Book Read Free

Capricious

Page 6

by Gabrielle Prendergast


  And where is my Chapstick?

  I sit with David

  Although he’s with his football friends

  Who look at me like I have snakes for hair.

  So, Ella, still doing photography?

  One of them says

  Dude, shut up, David says.

  But I sweetly ask the friend

  If he’d like to pose for a new piece

  Called “Virgin Penises.”

  Don’t qualify. But you could include David.

  Oh my god. You’re such a dick, David says

  As his friends snicker into their smoothies.

  Then I long to take David’s hand

  In front of everyone, even Samir

  But instead I put both hands on my lap.

  I hear you’re doing the car wash, says the friend

  Isn’t a bikini a little overdressed for you?

  David tenses but I shake my head.

  It’s not my style to have a boy fight for my honor

  That’s from songs and movies and trashy books

  And I could probably eviscerate this douche nozzle

  But I actually feel sorry for him

  Because I’m pretty sure he’s jealous

  Of all that David has.

  BROWN-PAPER PACKAGE

  It arrives wrapped in plain brown paper

  As though a vintage bikini is something

  Kinky

  Unseemly

  Forbidden

  I suppose for some people, maybe it is.

  It’s a little too big for me

  In the boobs especially, but I fix it with

  Pins

  Darts

  Tucks

  And little hand stitches, like an Amish girl.

  The blue polka-dotted high-waist bottoms

  Cover everything

  Belly

  Navel

  Ass

  And every inch of waxed bit.

  The intricately seamed and structured top piece

  Turns my breasts into engineering wonders

  Rockets

  Missiles

  Pleasure domes

  I can’t help but laugh at my pin-up self.

  As usual, I look faintly ridiculous

  Like a girl who has fallen out of time

  And space

  Into

  Chaos

  But at least, at last, I feel like me.

  JUDGMENT

  It’s an odd vindication

  To get the official report

  On my grade-eleven year.

  It’s an odd evaluation:

  Raphaelle overcame a lot

  Of obstacles to get here.

  It’s an odd situation

  Because the “obstacles” were set

  By those who say, We’re proud of her.

  It’s odd, their admiration

  Those flaccid words they wrote

  Instead of the truth that I’d prefer.

  “Raphaelle is an abomination

  A self-obsessed, destructive brat

  A nihilist, a saboteur.”

  It’s odd, the source of my salvation:

  I passed all their tests, like that

  Is any kind of accurate measure.

  ESCAPE

  We pour out doors

  That open as though

  For the first time

  Freedom erupts

  Shouts of triumph

  Of primal joy

  Rise into the blue sky.

  I wonder, if we love summer so much

  Why most of us will return.

  The back-to-school magazines will arrive

  And we will file obediently

  Through those unlocked doors

  Sucking down from the blue sky

  Our triumph

  Our joy

  Our freedom

  Letting the clouds of autumn fall

  And close their dome around us.

  For now I exhale and let

  Stale repressive gym shoes

  Linoleum wax

  Trophy polish

  Neglected books

  Blue ink

  Formaldehyde frogs

  And whiteboard marker

  Dissipate in the warm breeze.

  I inhale one last breath

  Of steel and concrete

  Resolve and think

  Just the car wash to survive

  Now.

  COLD AND DARK: PART ONE

  We washed a hundred cars

  And Genie glared

  At my eye-popping attire.

  And when the newspaper

  Only wanted a picture of me

  Looking like a manic vintage starlet

  Genie glared some more.

  We made good money

  Secured away in Genie’s car

  With my backpack, clothes and phone.

  The sun sank; it cooled off

  And when the last water bucket was thrown

  At me, it was all in fun.

  Genie laughed first.

  Then we all laughed as I dripped.

  That makes me need to pee, I spluttered

  And ran off past the Dumpsters

  To the gas station bathroom

  A seedy, creepy, damp and skeevy

  Dingy cracked-white-tiled affair.

  It smelled of mold and dead things.

  I peed fast and wiped and washed

  And rushed back to the parking lot to find

  The girls, their cars, my clothes and phone

  Their laughter

  Those few hours of camaraderie

  I worked so hard for

  Gone.

  Chapter Six

  Unseen

  COLD AND DARK: PART TWO

  I could do it

  Walk alone across town at night

  In nothing but a vintage bikini

  Floppy sun hat

  And flowered flip-flops.

  Or I could flounce into the Stop’n Go

  Ignore the cashier’s shocked stare

  And demand to use the phone.

