--IT’S MORNING AND I’M WIDE AWAKE
Baby, Baby, Baby
We
are desperate, or I am. Yes, it’s
me. I go to lengths. I take my husband’s hollow silences and try
to fill them with code but he snickers or re-fingers the remote.
I
get masseuse lessons. When I come home I
say, “Do you want your neck worked on, you look stiff,” but he only whinnies at
me.
I
find hair in the sink. Blonde. Long.
He reminds me he is a custodian.
He sweeps the whole mall, even Cutter’s Salon.
I buy plastic sheets and a vat of
baby oil as one magazine recommends. I
dress in stilettoes and two pieces of string.
I lock the door and insert the key in a private place he’ll have to
reach. So, we slip and slide. My eyes burn from splashes of oil. One of us sweats a small lake. When we are through, he showers, then slinks
off to watch Sports Center. In the
morning I say, “You didn’t come back, why not?” and he tells me he thought I’d
be sleeping.
I say, “I’m going on a trip.”
He
says, “Fine by me. How long?”
I say, “A while.”
I land in the tropics. It’s like a Malaysian fat farm but
better. I get liposuction. I apply lip plumper. I wax what’s never been waxed. I get a cut and dye job, going red. I bleach my teeth. Buy a Pucci-print dress and Channel bag. I get piercings below the neck.
When I come home, my husband is all
nerves, a jumping bowl of spaghetti. His
eyes jerk like pinballs. When I ask if I
should get the oil, grab the plastic sheet, he chuckles, tells me we don’t need
it. He keeps humming, “Baby, baby,
baby.”
I can’t get enough air. He’s gained weight while I’ve been gone. He smells like ammonia and has a forest of
black nose hair I never noticed. When we
kiss I can feel canker sores in his mouth.
He asks, “Round two?” Then after that, “Ready for a hat trick?”
He wants me. All the time.
I tell him I need a break. He
says, no. I complain, threaten to go
back to the old me. He says there’s no
going back, calls me Baby, Baby, Baby.
When he comes home from work the
next night I can hear him panting. He
opens the bedroom door with a flourish.
“What the?”
I’ve shaved my head. I don’t have any makeup on. I’m wearing my flannel pj’s with the poodles
on them. I’m eating my second tub of Ben
and Jerry’s that’s given me a awful case of flatulence.
When he steps closer, I burp up a
little cloud of Chunky Monkey.
***
Now
it’s years later. We’ve eaten dinner and
dessert. We’re sitting in a booth by the
window. My husband runs a toothpick
through the gulley between his teeth. He
reads a magazine about tattoos and motorcycles.
I stare past my reflection in the glass at a young couple wrestling in
the front seat. I wonder if he calls her
Baby.
Inside the diner, there’s Muzak
playing: “Here Comes the Sun.” Oh, and
there’s you and your girlfriend. You look
nice together, like a twin sweater set, yet you both look away. Good thing I’ve still got my hearing.
Your
girlfriend whispers, “Can you believe it?
They haven’t even said one word the whole time.”
You rip a hunk of meat from a gray
slab of chicken, and let it wobble against your wrist.
“I hope we never get like that when
we get old.”
“Here,” you say, flapping the greasy
meat, “take a bite.”
“That’s so gross.”
“Come on.” And then you do it, call her, Baby. And she does it, too. She eats the meat right off your fingers,
says, “Sugar, you know I’d do anything for you.”
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