--IT’S GOING TO HAPPEN SOMETIME
The Exchange Student
Her name means miracle in Spanish. I mean, B.F.D., right?
On the way to the airport my dad
sings an old Tommy James and The Shondells song, hitting the falsetto so
perfect I feel as if I’m going to vomit.
“Children behave. That’s what they say when we’re
together. And watch how you play-aye.”
I used to love that song, love
hearing him sing it with his cover band, but that was before mother died. Since then he and I have been through some
real muddy shit you wouldn’t even believe.
In fact, it’s enough to make you wonder what type of screening these
agencies use.
***
Of course she’s exotic. It’ll need a stitch where I’ve stabbed my
palm with a fingernail. Bitch, bitch,
bitch. My thighs twitch and a fissure
spasms squirting pee down my nylons.
“I forgot something in the car!” I
yell so loud that a grandmother stops getting a hug and stops crying to be able
to watch me sprint past Gate 13, back the way I came.
She won’t sit in passenger and it
becomes a big deal and she comes out looking like the gracious one when she
gets into the back.
“Stop screwing with the rearview,”
Dad says. I want to jab my thumb into a
lung and hear his rib cage gasp.
This Mireya is from Spain and she’s
fucking gorgeous in a dark-skinned, dark-haired moody sort of way. It sucks royally. Right away I hate her more than anyone I
know, which is saying a lot, let me tell you.
Mireya should pluck her
eyebrows. I suggest that. I say, “Your eyebrows look like a fucking
arboretum.”
We’re at home by this point. My father’s left us in the living room while
he makes dinner a few yards away, humming like a corny jackass.
Mireya smiles at me, her eyes
narrowing and glittering a purple that would make Elizabeth Taylor jealous.
“Are you wearing tinted contacts?” I
ask. “Don’t lie. I bet you are.”
***
“I can’t believe you’re letting her
sleep IN THERE!” I half-scream, because it’s late and Dad’s told me to keep my
voice down at least forty-seven times already.
“It’s not a mausoleum.”
He thinks I don’t know that word,
but I do. I know a lot of words. “Fuck you!”
“Hey, that’s not cool!” He grabs my wrist and I make a move as if I’m
going to kick him in the nuts and when he flinches he releases his grip and
that’s the end of that, only it’s not, because I spend the rest of the evening
with my face pressed to the wall, same as I used to do when mother was sick,
listening for the sound of breathing, hoping for snores, anything but wheezing.
***
“You should go swimming,” he tells
me the next afternoon. “
“Yeah, well you should go kiss—“
“Watch it young lady. I’m still you’re father.”
“Ain’t that a shame?”
But I take his advice because it’s
too perfect to do anything else, the weather a preposterous eighty-five
degrees. Besides, she’s in the backyard by the pool, sunbathing.
“You can’t fucking lay around
naked. America is not a third world
country,” I say, heavily leaning into the first consonant of the last word of
that sentence.
When she leans up to shield her eyes,
Mireya’s breasts roll across her chest like clumps of pizza dough before any of
the real work has started. Her skin
glistens topaz. The worst thing though
is her nipples, the size of them, twice my own, hers as large as cocktail
parachutes.
I take the lounge chair next to
her. “Stop fucking grinning. What are you always so fucking happy about?”
She lets me simmer some. The she flutters her hand. “You like to, how you say, swear?”
“You never plucked your eyebrows.”
“Whoa!”
My cousin, Travis, is easy to
hate. I could give you five million
essential reasons, but just take my word for it, okay? When he shows up with his Emo Goya friend in
trunks I feel like screaming.
“You’re the new girl,” Travis says,
his voice as polite and tucked in as a limo driver. He even sticks out his hand!
“You’ve gotta be kidding me?”
“Hey, crab face. See you got a new zit on your forehead. This one might just grow up to become a mango
someday.”
“Go stroke yourself.”
“You wish.”
Bottleneck—I don’t know his real
name. We only call him Bottleneck
because he has one that’s absurdly long—reaches out his hand and Mireya takes
it although even she appears a bit squeamish.
“Nice to meet you, too,” Travis
says, his eyes not even bothering to look elsewhere.
“Mucho gusto!” Bottleneck says.
Mireya goes all epileptic then,
rattling off more Spanish than I’ve heard my entire life, Taco Time commercials
included.
“Sorry,” Bottleneck says, palms
up. “I’m just taking Spanish now. First year.
All I know is ‘Mucho gusto’ and some numbers.”
“If I’d a known, I’d a worn a
Speedo,” Travis says regarding Mireya’s discarded biking top and her shining,
buttered-up bosoms.
I’m not the best at
eye-rolling. Usually it makes me dizzy
and because of that I can’t understand why more women don’t just go with
adoption. “You’re disgusting,” I say,
feeling disgusted myself for not being able to extrapolate anything more
cutting. The truth is Travis intimidates
me and he’s aware of it.
“You know what,” I say, “if this is
how you’re going to behave, I’m leaving.”
“Mother Teresa.”
“Cocksucker.”
“Fine then.”
“Fine.”
“Fine.”
The plastic strips stick to the back
of my thigh, the entire chair clinging when I stand and step. Before it has the chance to peel free, the
chaise swings stiffly, crane-like, and cracks Mireya on the nose. I’ve never seen sprouting blood before. It hits me in both eyes.
***
“Listen, El, if you can’t learn to
lighten up and live with Mireya, this is going to be a long summer for everyone
involved.”
“I already told you, it was an
accident.”
“That’s not what I mean and you know
it.”
I did.
“At your age you should have lots of
friends.”
“I’ve got enough.”
I hate that expression of his when
he’s trying to swallow but comes off looking panicked instead, like he’s pooed
when he meant to fart. “I’m not going to
lay a guilt trip on you. That’s not what
I’m intending at all, so hear this how I mean it: I brought Mireya here for you.”
Some people have a gag reflex, but I
have a slap reflex, and right then it takes extraordinary, superhuman, Jesus of
Nazareth type willpower not to knock my dad to east Texas.
“You aren’t going to say anything,
not going to respond?”
“Why bother?” I say, swinging my
head idiotically, “you’re the one calling the shots, making all these grand plans.”
“It’s not healthy,” he says leaning
forward, his hand on my knee.
“Don’t give me that shit, you’re not
a damn doctor, I don’t care what they say.”
“El?”
“A PhD is just a piece of
paper. Paper burns!”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
But I am running up the stairs by
the time I hear the question.
Two hours later there’s a knock at
the door and I tell him to come in, only it’s HER.
She saunters in and sits on the edge
of the bed and has the audacity to put her palm on my back, so I consider strangling
her right then and there because her hand started to move and her fingers drew
swirl patterns on either side of my spinal column the same way Mother did.
“It’s okay,” she says, her voice
hushed yet purposeful.
My face is buried in the
mattress. I can barely breathe. Without adjusting, I ask, “What?” because I
need to hear it again.
“It’s okay,” she says.
And I believe her.
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