxies on them. I
couldn’t sleep after that so I tried to see the neighbor if he was up, but all
I saw was Gracie outside shivering.
October 14, 2011
Try Stuff
Meet Brian behind the pool-house.
The one at the lake. Let him kiss you. Let him put his hands up under your
t-shirt, but not down your shorts. Tell him not to tell. Tell him you’re too young
for him. Tell him you aren’t an object. Tell him you don’t like boys with blue
eyes. Tell him you aren’t going to be easy to know. Tell him to write you a
note and to put in it the things he thinks you’d find interesting. Tell him he
better make it good, because you know a lot about a lot. Tell him to talk about
you. Tell him to describe you and make it romantic. Punch him. Grab his hands
and put them behind his back. Watch him watch you. Let him chase you across the
lawn. Slow down so he can tackle you. Kiss him again. Not know the
consequences. Fall in love a little. Tell him, no one has captured your heart
yet and you doubt he will be the one. Tell him he’s too tall for you. Tell him
you like skinny but not too skinny. Tell him you like his hair. Tell him you
like his plaid shirts. Put makeup on him. Lipstick and eyeliner. Hate him for
liking you. Be scared. Not know what to do next. Leave. Let the phone ring when
he calls. Don’t pick up. See him at school but act disinterested. Flirt with
boys you don’t care about in front of him. Write his your name with his last
name on the end. Think you’re dumb then cross it out. Tell nobody.
Go find Tami. Lay on her floor
cutting up magazines for the wall. Wish you looked like the big nosed model
with the giant lips that scream sex. Be mad you don’t look like your mother. Be
mad your mother doesn’t care that you aren’t going to be a model and won’t pay
for plastic surgery. Be mad that she won’t drive you to Los Angeles to be an
actress. Be mad you’re stuck in the middle of nowhere without transportation.
Be mad that she won’t come see you be a cheerleader. Be mad she thinks
cheerleading is dumb. Be mad she hates high IQ’s because hers is low. Be mad
that she is skinny and perfect and your boobs are so big they call you Torpedos
behind your back. Be mad she doesn’t understand the pressures of your clothes
not fitting because she is a waif.
Be mad you are eating all the time and can’t starve yourself like she can. Be
mad tami is sexy sleeping with boys but you don’t even know what blow job means
yet. Be mad she returned your khaki skirt with cum on it. Be mad at the world.
Consider suicide.
Watch your father eat you with his
eyes. Pretend it didn’t happen. Stop wearing shorts so nothing gets too weird.
Stop talking to him after that. Be scared to be alone with him. Not know who to
talk to about it. Try to be less pretty. Try to be less voluptuous. Buy bras
two sizes too small to press you down. Cry in the closet because nothing will
close over you. Not know who to tell. Start wearing giant sweatshirts. Be sad
you’re fat. Be sad you can’t afford bigger clothes. Be mad your mother thinks
you are a bottomless pit for asking. Try starving yourself again. Begin
throwing up. Paige taught you how. Try on bikinis. Get on and off the scale a
bunch of different times to see if the digital numbers change. Be happy when
the numbers go below 120. Read the Best Little Girl in The World. Learn how to
starve yourself through will-power. The flesh is dumb. Get your friends
boyfriends to ask you in dark clubs if you’d consider making out with them,
consider it, but say no, rejecting them feels good. Keep that a secret. Be
lonely. Start shoplifting with friends. Get caught for grand-theft. Be scared
your parents will find out.
Sneak out your window. Go to clubs.
Dance and drink peppermint schnapps. Like dancing more than all the sex stuff.
Ignore your friends who are experimenting with it. Be scared. Take pills. Be
friends with younger boys hoping they won’t love you. Be mad when they do. Change
friends. Sleep on the beach. Pass out in the shower. Curl your friend’s hair in
the morning. Kill a giant potato bug with a flip flop. Scream when it screams.
Wish someone would hug you. Wish someone would say you are beautiful. Wish
someone would be nice.
September 22, 2011
May 2, 2011
The Day The Sun Died
I drove out to the house off of Van Nuys where Jeremy lived looking for heroin or oxycodone, but sometimes he had nothing and I never knew which way it was going to go. Jeremy always greeted me when he heard me drive up the gravel driveway.