  Or I could plead my case with a bus driver

  And ask to borrow a sweater.

  Or I could beg for quarters

  And find a phone booth

  And phone Samir or David

  Or Ms. Sagal or Mom and Dad

  And admit that here I am again.

  Where girls I thought were becoming friends

  Made off with my possessions

  And left me to the concrete and steel.

  I could just

  Swallow

  My

  Shame.

  But I can’t move.

  FROZEN

  Like that girl

  Locked under the stairs

  In a condemned auditorium

  In winter.

  Frozen

  Like an image

  On a glitchy video

  Me on the concrete, crying.

  Frozen

  Like that night

  In the dark

  I can’t seem to leave behind.

  Frozen

  At fourteen nearly

  Fifteen too scared to yell for help

  Too drunk to think.

  Frozen when they found me

  Half dead, numb

  With no words to explain

  What happened.

  Frozen

  As their faces

  When I finally

  Went back to school.

  Frozen as their lies

  Tinkling down like icicles

  We didn’t realize

  We thought you were right behind us.

  Frozen

  As a corpse on a mountainside

  Maybe if they all want me dead

  I should just die.

  SPIRIT GUIDE

  The gas station is out by the bypass on-ramp

  So we would get the commuters heading home

  Backing onto a fertilizer depot

  That’s out of business


  With a narrow lane between them

  Lined with rusty Dumpsters

  I crouch between two of them watching

  Truckers and strange shadowy men

  Trudge past unbuckling

  On the way to the bathroom.

  I try to be quiet

  Try to disappear into the dark

  Bite down on my knuckles

  To silence my chattering teeth

  And time passes

  The slice of dark sky above me changes

  I watch Jupiter’s transit

  A satellite and a distant plane.

  The cars on the highway hum

  Until my ears ring so loudly

  I can’t hear my heart pound anymore

  Maybe I fall asleep and dream

  A tapping, scuffling noise

  I turn my eyes up and see

  I’m nose to nose with a coyote

  Sniffing, she nods

  Her primal understanding.

  I would trade places with you

  I tell her, I would trade bodies

  She’s wiry, lean and bright like

  She drinks only moonlight, howling

  Letting the white glow infuse her.

  I would give my opposable thumb

  And my dysfunctional frontal lobes

  For her blurry fur,

  Her bone-hungry freedom.

  A car door slams

  And she wisps away

  Like smoke

  Taking my dream with her.

  NOT ALONE

  Someone yells down the alley

  And the hard steel rings

  Like bells in my ears.

  Footsteps crunch on gravel

  Broken glass and oily trash

  A low voice murmurs

  A Dumpster lid creaks open

  For a few seconds

  And clangs shut

  So loud it rattles something loose.

  My mind clears

  He sounds like he’s praying.

  Another Dumpster opens and

  Closes like a gunshot.

  He’s praying.

  I strain to hear over the trucks

  And the blood rushing

  I can’t understand the words but

  He’s praying

  Praying

  In Arabic.

  Samir.

  My voice dies in my throat

  I slam my fist on the metal.

  He steps in front of the moon

  And falls down, hand on his chest

  Habibti, thank God.

  You were looking for me in Dumpsters?

  Why? I ask, and his eyes fill with tears.

  Don’t make me say it out loud.

  MISSING GIRL

  I’ve been looking for you for hours

  Genie said you left her party.

  You didn’t answer your phone

  No one is home at your place

  I tried everywhere.

  Twenty minutes ago Genie texted me

  Admitting they left you here

  That you were never at her house

  That the last they saw of you

  You were heading to the bathroom.

  Put my hoodie on, you’re shivering.

  Alhamdulillah you’re all right.

  My heart is pounding

  My heart, my love

  I’ll murder that sharmouta.

  DAMAGE CONTROL

  Please don’t tell my parents

  Don’t tell anyone.

  Not David

  Not Kayli

  No one.

  I’d explain what this did to me

  Last time

  The long hours on a shrink’s couch

  The insomnia

  But suddenly somehow our love seems

  Fragile

  Like we’ve crossed a bridge into a castle

  Of cobwebs

  And the slightest wind could blow us both

  Away.

  WHY?

  Because I couldn’t move

  Because I was too embarrassed

  Because I didn’t know who to call.

  You should have called ME, habibti

  You can always call me, no matter what.

  Because I thought you were mad at me

  Because you didn’t want me to do it

  Because I don’t like feeling that way.

