Good In Bed

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Good In Bed Page 37

by Bromberg, K


  I tried, until I finally figured out that I wasn’t able to help everybody.

  That was a major revelation for me—not the busker part.

  The idea that you can’t help everybody.

  This morning I was avoiding my mom’s call. Ever since I moved out she made it a point to call at least once a day and text a couple times. Nothing had changed. Everything was about my eighteen-year-old brother.

  Evan was the golden boy—and had been for years—except, how many golden boys are on their second round of detox?

  This was our family secret. Mom was the high school guidance counselor and having a son with an addiction problem was something that she refused to admit. Having him show up at school drunk his senior year made it really hard to remain Cleopatra.

  Queen of Denial.

  I’d known since he was eleven or twelve when he’d find older eighth and ninth graders to supply him with beer from their older brothers and sisters. He’d even tried me but there was no way. I was the good little girl. I didn’t do that.

  And besides, who would I go to? I didn’t even know who the drug dealers were at school or who could hook you up with a six pack of beer.

  My nose was in a book, on the Internet doing research, and involved in academic pursuits. That’s where I excelled—that’s where I was Mrs. Smithson’s daughter.

  The good little girl.

  The day that I graduated from high school, Evan got shitfaced and threw up all over my cake that was set up for my graduation party. “Thank God,” my mom said, “he hadn’t done it in public.” We were able to clean up the mess and quickly buy a new one.

  But you don’t forget the sight, or smell, of that.

  When I graduated college in May, Mom was prepared—she tomato staked him and made sure he couldn’t cause a scene. I appreciated that, but again, that meant that Evan got Mom.

  Evan always got Mom.

  Evan could suck the energy out of a nuclear reactor.

  Right now, he was in detox—due to get out any day.

  And that was when Mom’s delusions would start all over again.

  “This time Evan’s gonna make it,” she would say. “This time I know he’s gonna kick it, honey. Oh, sorry, I’m not sure we can afford to pay for—(whatever new thing I’d requested)—because we have to handle Evan’s bills.”

  Private drug rehab is what she meant.

  I may sound bitter. I’ll own that.

  I am bitter—but when you’ve watched people you love being manipulated and lied to and watch them want to be manipulated and lied to because they can’t accept the truth — what are you supposed to do?

  Damn right I’m bitter.

  The other part of living in the city is that everything is so expensive. As much as I wanted to get that double soy latte at my favorite coffee shop, I had to walk past it carrying a bullet thermos, one given to me last Christmas by my mother.

  This made me happy—a full thermos of coffee that I’d made at home, a beautiful, sun-filled day in Boston, and hours of freedom.

  I scored an awesome apartment on the Fenway for dirt cheap. It might be the size of a postage stamp, but it worked and I didn’t have to have a roommate. The building had a strange series of little apartments at the corner of two wings. A column that is a triangle rose up all eight stories, and somehow the landlord carved out eight 180-something square foot apartments.

  My bathroom was so small you couldn’t sit on the toilet without your knees going into the shower. The kitchen was a mini fridge, a microwave, a sink, and a two burner stove. My mattress? I had to get a futon because you couldn’t open the front door all the way and have the mattress on the floor. I have to roll it up in order to get in and out of my apartment.

  But you know what? It’s mine, it’s cheap, and did I mention it’s mine? No roommates. I can walk anywhere I want in Boston. I don’t need a car. I don’t even need a bike. It’s perfect.

  Mine.

  Walking through the Longwood Medical Center, past hospitals and Starbucks, and Wheelock College, I looked at the old buildings juxtaposed with the shiny Cancer Center. I watched people walk past me, some of them in medical attire, some in scrubs, plenty of them homeless, and of course, most of them the ubiquitous college students.

  I’m one of them, right? I looked at the crowd and categorized: medical, medical, college, college, patient, college, college, medical, mom with baby, medical.

  And that’s the easy way to go through life, right?

  What does someone think when they look at me? What’s my category?