Instead his brother, Garrett, walked out front say hello, which was odd because Garrett didn’t live nearby or anything. In fact, he lived outside the city in a huge house that he bought from the accident he and Jeremy had been in 10 years ago. I had spent time there, and couldn’t see why he’d want to hang in this shit-hole, when he could be kicking it in that place of his. He was wearing overalls and a plaid shirt opened underneath with a silver and diamond cross I had seen on Jeremy. Although his boots were alligator, they were covered in dirt from being out with the horse in the back where they had a stable.
“Hey there, Jeremy’s not home.”
“Okay, I’ll come back later.”
“Come inside, you can wait. We’ll have a drink.”
The lawn was dead and the pit-bull stood guard at the front door like usual. He always eyed me, but Jeremy had him smell my shoes and told him to like me, so I always thought I was safe. Garrett was the handsome one. Not covered in burns over 75 percent of his body like Jeremy. They were twins. The accident had something to do with a meth lab. Garrett got out. Jeremy didn’t. The fact that he lived was amazing to all the doctors.
Garrett disappeared in the kitchen and left me in the main room with a girl and her daughter. They both looked at me and I smiled at them. The little girl was dancing and she grabbed both my hands and danced me in a circle. There was a little pink ghetto blaster on the floor and the music coming out was like some Disney fairy tale. She wore a bright pink dress and had flowers in her curly blonde hair.
“My dad’s not coming back today,” she said.
“Oh, that’s too bad, was he supposed to?” I asked.
“Yes. He’s always supposed to. He never does it though. I’m used to it.”
I caught the woman, who I assumed to be her mother, staring at me and gave her a smile. She froze me out and gave me a look like she’d kill me later when no one was watching. Cut up in a garbage bag with all my teeth pulled out. Garrett came out with beers and I stopped dancing with the little girl.
“Garrett and I are going to have a talk,” I said.
“You’re pretty,” the little girl said.
“Thank you. So are you,” I said.
Garrett led me away from them and out the back door and pulled out a chair covered in dirt and other stuff and told me to sit down. I looked for another option but there wasn’t one. His eyes never left my face the whole time watching me to see if I would care if I sat on dirt and who knows what else. I sat.
“The girl in the front had a father, but he’s not coming back,” Garrett said.
“Why not?”
“I killed him.”
I wasn’t sure what to do. I took a drink of my beer and tried to look for an escape route in case things got weird.
“Aren’t you going to ask me why?”
“I was taken aback is all.”
“He molested that little girl in there and when her mother found out, he beat her up.”
“I’m so sorry.”
“Don’t be. They’ll be all right now. He was a criminal before they met, she just didn’t know it.”
“I see.”
The backyard had two cars covered in blue tarps and a stable for two horses. It was one of the hottest days California had had in a while; the valley was always 10 degrees hotter. I was wearing a dress and it was sticking to me. There were no umbrellas, empty bottles everywhere and ashtrays never emptied.
“Do you need a hat or something?”
“That would be great.”
Garrett disappeared inside the house and came back with two overdone straw hats, the kind you’d wear for gardening. He put one on my head and sat down.
“You’ll want to know about Jeremy.”
“Yes. Where is he?”
“He went to stay in my place. He’s not going to be doing what he’s been doing anymore. He’s getting clean.”
“Oh.”
I knew it was a lie the second he said it, though I had no proof. You know how you just can tell. Plus, he was wearing Jeremy’s favorite cross, the one he never took off his neck. I had the number of his mother; I thought maybe I could call her later after I got out of there. I would have to find someone else to get me drugs. That was my next thought.
“He left something for you, so you wouldn’t be caught out in the cold.”
I nodded.
I didn’t know what to say to Garrett because I never liked him. He was handsome true, but whenever I heard the accident story, something always made my stomach sink. Something like, he could have helped his brother. I know it was fire and all, but the way Jeremy told it, from his vantage point he saw his brother look at him and run. Not toward him to help him, but away from him. Jeremy said he thought about it day and night for two years and then asked god to release him from hating Garrett. He was always wondering if Garrett had come to help, if Jeremy would have been saved or if Garrett would have been disfigured the way he was. It hurt me every-time he told the story, which was often because we used drugs together and people like to tell the same story over and over even though we tried not to.
Jeremy was also the one with the personality. Garrett always got the girls. It sucked to know that that was something we could never do anything about. I had kissed Jeremy once. I remembered it. We were out by the horses. It was my first time doing heroin. He put it in a cigarette and I took a hit. It wasn’t what I expected; it felt like happiness hit the cells of my body. A rush of the all at once feeling of total release. I hadn’t known I had any pain in my body until that moment when it all disappeared. The feeling of it leaving was overwhelming. Try imagining something you’ve always known, that has always been with you, forever and ever, suddenly disappearing. That was what it was like. There was no choice in it. Jeremy watched and he told me he loved me. Then I threw up on his shoes. I had wanted to love him back. I really had, but I couldn’t and I felt the shame of not loving the thing you are supposed to love.