  What way? Like I care what happens to you?

  Why would you want to show off like that?

  Because I needed to join a group for the trip

  Because once I’d joined I’d look chicken if I quit

  Because I told myself I can do anything.

  But how is that challenging for you?

  Exposing your body like a stripper?

  Because of what happened last year

  Because I don’t care if people see me

  Because it’s MY body.

  But that was different; that was art

  This was just trashy; you’re better than that.

  Because of this I didn’t call you!

  Because you think I’m trashy

  Because maybe I belong in a Dumpster.

  Raphaelle, my love, don’t say that

  You belong with me.

  THE OFFICIAL STORY

  How was the car wash?

  Kayli asks

  Though it’s late

  And hot in my room

  She fell asleep in there

  Waiting for me.

  It was great, I lie

  I went to Genie’s after

  And Samir picked me up

  We went for falafel.

  I hope that is the end of it

  I can’t do this again

  Though Kayli is kind of innocent

  Floating in her cloud

  Of social success

  It occurs to me

  She might not know

  The whole story

  But I guess

  That’s how I like it.

  Did Samir drop you off?

  She asks

  Dreamily

  You’re sleeping with him

  Aren’t you?

  Is it good?

  I don’t answer

  Thinking maybe

  Nothing will ever

  Be good again.

  BEHIND MY EYELIDS

  My eyes move

  In dreams and I

  Imagine my broken

  Body, bikini askew

  In the bottom of

  A rusty Dumpster.

  Time can’t be undone

  Mistakes can’t be unmade

  And the things Samir saw

  Even if they weren’t real

  Can never be unseen.

  FALLING WORDS

  Like water rushing

  Gushing

  Over rocks

  To froth and churn

  Below.

  Trashy.

  Show-off.

  Like a stripper.

  And the word

  He called Genie

  Sharmouta

  It means slut.

  You can’t trust

  Girls like that

  He said

  Don’t even speak to them

  I’ll get your clothes

  And phone

  Tomorrow.

  Maybe everything

  Will be better

  Tomorrow

  Maybe

  Tomorrow

  I won’t be

  A girl like that.

  RED INK

  I sketch

  My hand

  in red ink

  Squeezing a sopping sponge

  So the dripping water

  Looks like blood.

  HEAT

  My clock says 12:03

  When I wake

  Baking

  In the hot sun

  Pouring in the skylight

  Kayli is gone

  The house is quiet

  And my mind has flipped

  Back to David.

 
EMPTY HOUSE

  Kayli’s room is cool

  In both senses of the word

  Cool as the permafrost

  Two feet down

  Cool as having the right handbag

  The right haircut

  The right shoes.

  I lie on her wide pink bed

  And imagine being the kind of girl

  Who might sleep down here.

  Sheathed in H&M pajamas

  Powdered in pink

  Circled in friends

  Sweet but secretive.

  Sweetness is something

  I’ve never quite mastered

  Never really wanted to.

  But secrecy

  Clings to me

  As naturally as disaster

  And humiliation.

  Kayli found one of those

  Ornate old phones

  And hooked it up down here.

  I wrap my fingers around

  The curved handset

  And think of phoning David

  Wondering what I might say.

  If I told him everything

  About the girls in junior high

  Who locked me in the dark

  How I nearly died

  About Genie’s jealousy

  And continued vengeance

  Would he understand?

  Or would he blame me too?

  Chapter Seven

  Imprudent

  KNEELING BUS

  Buses kneel now, did you know?

  Like supplicants

  To Marika’s regal glory

  Bus drivers greet her like a queen

  And flirt with us both.

  She seems to know

  Every person we meet

  Young or old

  From bald babies

  To gray old ladies.

  I

  Will

  Be

  M-A-Y-O-R

  One

  Day

  Marika says.

  And no one disagrees.

  TALKING

  How was your first day with Marika?

  Dad asks

  Again with the uber-parenting

  He smiles as I answer

  Fine

  Good

  Fun.

  I think this will be

  A great summer for you, Rah Rah

  He says

  Oblivious.

  A job, new friends

  I hear the car wash was fun.

  Mmm, I say

  As he wanders off

  Distracted by a ringing phone.

  I could follow him

  And tell him

  How wrong he is.

  But I can’t

  I’ve told Samir to forget it

  He got my phone

  And clothes back

  And threatened Genie

  To shut her up

  And she has those other girls

  Under her command.

  No one else needs to know

 

‹ Prev