  I’m curvy. I walk with purpose. I have long, brown hair that sways behind me, slapping up against my back. I have wide, friendly eyes, but I hide them behind sunglasses most of the time, because men tend to make eye contact with me and then leer. I carry a book, a tablet—something all the time so that I can read and immerse myself in a world that has nothing to do with anyone else.

  For the longest time I judged myself by what I didn’t have. I didn’t have popularity. I didn’t have a size zero waist. I didn’t have the latest clothes. I didn’t have parents who sent me to Vail for winter break, and to St. Martin’s for spring break.

  I didn’t, I didn’t, I didn’t.

  If you spend your life judging yourself by what you don’t have, then pretty quickly you start to feel empty. It’s so much better to think of yourself in terms of what you do have.

  Today, I have some good books on my tablet, I have money in my pocket, I have a thermos of good coffee, I have time, free time to explore, to read, to revel, and to ruminate.

  That feels rich to me.

  Boston Common was my target. I loved to watch the swan boats. I hadn’t ridden them in years. Tickets were only a couple dollars, but it was more fun to watch other people enjoy them for the first time.

  I found a park bench right across from the loading area and watched people, mostly families with small kids in strollers coming in, but occasionally a group of tourists speaking animatedly in another language. They would get on the boats, which looked like something out of the 1950’s—old and quiet and staid in a way that was calming.

  The coffee was great. The weather was perfect. My shoulders relaxed, my mind letting go of the dreaded anticipation of that phone call from my mother.

  But it’s always the thing you don’t anticipate that gets you.

  I heard two distinct, familiar voices behind me.

  And suddenly, my day got very complicated.

  Sam

  Walking through Boston Common was awesome, especially on mornings after we’d had a gig. It made the music life feel more real. Raw. Like I had this secret life that the other people walking past me through the gardens, down the asphalt paths that bisected the grass at angles, didn’t have.

  I could be up until four in the morning, strung out and blissed out, weak-armed and high on the beats themselves, and then wake up, at eleven or noon, with a pounding headache, in need of caffeine. A quick cup and then a walk, the blinding sun adding to my energy, always did it for me. Joe, for some reason, wanted to come with me this morning.

  The guy had changed since our geeky high school years. He’d been this rude, rough-edged debate geek who morphed in college into something uptight but alright. Joe was that guy in a group who would moralize and tell everybody why they shouldn’t do something, and then, behind your back, do something even worse. The guy was slippery, but he never got caught.

  But damn if he didn’t worry so much about his mom and dad, and what they thought.

  I had the luxury of not giving a shit about my parents anymore. Dad had made sure that had happened. I didn’t really have any contact with them.

  Mom would try—she still had my phone number. I’d give her five or ten minutes but as long as she was still with Dad she was part of the enmeshed world. If you’re married to an alcoholic, and you have kids with that alcoholic, and you let that alcoholic warp the kids, then you’re complicit too.

  She wouldn’t see it. Sh
e couldn’t.

  And I had spent four years on campus going to the Al-Anon meetings, slowly unraveling the hell Dad had put us all through and finally figuring out why I was so angry at Mom. It’s easy—it’s always easy to be angry at the most rational person, right? They’re the one who was supposed to save you from the mess.

  Except Mom expected everyone to rally around the least reasonable guy in the household and to tap dance around the fact that she was enabling him.

  This whole thing Joe had about sucking up to his parents—I didn’t get it.

  Then again, I didn’t have to get it.

  “I’m leaving,” he said, his words clipped, his eyes barely making contact with mine.

  “I know. You told me at the gig last night.”

  “It’s sinking in, though.” He took a deep breath, as if it were foreign to him, and looked at me. “I need to leave soon.”

  “Darla okay with this?” I knew Trevor was.

  “Darla isn’t exactly thrilled. She didn’t even know what Penn was. She thought it was Penn State.”

  We both laughed, an evil sound of condescension. Ivy League vs. flagship state university? No contest.