Garrett and I made small talk about what I can’t remember. Then he went inside and got the package from Jeremy and handed it over. It struck me how all the time we talk to people we don’t even like, just to get by, always barely making contact with the ones we really are drawn to. I only talked to him to find out about Jeremy. I’m not sure if he could tell or not though.
“Thanks for coming by,” Garrett said and he walked me back out front where I said goodbye to the little girl and hugged her.
“Are you going?” she said with a sad voice.
“I am. So nice to meet you.”
“I love you,” she said and threw her arms around me again.
“I love you too,” I said and slid out the door to freedom. I felt sick about that girl, leaving that little shiny thing with two people who were going to harm her in ways I can’t go into. She would be ruined and there was a great sense of loss in the knowing of it.
I had been staying at my parent’s house in Encino. I had a stash that could get me by and I was sharing with this new kid named Pretzel. Pretzel was a mulatto ex-model who wore this red emo t-shirt for the first few week I knew him. I got so sick of it, finally, I got a shirt out of my father’s closet and made him wear it. He wore it for only an hour and then the emo shirt came back out. At first he was a bore like everyone, but one night he grabbed me hard by both arms and said, “I could kiss you for 24 hours straight.” I thought of him differently after that. Like I could love him or something. As long as he didn’t need to have any sex. I was pretty fucked up that way. My last boyfriend and I tried, but I always just ended up laughing. It felt funny. I went to a shrink and they gave me some bullshit about being molested, only I know I wasn’t. They were just out of ideas. Plus, aren’t the molested ones sluts? My friend Terri was molested and she was a complete whore. They gave me some pills though and that’s always good.
Pretzel set up a turntable in the living room and played all kinds of music. I called Terri and a few of my friends from when I lived in Venice and they all came to hang out. Terri had never done heroin and got pretty pissed when she found out that’s why I disappeared.
“We do everything together,” she said.
“Sorry,” I said, even though I wasn’t. She did coke and sucked cock long before she ever told me about it. We danced around and drank champagne from my father’s cellar. The party was on and there hadn’t been anything bad that happened to any of us for some time, so the drama level was low. Just pretty sparkly people getting blasted and doing stupid dances. That was it.
Then, one night my doorbell rang and I went to get it and it was Jeremy. He was dirty and skinny and had scratched up and down his arms on the good arm and the burn arm. It was the best thing I had ever seen---Jeremy standing there.
“He tried to bury me alive,” Jeremy said.
“Jesus, are you okay?” I said opening the door. At that moment all the beautiful kids I had in my house looked at Jeremy like he was an alien. I felt bad too, because it was one of those moments when I realized I was ashamed of him. I was ashamed to be ashamed. He wasn’t beautiful, but all of us were. It sickened me to be this way, but it was beyond my control. It washed over me like the feeling of adrenaline or any other kind of feeling that you can name but might not want to in order to hide it from yourself so you can go on living in that manner. Emotionally dead-land, that’s what my friend, Terri called it. Dead-land. I felt nervous as hell, but also real guilty that I hadn’t ever called his mom. I was a bad friend and to be honest it wasn’t on purpose, I forgot.
I got out a cigarette filled with heroin and gave him a drag, then I put him in the shower, more to get him away from the others than anything else. We were going to turn off all the lights later and he would be safe from their scrutiny with their fucked up plastic noses and perfect faces. I sat on the toilet while he showered. The bathroom was tiled with glazed Moroccan blue and white tiles and I had t-light candles going all through the house. They flickered off the tiles and made shadows on the walls. I stared at the shadows and marveled at the wonder that so much in life is in the shadows, and only some of us were willing to go into the darkness to find what was missing from the light. That’s the part you don’t read about. Drugs do that. They take you to the other less obvious sections of your psyche and they make you see things you didn’t know existed and never even wanted to know, but then you fell in love with those things too and had a hard time coming back from it. One of my friends always said he liked cocaine psychosis better than the cocaine. Only, I had it once and pulled out all of the hair at the crown of my head and that’s why I’m now a charge of the state. There’s some worse stuff I did to my shoulder, and something I can’t tell you because it’s too scary.
