Capricious

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Capricious Page 5

by Gabrielle Prendergast


  I say.

  She sniffs

  Nose in the air

  A taste of snarky Kayli.

  Don’t sweetie, please

  I try.

  Is it Parker?

  Is he pressuring you?

  No pressure

  No problem

  None of your business.

  She pockets the condoms

  And promises

  You tell, I tell.

  And Samir will suffer

  Worse than us.

  Once, under

  The crocheted blanket,

  We swore

  No man could

  Come between us.

  Once we vowed

  It was me and her

  Against Mom and Dad.

  We were sisters in arms

  United, blood-bound

  Virgin warriors

  Once.

  PASTELS

  I draw Kayli’s pale, thin hand

  Chipped pink nail polish and a

  Fistful of stolen condoms.

  In pretty pastels,

  Like a greeting card you would

  Give to your grandmother.

  EUPHEMISTICALLY SPEAKING

  I’m on Facebook when David’s message pings

  Do we need to talk, he writes

  About the thing?

  “The thing” where I kissed him on the steps

  Two weeks have gone by already

  Two weeks where we’ve run past each other

  At school and barely stopped

  To say hello.

  Are we still friends, he writes

  Or are we more?

  I can’t pretend like

  Nothing happened.

  Infuriatingly

  My eyes fill up with tears

  I’m supposed to be stronger than this

  Colder, but instead I burn

  Blushing with shame

  Though there’s no one around

  To see it.

  DISCRETION

  I sniff back the tears

  And write

  “The thing?”

  I like you.

  What are you thinking?

  Boyfriend/girlfriend?

  Does it have to be public?

  I’m not ashamed or anything.

  I’ve just had enough of gossip.

  A long time passes

  With me choking

  On my lies

  Before David writes back

  I’ll see you at school.

  411

  It’s not hard to find him

  Ashraf combined with Samir’s last name

  And there’s only one in New York.

  And it’s not hard to locate him

  On Facebook, on Twitter, he even has a blog

  With his graphic-design portfolio.

  It’s slightly hard to decide

  The best way to contact him

  Email, tweet, Facebook, comment on his blog?

  It’s hardest to know what to write

  Hello, Ashraf, my name is Raphaelle

  I’m secretly dating your brother Samir.

  He misses you.

  INSUFFICIENT

  “Secretly dating”

  Seems too small and innocent

  For all that we are.

  Chapter Five

  Unruly

  DEFORESTATION

  Apparently, every second

  An area the size of

  Two football fields

  Is deforested.

  That’s horrible, of course

  But when you think about it

  Quite an achievement

  Of man taming nature.

  It’s with this in mind

  That I face the terror

  Of having my bikini line pruned

  And torn out by the roots

  Like an unruly garden hedge.

  I figure

  If those Brazilians

  Can cut down the Amazon

  They can handle pretty much anything.

  CLUELESS

  My limping

  Bowlegged return

  Is met by Dad

  And just-baked cookies.

  Like he knows

  Chocolate is the cure

  For humiliation

  And tender red skin.

  What did you do today?

  He asks in a kind of

  Mindless parental mantra.

  I wonder

  If he really wants an answer

  If asking satisfies

  Some fatherly need

  Or if he’s waiting for me

  To say something like

  “I had most of the hair removed

  Painfully

  From my private parts.

  What did YOU do?”

  But I shove cookies in my mouth

  And say, Shopping.

  NUCLEAR TESTING

  Then there is the matter

  Of choosing a bikini.

  Kayli has about a dozen

  Each one

  Tinier

  Than

  The

  Last.

  Why don’t I just go nude?

  That would cause a scene

  Wouldn’t be the first time

  Kayli says, eyeing me

  Assessing me

  Narrow-eyed.

  My flowered

  Ample bottom

  Overflows

  My tidy boobs

  Cower helplessly

  Swathed in

  Purple.

  Can’t I wear the WonderBra?

  That gave me cleavage.

  That’s underwear, Ra

  Is it a lingerie car wash?

  We’d probably

  Make more money

  If it was.

  Lingerie is hardly appropriate

  Kayli pencils A P P R O P R I A T E

  On her homework

  And then

  Sexy lingerie is not appropriate for teenage girls.

  That’s a vocabulary word

  She says.

