|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Chapter 22
The first time I had sex I threw up.
This was at the Sky-Vue Drive-In, in the
bed of Monty Hunt's Ford Ranger. We were watching Halloween
and drinking pink Champale. We'd been going out all summer, and
I was going to be a junior, so I thought it was time. We'd been
close before. I'd made him beg me.
I heard it hurt, so I was two bottles ahead
of Monty. He had the truck backed up on a hump with the speaker
hanging over the side. It was warm but the bugs were bad, and
we were under a blanket. We were kissing, getting our faces wet.
I was wearing anklets with little pom-poms in the back, that
was all. I'd started the night with shorts and a tube top but
they were gone. In my bag I had another pair of underwear.
I opened my legs and let Monty put his
hand there. I think I surprised him. He dug around down there,
then got on top of me; the movie was blue on his face. The music
was building up to a killing. Two speakers over sat a family
in lawn chairs, eating popcorn out of a giant yellow bag.
He couldn't find his way in at first, and
I had to help him. It's funny how they want it so much and them
don't know what to do. I could barely feel it in me. He had
his mouth open and I could see up his nose. It felt uncomfortable,
almost like the beginning of cramps, and then something gave way,
like when you realize you have a nosebleed. It stung, and I tipped
my chin up so he couldn't see that it hurt me. The Champale wasn't
working. He was pushing against my stomach; I felt like I had
to go to the bathroom. Above me, upside down, Jamie Lee Curtis
was riding through a graveyard with this other girl, getting stoned.
Monty stopped all of a sudden and let out a hot breath right
in my face and fell on top of me like he'd been stabbed. His
back was sweaty, and I could feel him seeping inside of me. We
didn't use anything, and I knew I was going to get pregnant.
"I love you," he said, still
gasping. He didn't even say my name.
And what was I supposed to say? That I
felt sick, that I wished I hadn't let him?
I said it back.
"Are you okay?" he said.
I knew there would be blood but not so
much. I wiped my thighs with the blanket and folded it over.
"I'm okay," I said. "I
just need to clean up."
"I've got Kleenex," he said,
and reached through the back window of the cab and handed me the
box. He knelt there staring at me.
"Watch the movie," I said.
I stuffed some up there, but I still felt
sick, so I put on my top and my old underwear and my shorts and
found my clogs. Monty wouldn't leave me alone. "I'm okay,"
I kept telling him. "I just need to use the bathroom."
He wanted to come with me, but I finally shouted at him, and
he let me go.
I jumped down from the tailgate and almost
fell. My legs were shaky and my stomach was churning like a washing
machine. Everything down there stung. I stumbled over the dusty
mounds toward the red flourescents outlining the snack bar. It
was circular and shaped like a witches hat, the projector in the
top part. You could see the movie scissoring through the air.
We were in the back, like a mile away. The last hundred feet
were deserted. A green light burned on each unused speaker like
an eye. Halfway there, I knew I wasn't going to make it. I stopped
and leaned against a speaker pole and heaved up everything I'd
eaten--the Champale and the mustard fries, the nachos and the
Dots--all of it splashing hot over my Dr. Scholl's. I spit to
clean my mouth and kicked dust over everything and went on.
My thighs were sticky, and getting sick
made me cry, so my face was a mess. I knew the bathrooms were
by the front, so I walked around the outside and slipped in, hoping
no one would see me.
Inside there was a line--seven or eight
girls smoking, hands on hips. I stood outside in the pink glow,
the movie huge behind me. The music was building again. A fat
guy carrying a little kid in pajamas on his shoulders was coming.
I pretended to be looking for something I dropped, then when
he was even with me, I fell in beside him. The girls inside didn't
even look. I walked straight past them into the men's room.
There was one guy at a urinal, but he didn't
turn around. I wetted a handful of paper towels and took them
to the farthest stall and locked the door. It was so filthy I
didn't sit down. I threw the Kleenex in the toilet and the water
went red.
As I was wiping my legs, I heard the guy
getting some paper towels and the door closing.
In the mirror I looked the same, maybe
a little buzzed, a little tired, but the same girl I'd been before.
I didn't think I'd learned anything.
Outside, the girls in line took one look
at me and ran for the men's room.
Monty was waiting back at the truck, asking
the same questions.
"I'm fine," I said, and let him
hold me. Now that I look back on it, he was being as sweet as
he knew how, but right then I hated him.
"Marjorie," he said, real serious,
like he was going to follow it with something like "I love
you" or "I want to marry you."
I didn't give him the chance.
"Hey," I said, "did you
leave me any of that Champale?"