Jeremy told me the story. Garrett had drugged him and buried him in a shallow grave in the back of his parents’ house. Jeremy woke up and didn’t know where he was, just that dirt was on top of him and he dug and dug for two days to get out. It would have taken him less time, but he was tied up, so there was that.
“I knew he had done something to you. As soon as I saw the necklace.”
“He’s mental,” Jeremy said. “I’m going to kill him.”
I didn’t say anything. He got dressed in some of my father’s clothes and then we went out to the living room and got high. The heroin he had left me was good stuff and it didn’t take a lot to be on your way. We fell asleep on the couch in the center of the room.
When I woke. It wasn’t morning. Or if it was I couldn’t be sure, not unless I was willing to get up and look. I was on the plush carpet surrounded by bodies sleeping. Other than the people I invited, mostly I didn’t know where they came from; just that they found out my house was open and then appeared. First one. Then two. Boys. Girls and so on. The red couch cast a glow onto the carpet like a halo. Golden light shone from the velvet in a way that defied what one knows of the physical world. It wasn’t a hallucination. I’ll get to that. This was warm. Part of the reason I was on the floor in the first place. The hit of heroin I took was too strong, but that was hours ago. I couldn’t understand why all the lights were off and then the lights themselves, carved glass sconces on the walls, shone tiny rainbows on the wall surrounding them. They made me know once and for all that the smallest things are the things worth remembering. Tiny rainbows.
Pretzel was still sleeping and I studied his face, totally hoping that if I ever had sex and was able to bring forth a baby, that it could be as beautiful as he was. I was almost positive he was gay too, but that didn’t stop us from pretending to be a couple. I couldn’t have sex and he was gay, so it kind of worked out.
Terri had gone off with someone, and we didn’t see her again. At some point in the night, something happened to Jeremy. We had to call the paramedics and then everyone scattered to different houses so that we wouldn’t be caught with our pants down. Jeremy had slipped into a coma right there on the floor while we were all out cold too. We hadn’t noticed because we were all pretty fucked up. I imagined his brother at his bedside fakely trying to be nice and it made my skin turn.
I called Garrett on the phone the next day to tell him where his brother was. He drove into the parking lot and parked his car. He got out and was walking towards the entrance. I came up behind him.
“Hi Garrett.”
“Hi Sunshine.”
I shot him like my dad showed me that day at the gun range, saying, if he comes at you just do it, you won’t have time to think. And he was right, the human head makes a sound he didn’t tell me about, I won’t burden you with that, but believe me, it’s memorable. I got outta there, what else you wanna know?
April 8, 2011
Indian Rock
You walk ahead of me. Your trousers hang so ghetto-low they might come down. I follow you like a dog. I think how my friend Shannon should be here, but dolls are more important, so I’m stuck with you. The Indian burial ground isn’t here, you know that, but you insist on looking. Your hands dig deep in the wet earth, but come up empty. “These Indian heads have to be here. Michael saw them,” you say. But, Michael is dead; an Indian curse from touching arrowheads.
You climb up the rock first, to the closest cave. Telling me we’ll go up its face. I have to help you down and you start to cry. I laugh at you. Pussy-boy, I call you. This makes you hate me and the hate colors your smell. Like metal mixed with trash. It seeps around me and I choke on the you-air. You tell me if there isn’t enough water we’ll die. But, we live close. Too close. This isn’t a real adventure; it’s a scam. Just like how we think we are rich because we live at the lake. But we are poor. Not exactly white-trash but close. That’s why I’m wearing my sister’s hand-me downs. My sister who is six inches taller than me. Red clown pants.
You say you won’t have sex until the girl seems better than the girl’s you’ve met. I know you don’t see me as a girl. I’m a friend. I don’t care, Pussy-boy. You are eleven. I’m twelve.
You say it’s around here somewhere. The life-jacket; electric orange and covered in blood. I don’t believe you. I see nothing. I think you made it up because you are too afraid to go up the face of Indian Rock. Pussy. I’m hungry. You never are. I have a snack in my pocket. I eat it and shove the wrapper deep in my jeans. You pretend a story, the one about your alcoholic mother vomiting in your bed, but how many times you gotta say it, anyway? We’re all fucked coming to earth, out somebody else’s hole.
The sky’s blue is getting covered in clouds. “It’s gonna rain on us,” I say. I can hear the rapids from the dam overflow violent and magical. “Let’s get a piece of Styrofoam and ride the water, as long as we’re going to get soaked.” You agree and run towards towards the water. You tear the branch off the first tree climbing up and jumping on it with all your weight. You fall to the ground screaming pain. Then you laugh and jump up with the broken tree branch and run to the rapids over the foamy infected part and reach way out for some Styrofoam.