  NOT QUITE IRISH TWINS

  She:

  Has golden light in her hair

  Ocean-bright eyes

  Dancer grace and athlete strength

  Skin like butter

  A pouting shape

  Plentiful with promise.

  I:

  Have wiry mud waves

  Storm-cloud eyes

  Bones and butt and bloat

  All in the wrong places

  Skin like sifted flour

  Dotted with spice.

  She:

  Can talk to anyone

  And say nothing.

  I:

  Open my mouth

  And obnoxious pours out.

  She:

  Was born silently in a warm bath.

  I:

  Was torn screaming into the world.

  REFLECTION

  My reflection glares

  Flinging words

  I try not to use.

  Fat

  Pale

  Puffy

  Disproportionate

  Like I’m a badly executed

  Painting.

  My body

  Swells

  Distorts.

  Once the me in the mirror

  Was my golden temple

  A swift and sturdy chariot.

  Now she’s becoming

  My unwieldy burden

  A suit of iron.

  A twisted bitter sister

  On whom bikinis

  Shrink and choke.

  She pushes me away

  Holding me at arm’s length

  In her judgmental eye.

  BROKEN MIRROR

  And then

  I want

  To wrap

  My naked

  Body around

  Samir’s and

  Let his

  Ecstasy rebuild

  The wholeness

  Of me.

  NEW EARTH

 
Our spring cleaning is a bit late

  Because summer has fallen unexpectedly

  Full-grown and armored

  Into our unprepared laps.

  Mom whistles as she rakes away

  The last of the slush-mashed leaves

  Now fragile, dry and cracked

  By the relentless prairie sun.

  Dad shreds papers and notes

  Out-of-date progress reports

  He won’t need or prefers to forget

  For the summer term.

  Kayli piles unwanted clothes

  And shoes on my stairs

  Like her rejects, some unworn

  Are good enough for me.

  I sweat on my unmade bed

  Choosing artwork from grade eleven

  To add to my walls

  Or discard.

  The hand collection has grown

  And is beginning to look

  Peculiar, menacing even

  Like an encroaching army.

  The mandalas soothe me with their symmetry

  But the portraits prickle my conscience

  Sarah, I called Puffy and sketched

  Fatter than she is.

  Sarah and I might have been friends

  In other circumstances

  If I had achieved what I set out to do

  Instead of what really happened.

  How somehow I

  Turned Genie against her

  Tore them apart without even trying

  Broke their BFF bond by being me.

  My face gets hot.

  The slant-ceilinged room is an oven

  Even with the mudroom door open

  Because heat rises and has nowhere to go.

  SOIREE

  They arrive in pairs

  Or groups

  Languid, drowsy-eyed

  Arms slung over shoulders

  Smelling mildly of skunk

  And beer.

  They call Dad “Drew” or “Boss”

  And smoke in the driveway.

  If they’re graduates

  Why are they still students?

  Kayli asks.

  She understands how it works

  Just doesn’t know why anyone

  Would CHOOSE more school.

  Two bearded boys slip out

  Barefoot across the dewy yard

  Fragrant tendrils of smoke

  Curl above the back fence.

  Want some?

  Says one

  When I join them

  In the lane.

  How old are you?

  Says the other

  As I puff

  Inexpertly.

  I would tell him

  Or lie

  I’m getting good at that

  But I don’t care

  For the look on his face.

  NIGHTTIME STROLL: PART ONE

  Supposedly, it’s safe

  To walk at night

  So I walk away

  From the stoned

  Graduate students.

  Stay on the well-lit

  Busy roads

  Walk on the sidewalk

  Squinting in the headlights

  Trailing my hands

  In the chain-link

  Around the baseball field.

  A shadow moves

  Near first base

  At first I think it’s a child

  But as it runs into the trees

  I see its tail flick gray

  Wait! I cry

  As though a coyote

  Would listen to me.

  I try a tentative howl

  Raising my face to the moon

  My lungs sing and sear

  And I run out of breath

  But no one answers.

  NIGHTTIME STROLL: PART TWO

  David sniffs

  Suspiciously

  When I appear

  Goose-bumped

  And red-eyed

  In his driveway.

  You smell like weed

  He says.

  His brother, Michael

  A taller, older lookalike

  Dribbles a basketball

  Like he doesn’t care

  About anything.

  Dude, chill, he says

  And grins at me

  Where’s the party?

  My dad’s students

  Postgrads

  Two of them

  Were creeping me out

  So I bailed.

