--EVERYONE
WANTS TO SEE DISASTER
Boots
I am wearing the same Fry boots I
bought at age twenty-three, used boots then, used now. Gary
threw one at me when we were watching “American Idol” and he didn’t think I was
paying attention. The heel hit me square
in the eye and now I have only one that works.
Sometimes I like it better that way.
The world’s not always a pretty picture.
Even after that episode I stayed,
lingered like an alley cat scared by vagrants and night sounds but still
starving. What I was famished for was
love, even a facsimile of it, even a cruel torch masquerading as love, and so I
stayed with Gary too many months and years until my family disowned me for my
weakness, my lack of spine, as Dad said.
A knife to the throat one evening in
bed tipped things for me. Gary liked it
weird in bed—holding an unloaded Luger to my head as he took me doggy, a pair
of used panties stretched across my face as he took me doggy, searing hot
candle wax dripped down the back of my neck and across my shoulder blades as he
took me doggy.
The guy in the apartment above has
been coming around when I go out to the patio to smoke. He says I look too wounded to be alone. He’s asked me out but I keep saying no. He seems like good people and it’s a mistake
for someone like me to pass up such an offer, but when you only have one seeing-eye
your focus is always off. You get
clumsy. You miss things. The world is tilted.
Today was the first day of school,
and as usual I was nervous how the kids would react when they saw me because it
always happens in one form or another.
As we broke for recess, sweet little
Fiona with her afro and Sues-striped socks up to her thighs pointed and asked
if I was an ogre. Kids are smarter than
you think. At any age, they are. She was just being a child, curious, a seven
year old with no will ill yet.
When I laughed and raised my arms,
making my hands into claws she started to whimper. I felt like shit about that, and said, “No. No. I’m
a human being. I’m real.”
I went to Group for a few years
after leaving Gary. People shared their
stories. Some of it was very hard to
hear, some of it heart-crushing, some of it self-pity. It took almost as much strength to stop going
as it did to leave Gary because Group was the only place I felt safe, even
though I knew feeling that way just made me weaker, less.
One woman there had been burned with
lit cigarettes on her face so many times that her skin was a rope of wedges
melded into each other, like moon craters if moon craters were skin and not
quite as deep. People called her “The
Thing” because she resembled a deformed comic book hero.
When I phoned last night, for no
reason other than I was thinking of her out of the blue, her sister answered
and I found out about the suicide. The
pull of darkness and despair can get to a point where a quick end seems
inevitable and there’s no alternative.
People who call suicide victims selfish don’t get it. They’ve never been there. Life is that much brighter for them.
I look at my boots now, noticing a
nail is coming through the left heel like a snaggletooth. I hadn’t felt it when walking, hadn’t detected
it at all until now, and I feel even more blind than I am, more stupid, sort of
how a relationship can be lethal even when you’re in it and all the signs are right
there, red flares screaming at you to run.
When the kids clamber back into
class, I stand up and write on the chalk board Something I want to teach you, then erase it and write Something I need to teach you is how to love
the right way.
Turning around, I see Fiona’s upraised
hand.
“Yes, Fiona?”
“I already know that one.”
“You
do?”
“Yeah.”
“Are
you sure?”
“Yep. My Daddy loves my Mom. He calls her Baby and they hold hands when
they watch TV.”
I let myself smile. “That’s good,” I say. “Let’s start there.”
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