I go first. Push it out into the middle and jump on and ride down the fast water laughing as hard as anything. I hold on for dear life too, but I just keep going and you run along the shore trying to catch me with the branch, I’m not scared, I’m having fun, but there it is the place where Michael died, I push my memory away. I grab on to the branch and you pull me to safety. You hug me and grab the Styrofoam and run up to the top of the stream for your turn. You hand me the branch and push it way out and jump on. The water is too fast and you lose your grip with your feet all the way under the water and just your arms and head sticking out. I run down the shore trying to help, but you are too far out. I shout and try to grab you with the branch, but you end up stuck on the other side near a rock. I tell you to get over to me, but you can’t. I am soaking wet and the clouds explode in a gush of rain. We are laughing uncontrollable like crazies.
I get in the stream and walk on the bottom, forgetting how shallow it really is. “Stand up, pussy-boy!” I yell. And you do, like it’s nothing. We are both standing in the stream laughing and laughing that we are out of danger and you turn around to the bank on your side to crawl out. “Something died over here,” you say. And you crawl up on the bank. I still haven’t waded all the way to the middle when you drag down a backpack covered with mud. Its burgundy like the one I used to have. “Open it,” I yell over the rain and the stream.
“Zipper’s stuck,” like with glue. “Let’s get it across to the other side.” I say. You look pale and your face wears an expression not like you. “I’m scared,” you say. I don’t call you a name, I am scared too. “It’s okay, I’ll help you.” I make it to your side and we put the backpack on the Styrofoam. The smell of death is gruesome and I throw up in the water before I can help it. You wade on one side and I wade on the other side and we get it to the safe shore, our shore.
I say, “Let’s leave it,” what can we do anyway? “Nothing,” you say. I lug the heavy pack to a tree. You say, “I have to know,” and you take out your razor and you cut it open. You scream the scream of the damned. The thing you can’t take away from memory happened, the pouring rain, our freezing bodies and the fact of it; a dead girl’s head. She is decomposing I can’t tell how old she is. I have no match in my memory for what this means or where to put this in my mind. You are crying full bore. “We have to find a ranger or a policeman,” I say, but you aren’t listening.
“We can’t leave her here,” you scream. “Okay,” I say. And we carry what is left of her out of the park him on one side me on the other gasping for the air around us that wasn’t covered in death.
We don’t see anyone on the trail. You say, “Are you okay?” I’m not okay, but I lie to you and say I am.
At the base of the trail out of the park you see a truck, you leave me with the she-head and run to it. You are waving and screaming over the rain. I am thinking of my parents and my sister and the boy at school I like. I am thinking of my dog and how I wish he were with us. I am thinking how death is so close to being alive. The man runs down to us he sees what we see and he shakes his head and starts to cry too. “We’ll drive her to the station, come on,” the man said. We follow him, you on one side, me on the other and we put it the dead-girl’s head in the back.
We sit in the front with the man. I have seen him before. He has hot chocolate in a thermos. You drink some and hand it to me. He is saying how he knows my parents and knows your parents. I am listening to the tires on the pavement and wondering when I can sleep. I wonder if this man is safe.
You tell the police where you found her. How she was on the other side, a place someone might never look. I tell the police I hope they find her parents and the person who did this.
We drive home with the man, who drops us off together in front of your house. After the man disappears around the corner, you walk me home. You hug me and say, “I’m sorry.” And I go upstairs to my parents and say what happened.
You call me the next day to tell me; her name was Mandy Williamson she went to our school. She went missing two weeks ago. She was twelve years old. Like me.
You climb up the rock first, to the closest cave. Telling me we’ll go up its face. I have to help you down and you start to cry. I laugh at you. Pussy-boy, I call you. This makes you hate me and the hate colors your smell. Like metal mixed with trash. It seeps around me and I choke on the you-air. You tell me if there isn’t enough water we’ll die. But, we live close. Too close. This isn’t a real adventure; it’s a scam. Just like how we think we are rich because we live at the lake. But we are poor. Not exactly white-trash but close. That’s why I’m wearing my sister’s hand-me downs. My sister who is six inches taller than me. Red clown pants.
You say you won’t have sex until the girl seems better than the girl’s you’ve met. I know you don’t see me as a girl. I’m a friend. I don’t care, Pussy-boy. You are eleven. I’m twelve.