That was a weird time for me, fifteen and
sixteen. I think it is for most girls. The world can be so perfect,
and then it can just suck. That's unnecessary language, but I've
already said it; just don't have me say it in the book. People
are mean or dishonest for no reason. It makes you angry, and
angry with yourself for being that way sometimes.
I was weird, I know that now. I think
my mom blames it on my dad dying right in front of me, but I don't
think that's it. That's some of it maybe, but not all. don't
make too big a deal out of it.
I read somewhere that your dad left early,
so you know how people try to pin everything on that. You know
no to fall for it.
The big thing when I was fifteen is that
I got a job and started drinking a lot of diet Pepsi. I was a
fry man at Long John Silver's. That's what they called me--a
fry man. I worked the Fry-o-lator. Actually they call them fryes
there. Some other goofy stuff they had were chicken planks and
hush puppies and corn cobettes, which were just frozen ears of
corn snapped in half. You had to wear these ugly blue uniforms
with this dorky bow at your throat; they were made of polyester
and stuck to your sweat. It was boring because no one ever came
in besides the dinner rush. When an order did come in, the girl
at the counter said it into her microphone, and I tossed a breaded
fish square into the grease. You had to jump back fast or it
would get your hands. I'd fill up the metal basket with frozen
fryes and lower it into the grease. Everything there was frozen.
We used to play broom hockey with the filets; they hurt when
they hit your shins.
I wasn't really drinking then, not like
every day. I'd come in after school, and the first thing I'd
do was pour myself a jumbo diet Coke. The biggest cup they had
then was 44 ounces, now it's 64. I'd drink two of those before
the dinner rush and I'd be flying.
In some ways it wasn't a bad job, compared
to some of the ones I've had. You didn't have to do much. The
manager's name was Cissy, and when there was nothing to do, she
made us sweep. You'd sit down to read a magazine or something--maybe
I could be reading The Stand, the original one, because
it was around that time. If Cissy saw you sitting down, she'd
get on the microphone and say, "Grab a broom." We'd
go to the bathroom to read so much that she set a time limit on
how long you could be in there. She'd come in and knock on your
stall.
I liked the longer version of The Stand.
I liked the original one too. Even the miniseries was good,
with the guy from Forrest Gump with no legs. I thought
his dog was great. It's such a great story. Do you think someday
you'll put out an even longer version? You could just keep adding
to it. I'd read it.
You could do the same thing with all your
books, the ones people like. Not like It or The Eyes
of the Dragon or The Tommyknockers, but the good ones.
I could read a lot more of Salem's Lot.
Anyway, it wasn't a bad job. I could quit
anytime cause I was still living with my mom. I didn't really
need the money for anything. Monty always paid for everything.
One night when we were out on a date, Monty
took me to Charcoal Oven. It's this old-time drive-in off Northwest
Expressway with this great neon, this chef guy in a hat in six
different colors. You could see it for miles. We pulled up and
ordered, and Monty said to me, "What do you want to drink?"
And automatically I said, "Large diet
Coke."
"Diet Pepsi okay?" the girl on
the speaker says.
Monty looks at me like it might not be
okay. He was like that, he wanted everything to be just right.
I think he was scared that he wasn't.
"Whatever," I said.
So we cruised around to the window and
Monty paid and we picked a stall and backed in so we could look
at the neon. We sat there picking the pickles out of our hickory
burgers and squeezing the ketchup packets onto napkins, trying
not to make a mess. Monty was always worried about the carpet.
He had cup holders that attached to the lip of the window, and
I stuck my diet Pepsi in mine.
The first sip I took was weird because
I'd been drinking diet Coke for so long. The diet Pepsi was sweeter
and heavier and not as fizzy. I didn't like it at first. I must
have made a face because Monty was like, "We can go around
and order something else."
"It's okay," I said, not because
it was, but because I was tired of him asking me.. I was tired
of him calling us "we." He was the wrong one, and I'd
given myself to him and now I couldn't get it back. He was nice,
he was fine, but I hated myself and I hated him. I hated "we."
It was just bad.
So we sat there eating our hickory burgers
and curly fries, watching the neon build the man in the chef's
hat one pieces at a time, and little by little I felt the caffeine
creeping through me, except it wasn't like the diet Coke, it didn't
build to a level and spread. It just kept going. My heart was
jumping so much I had to catch my breath, and a chill made me
hard in my bra. It was better than anything Monty had ever done
for me.
When we were done, I asked him to pull
around and order another.