  It’s not really true

  They were harmless stoners

  Historians in progress

  How dangerous could they be?

  But David softens

  You walked here?

  Do your parents know

  Where you are?

  No less than usual

  I think.

  CHIVALRY

  And he walks me home

  Because it’s late

  And he asks

  For permission

  Before giving me

  A timid kiss

  And he doesn’t mention

  I must taste of smoke

  As we stand

  Nose to nose.

  And when the two stoners

  Appear on the porch

  And say, Whoa

  You lucky bastard

  David tells them

  Laughing

  To fuck off.

  And I know

  Later, maybe tomorrow

  He’ll ask me about it

  And want to talk

  About “us”

  And I appreciate

  That he knows

  I’m too wasted

  And tired

  To discuss it now.

  And I watch him

  Amble away

  Hands in pockets

  Into the dark street

  And I want so badly

  To call him back

  To call it all off

  This selfish game

  Right now.

  BY THE WAY

  Mouth fuzzy

  Feeling like

  A doppelganger

  Is lying next to me

  I (we) watch the moon

  Traverse the skylight

  And close my (our) eyes

  Against the clawing

  Accusing hands

  Floating on a bed

  Of paranoia.

  So much

  For not using

  Drugs.

  PLAYDATE

  Samir brings his nephew

  Jibreel, the angel

  Who is nearly five months old.

  You would never know

  His shaky start to life.

  I think of his tiny limbs

  His bird’s chest

  Laced with tape and tubes.

  Now he’s round and rosy

  Though still as bald as my

  Newly waxed thighs.

  Nina brings Aidan

  Who emerged

  More than fully cooked

  Two weeks late, says Nina

  They had to induce.

  He’s twice Jibreel’s size

  And crawling.

  Marika and I sit on the patio

  And watch the chaotic result.

  Aidan squeezes Jibreel’s fat foot

  A little too hard.

  Jibreel squeaks, kicks out

  And Aidan cops it in the chin.

  He cries until Jibreel farts

  So loud I think they must hear it

  On the Space Station.

  Then they both laugh

  Until they fall over.

  NAP TIME

  After Nina and Marika go

  While Jibreel naps in his car seat

  On the kitchen table

  Samir slides his hand

  Under my summer dress

  And his fingers linger

  On the surprising smoothness.

  Can I look?

  He asks

  We slip behind the pantry door

  Wow, he sa
ys

  Admiring my new landscape

  A neat and trim and tiny strip

  You should take another picture

  Like a before and after

  Did you do this for me?

  I could lie

  And say yes

  But do I really want him to think

  I’m that kind of girl?

  Then again

  Is it better to be

  The kind of girl

  Who would

  frolic practically naked

  In front of strangers

  For money?

  PREDICTABLE

  So I tell the truth

  Experimentally

  Like free-diving into open space.

  Samir stares at me

  His face unreadable

  I watch him take two careful breaths.

  Tell me you’re kidding

  He says, smoothing my dress down

  And stepping into the kitchen.

  And when I don’t

  He says something

  I didn’t realize I expected him to say.

  What if I don’t want you to?

  He bites it back

  But some things can never be unsaid.

  He waits

  As though he knows

  The next words out of my mouth.

  You don’t own me

  You don’t control me

  You can’t tell me what to do with my body.

  Jibreel coos

  On the table

  And saves us from ourselves, for now.

  THERE IS NO ESCAPE

  Yes, Ella

  It has to be

  A bikini

  Otherwise it would be

  A “Skanky Droopy

  One-Piece Car Wash.”

  SECOND OPINION

  David’s only comment

  About the car wash

  Is that I should have fun

  And remember

  To wear sunscreen.

  OASIS

  Are you excited about summer?

  Marika talks of nothing else

  She has big plans for the two of you.

  She knows I can’t drive the van, right?

  Marika loves taking the bus

  And they all have ramps now

  You’ll be fine.

  I’d like to do some art with her.

  That would be great

  You’d think she’d be sick of art

  But she adores it.

  I think she’ll probably teach me things.

  I wouldn’t be surprised

  She’s studied all the techniques

  Right now she’s into Fauvism.

  That suits me.

  I’m quite wild myself.

  CAFETERIALISM

  I’m late for lunch

  Because I fall into one of those

  Moments where you just stare

  Into your locker wondering

  What is the meaning of it all?

 

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