You say it’s around here somewhere. The life-jacket; electric orange and covered in blood. I don’t believe you. I see nothing. I think you made it up because you are too afraid to go up the face of Indian Rock. Pussy. I’m hungry. You never are. I have a snack in my pocket. I eat it and shove the wrapper deep in my jeans. You pretend a story, the one about your alcoholic mother vomiting in your bed, but how many times you gotta say it, anyway? We’re all fucked coming to earth, out somebody else’s hole.
The sky’s blue is getting covered in clouds. “It’s gonna rain on us,” I say. I can hear the rapids from the dam overflow violent and magical. “Let’s get a piece of Styrofoam and ride the water, as long as we’re going to get soaked.” You agree and run towards towards the water. You tear the branch off the first tree climbing up and jumping on it with all your weight. You fall to the ground screaming pain. Then you laugh and jump up with the broken tree branch and run to the rapids over the foamy infected part and reach way out for some Styrofoam.
I go first. Push it out into the middle and jump on and ride down the fast water laughing as hard as anything. I hold on for dear life too, but I just keep going and you run along the shore trying to catch me with the branch, I’m not scared, I’m having fun, but there it is the place where Michael died, I push my memory away. I grab on to the branch and you pull me to safety. You hug me and grab the Styrofoam and run up to the top of the stream for your turn. You hand me the branch and push it way out and jump on. The water is too fast and you lose your grip with your feet all the way under the water and just your arms and head sticking out. I run down the shore trying to help, but you are too far out. I shout and try to grab you with the branch, but you end up stuck on the other side near a rock. I tell you to get over to me, but you can’t. I am soaking wet and the clouds explode in a gush of rain. We are laughing uncontrollable like crazies.
I get in the stream and walk on the bottom, forgetting how shallow it really is. “Stand up, pussy-boy!” I yell. And you do, like it’s nothing. We are both standing in the stream laughing and laughing that we are out of danger and you turn around to the bank on your side to crawl out. “Something died over here,” you say. And you crawl up on the bank. I still haven’t waded all the way to the middle when you drag down a backpack covered with mud. Its burgundy like the one I used to have. “Open it,” I yell over the rain and the stream.
“Zipper’s stuck,” like with glue. “Let’s get it across to the other side.” I say. You look pale and your face wears an expression not like you. “I’m scared,” you say. I don’t call you a name, I am scared too. “It’s okay, I’ll help you.” I make it to your side and we put the backpack on the Styrofoam. The smell of death is gruesome and I throw up in the water before I can help it. You wade on one side and I wade on the other side and we get it to the safe shore, our shore.
I say, “Let’s leave it,” what can we do anyway? “Nothing,” you say. I lug the heavy pack to a tree. You say, “I have to know,” and you take out your razor and you cut it open. You scream the scream of the damned. The thing you can’t take away from memory happened, the pouring rain, our freezing bodies and the fact of it; a dead girl’s head. She is decomposing I can’t tell how old she is. I have no match in my memory for what this means or where to put this in my mind. You are crying full bore. “We have to find a ranger or a policeman,” I say, but you aren’t listening.
“We can’t leave her here,” you scream. “Okay,” I say. And we carry what is left of her out of the park him on one side me on the other gasping for the air around us that wasn’t covered in death.
We don’t see anyone on the trail. You say, “Are you okay?” I’m not okay, but I lie to you and say I am.
At the base of the trail out of the park you see a truck, you leave me with the she-head and run to it. You are waving and screaming over the rain. I am thinking of my parents and my sister and the boy at school I like. I am thinking of my dog and how I wish he were with us. I am thinking how death is so close to being alive. The man runs down to us he sees what we see and he shakes his head and starts to cry too. “We’ll drive her to the station, come on,” the man said. We follow him, you on one side, me on the other and we put it the dead-girl’s head in the back.
We sit in the front with the man. I have seen him before. He has hot chocolate in a thermos. You drink some and hand it to me. He is saying how he knows my parents and knows your parents. I am listening to the tires on the pavement and wondering when I can sleep. I wonder if this man is safe.
You tell the police where you found her. How she was on the other side, a place someone might never look. I tell the police I hope they find her parents and the person who did this.
We drive home with the man, who drops us off together in front of your house. After the man disappears around the corner, you walk me home. You hug me and say, “I’m sorry.” And I go upstairs to my parents and say what happened.
You call me the next day to tell me; her name was Mandy Williamson she went to our school. She went missing two weeks ago. She was twelve years old. Like me.
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