The next morning I woke up with a huge
headache, but I was used to that. Before homeroom I bought a
diet Pepsi from a machine and I was fine.
I only lasted another two weeks at Long
John Silver's. At break I'd walk across the parking lot to the
Western Sizzlin' and buy a large diet Pepsi with no ice. Two,
three times a night. It didn't make sense. That's when I applied
at Sonic.
Everyone thinks it's funny that I worked
there. Don't make it funny, please. It's a cheap joke and not
fair.
Leo's has Pepsi. You'd be amazed how few
places do. McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's--that's all Coke.
Burger King used to be Pepsi but they changed. They must have
gotten a better deal or something. Sonic's interesting because
it's half and half; it's up to the owner. Which do you like better?
I've never had Jolt, but Darcy says it's
amazing. I would have ordered it if I could.
Chapter 23
Lamont and I first made love on October
27th, 1984. This is later that same night he drove me home for
the first time.
I don't remember us talking much in the
car, just hello stuff, what's your name, what do you do. He was
working at the Wreck Room, this collision shop over on Reno.
He didn't say if he had his own place--and he could have, you
know? He was nice that way. At one point he asked if I had a
little to drink and we joked about my job.
"I've been coming in every night for
two weeks now," he said. "I thought you might notice.
That's why I drove off earlier."
"I noticed," I said.
He was punching it between the lights.
You could feel that 455 through the seats. It was like riding
a motorcycle. Around ninety the car seemed to grow lighter, to
rise up on the frame like we might take off.
I used some unnecessary language like I
used to. "It's some nice machine."
"It's all right. What I really want
is a Super Bird."
"With that ugly old spoiler?"
I said. "Too expensive. What's wrong with a regular old
Roadrunner?"
"That or a GTX."
"How 'bout a Super Bee?"
"Same difference," he said.
"You know it's not," I said.
He said my name then. He might have said
it before but this is the first time I heard it.
"Marjorie," he said, "what
kind of car did your daddy drive?"
"My mom used to drive a Toronado,"
I said. "Now she drives a boat-tail Riviera. My dad drove
a Continental."
"There's a good-sized car," he
said, like I'd passed a test, and I knew I had him. I could do
anything with him I wanted to.
He was going to drop me off, but Garlyn
and Joy weren't home yet, so I invited him in. The dishes were
like an earthquake around the sink. I set my purse on the kitchen
table. The pint was right in the box of peas where I'd left it.
I reached in to get it, and he held me from behind. The freezer
let off steam. His hands ran up my front. The bottle stuck to
my fingers.
"We don't need that," he said.
"It's not for we," I said, and
broke the seal on it. I tipped it up and he kissed me on the
throat. "You want some?" I said, and when he didn't
look, I knocked the heel of it soft against his temple.
He opened his eyes, then shook his head
and kept going down.
"More for me," I said, and took
a sweet, hot swig.
He picked me up with his arms around the
backs of my thighs. I slapped the freezer shut before he carried
me out of the room.
"Where are we going?" I said.
"How 'bout right here?" he said
by the couch.
"Nope," I said.
I made him carry me all around until he
found my room.
I turned on the smallest light. It was
almost Halloween, and Garlyn had bought candy. On the floor beside
my mattress was a mess of Reese's Cup wrappers and empty Pixie
Sticks. The closet door was propped open by a pile of dirty clothes.
I turned the light off and pushed him onto my bed and took a
slug before joining him.
We were in the middle of it when I heard
the back door close. I'd forgotten that Joy and Garlyn would
be getting home. I was on top, still sipping that last precious
inch. I couldn't reach the door to close it, so I said, "Hang
on," and popped off him.
"No," he said, and when I got
back he was useless. The air was cold on me. We both said some
unnecessary things.
We didn't go anywhere though. Garlyn and
Joy were banging around the kitchen, trying to make something.
We just started talking. It wasn't uncomfortable. I had a stash
of Reese's cups keeping cold on the windowsill, and we laid there
eating them, holding hands and watching the headlights cross the
wall. I had a picture of my dad in the winner's circle with Unlikely
Guide, a big blanket of roses over him. Lamont got up out of
bed and looked at it. The headlights made his back white as a
statue, his skinny hips.
"Come here", I said.
He turned to me and pointed at the picture.
"Is this him?"
"Yeah," I said. "Now come
here." And that was the real first time. It wasn't great, it was only okay, but it meant something. I could tell it meant something, and back then not much did. |
||
|
|
|||
|
Excerpted from The Speed Queen by Stewart O'Nan. Copyright © 1997 by Stewart O'Nan. Excerpted by permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. |
|||