  “I can take the train back—it goes straight into South Station. I can be here in six or seven hours. Not every weekend,” he said with a sigh, “but, you know....”

  We resumed walking. Tourists were gathered around the little bronze statues of the Make Way for Ducklings ducks and I chuckled, watching little toddlers climbing on the momma’s back, parents geeking out and taking pictures. It was cute.

  There were lots of cute things when you looked around the Common on a Sunday morning: a million people with strollers, lots of tourists, a few strung out bums, but mostly happy faces.

  It was so different from the Monday through Friday grind where you walked past people who were deep in thought, bent over their smartphones. If the zombie apocalypse ever started on a work day I’m not sure how many people would notice before it was too late.

  “When do you leave?” I asked Joe.

  “About a week and a half.”

  “You got a place? Already?”

  “The power of Craigslist,” he said, stretching his hands out wide like a guru talking before an audience.

  “You’re kidding me.”

  “Do you know how cheap a room is in Philly compared to here?”

  “Not that you need to worry about that.” Joe’s parents gave him a spending allowance per month that rivaled some of the lower incomes in Dorchester and Mattapan—annual incomes, that is.

  “No, but it’s more money for fun.”

  “And train tickets,” I said pointedly.

  He mulled that over. “Yeah. Darla’s going to kill me. She moved all the way here from Ohio and now I’m moving further west. So,” he said after a pause, “you want to take over my half of the apartment and share it with Trevor?”

  The thought slammed into me. I knew what they paid. I knew what half the rent cost. There was no fucking way I could afford it.

  On the other hand, what a luxury that would be. My own room? My own space? An actual bed? A decent roommate? And without Joe around, maybe some of the sexcapades would slow down.

  Nah — they wouldn’t slow down but at least it wouldn’t be quite as crowded.

  “Let me think about it,” I said.

  We paused again. He put his hands on his hips. “It would make it so much easier for me to leave if you would take over. Seriously.”

  “I know,” I said. Anger and irritation rose up in me. Maybe I hadn’t gotten as much sleep as I thought. Or, maybe, I was aggravated that I couldn’t figure out how to be stable, without a job and without money. Miracle of miracles, it just wasn’t happening.

  “Dude, if this is about the money I can... you know, I can pay the first month, maybe even two months’ rent for you.”

  “I’m not a charity case, Joe.”

  “I know—and I’m not saying that. It’s just....” Those brown eyes stared into mine. I’d imagine that mine were as hard looking back as his were conflicted. “My parents won’t care. They don’t track how I spend my money.”

  I thought about that for a minute. If I had six weeks or so, could I scrape together the next month’s rent? I didn’t know. I had a call out to Liam’s job tip—maybe that would pan out. Joe stared at me expectantly.

  He ran a hand through his hair. “Make it easy on me, Sam. Just take the place.”

  “How much time do you need? Before you need to know, I mean?” I asked.

  “Couple days.”

  “A couple days?”

  “Yeah,” he shrugged. “I have to list it on Craigslist otherwise, or Trevor might find somebody.”

  “All right. Give me a couple days.”

  Amy

  No doubt about it, that was definitely Sam and Joe, and they were somewhere behind me.

  I felt like an animal trapped—what could I do? If I turned around, they’d hear me. If I moved, they’d see me. I could tell they were close based on the sound of their voices. My body warmed to a temperature that no amount of sunshine could generate. Each breath I took felt like an eternity as I overheard them.

  Joe’s voice, pointed and sharp, with a tone of victory that I knew from high school. Sam’s voice was quieter, lower, more melodic and flowing. A cadence I didn’t remember came forth as he and Joe conversed. It made something inside me echo with a wondering.

  Would he ever talk to me like that? Something familiar and casual was in his tone, the way you talk to a best friend or an intimate confidante.

  Being in the band with Trevor, and Joe, and Liam, had allowed Sam to forge a relationship with all of them in a way that I couldn’t understand. Liam I knew all too well and Joe I’d debated over the years. Trevor was a bit of a mystery to me—hot as hell, and confident and cocky, but we were just on a waving and a ‘hi’ kind of level.

  I heard Joe mention Darla’s name and that nice, floaty buzzing feeling that I had as I heard Sam speak ended like someone snapped their fingers.

  Darla.

  The way she had tongue fucked Joe and Trevor on that stage and then turned to Sam... I closed my eyes, as if smashing the lids together could smash her. Who the hell was she? A band whore you pass around? That friendly affect and the whole fakey-fake Midwestern thing made my stomach turn. She’d come over to my table and been all friendly and nice when in reality she was just another hole for the band.

  At least, that’s how it seemed.

  “...Darla... share... ” Joe said. I couldn’t catch the rest.

  Share? Sam and Joe and Trevor shared Darla?

  What?

  Sam never struck me as the kind of guy who did that. Polyamory was big at my college among a small clique of gamers and the cosplay people. Not musicians.

  Then again, four years is a long time for someone to change.

  Turning my head slowly, I saw that they were behind a bush. There was no way that they could see me. My shoulders dropped and I stretched my arms out, not realizing how tense I’d been. My heart slammed in my chest as I caught a glimpse of Sam, his arms akimbo, his body loose, an old, well-worn pair of jeans hugging his hips, those long legs relaxed.

  His red hair was grown out in that slightly long look that so many guys had now. His eyes were narrowed and focused on Joe, who stood a few feet away, gesturing with his hands. Sam just nodded slowly and then said a few words, Joe interrupting him repeatedly.

  Suddenly, Sam crossed his arms over his chest, the biceps bulging. Long tendons popped out in his forearms, those arms leading to hands that tapped out so many rhythms.

  I was a goner.

  I stood and picked up my thermos and walked closer, still hidden by the shrubbery. Phrases like ‘can you take over for me?’ and ‘Darla’ made my blood run cold.

  Were they really talking about swapping this woman? What exactly was his relationship with her? What were all of their relationships with her? Some sort of kinky three-men-one-woman thing? W
as that even possible?

  A plume of jealousy poured up inside me from my knees, through my pelvis, and into my throat. What kind of woman gets three men interested in her at the same time? The thought made me blush with rage.

  And arousal.

  Anger drained out as my eyes remained riveted on the two of them and I let myself explore that idea—just for a moment—because, why not? Ideas aren’t inherently bad. There’s nothing wrong with letting yourself imagine something new that you could do, even if you never, in a million years, thought that you’d actually act on it.

  What would it be like to have Liam, and Joe, and Sam, all at once, touching me? Hands on my lips, other hands on my breasts, and more hands going lower, finding a very eager red nub.

  Six hands.

  And one me.

  Sam

  Joe’s phone buzzed in his pocket. He reached in, took a look, and said, “Oh, hell. I have to go—it’s my mom.”

  “Dance, monkey boy, dance.”

  “Shut. Up.” He looked me square in the eye and shook his head slowly. “Sam, you know, for years I really felt sorry for you.”

  I pulled my head back. “What?”

  “You and all the shit that went down with your dad our senior year.”

  A cold flush poured over me and I frowned. “Yeah, so?” Where was this coming from? I didn’t need pity.

  “It’s just with this,” he held up the phone, “and my mom practically pulling on the diaper strings, sometimes I wish I had the guts that you have, man.”

  “Guts?” I asked. Guts? It didn’t take guts to tell my dad off and walk away and figure all this out on my own, I thought. I didn’t really have a choice. It was that, or watch my soul die. Joe was looking at me like he expected me to say something.

  “Joe, at least you have a mom who gives a shit.”

  “Your mom gives a shit.”

  “I know. She’s just... she’s just too weak to leave him.”

  Guys don’t talk like this, so there was something really awkward and weird about the fact that Joe was having this after school special moment with me.

 

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