Happy Father's Day

For me being a Daddy's Girl meant spending my Friday evenings at home watching The X-Files and Star Trek: The Next Generation, watching my dad play The Legend of Zelda and muttering into my chocolate milk when the dodongo narrowly dodged a bomb. It meant having no lecherous Captain Kirk to compare with the virtuous Picard, and nodding as vehemently as my nine years would allow at Mulder-inspired conspiracy theories offered on drives to the park where we'd throw frisbees or dig for clay. My dad understood time travel and the many ways one hapless crew could violate the prime directive. My dad had theories about aliens. Once he asked me, when had I realized that Luke and Leia were brother and sister? With an assumptive sniff, "Always, dad."

In the summertime when it was so hot we couldn't sleep, my mom and dad and brother and I slept all in the same room with a wall-mounted air conditioner, J and me on the floor on a cloud of comforters and sleeping bags. Out the window at night I could see stars and planes and once, I thought, a space ship. I woke everyone howling, convinced that I was or we were all about to be abducted. How they got me back to sleep I don't remember, but I found what I was sure were crop circles in the yard the next day: dead shapes where ten-gallon barrels full of copper wire from my dad's work truck had been left out in the sun. We spent our next Friday night with the same science fiction, proving my parents hadn't learned what I'd tried to tell them when I was a preschooler and they had to stop me watching Scooby-Doo: I have an overactive imagination.

Weaned on Skynyrd and Pink Floyd, my brother and I would bounce anxiously in the back seat as my dad quizzed us on each song - artist, song title, album - that aired on the classic rock radio station, especially Sunday nights on The Jelly Pudding Show. Aerosmith's 'Dream On' really threw us for a loop until Steven Tyler began shrieking. Every Thanksgiving we had Alice's Restaurant. When my dad put in his ZZ Top cassette with 'La Grange,' J and I played air drums and air guitar, respectively, and considered it a favorite second only to Alabama's 'Song of the South' and The Grateful Dead's 'Touch of Grey.'

After the divorce, my dad stopped listening to all of his old music, and it was like he'd stopped listening to me, too. I was twenty, too young to understand, the same as my mom had been when she'd married just a little younger. We didn't talk and when we did we shouted. It was as though the stubborn, free-spirited heathen that was my dad hadn't figured he'd raise an equally stubborn, free-spirited heathen; that the years I struggled to find myself - well after when it seemed everyone else was doing it, in high school - meant I struggled with what it meant to belong to my family, to own the things they'd given me in material and spirit.

What I'd loved as a girl, though, I loved still: my dad. The temper he'd given me. A rejection of Data's cool logic and an incalculably flawed emotion chip. I wouldn't have it any other way. We both try every day to be more human.

Homemaking

Joyful things are sweet and small today. Filling wide-mouthed jars with coffee brewed double-strength; the grounds slopped into the compost and joined by lemon rinds and the heads of strawberries, their leaves like bad haircuts. I boiled water for tea, mint whose saw-toothed leaves left a scent on my fingers more lasting than any cut. When the tea had steeped and cooled I washed my hair and poured it on my head, balanced over the sink, watching the beads of water drip-drop from curls as loose and slim as cursive handwriting. Capturing my cat in photographs of a clean house, folding his hairs already into freshly laundered towels and t-shirts and socks bundled mate to mate. They're easier to find this way, one wrapped snug in the other, paired.

The rumble of uneven wheels on pavement when M and I take the recycling and the garbage out, when we linger in twilight and track the progress of a single lightning bug between our yard and the neighbors'. We could see one star, too, like a chip of quartz in field stone, but it wasn't a wishing star. Just then I hadn't anything to wish for.

Baba O'Reilly

An hour of my life was lost in the annals of my teenage self. There are a few things I would like to say to her. Sixteen-year-old self, chill. In a year you will be kissed by a boy for the first time and it will be unremarkable. It certainly will not be self-fulfilling or anything like when Joe Fiennes and Gwyneth Paltrow kiss in Shakespeare in Love, mustache notwithstanding.

Hellishness is a stupid word.

Your first boyfriend will be a douche. Thank you for not sleeping with him, or even entertaining the idea. And when you think it's a good idea to wear your vintage boy's button down shirt to the park, please remember to do up all of the buttons again, and properly, before he drops you off at home.

In three years you will meet the man you are going to marry. You are not looking to date anyone at the time, but you make an exception. The very best.

He is a remarkable kisser.

Electroshock Therapy

"Seventy percent of the world is covered in water, and the other thirty percent is covered in people who want to be writers." - Laura Resnick

I feel a little like a child who's just pried the safety plate from an outlet and is trying to decide which implement to jam inside. There are hair pins enough in every room of the house that the choice seems obvious, at least.

Though I wasn't sure what to expect, I risked being stranded following the rapture at the Clear Creek Writers' conference, 'Confessions of a Working Writer.' Laura Resnick delivered the keynote and delivered me unto creative salvation. She was candid and cool and my hair might as well have been standing on end for how charged I felt after hearing her speak, and daring to go and speak to her. I've felt more than a little helpless, a little reckless - maybe my finger goes in that socket, yeah? - querying seemingly for the sake of increasing my misery, but Laura urged us to take control of our careers as writers, to help make the rules when we must play by them, and for fuck's sake to put down the pin and pick up the pen.

On a break I escaped to the patio of the historic home where the conference was held and leapt to the spongy lawn below, current conducted down through my shoes into earthworm jazz. I tried to call M to tell him what she'd said, what she'd made me feel, but when I couldn't reach him I simply grinned, lips a lightning-slash and hot from talk.

It's not just that rejection can't unwrite what I've written. It can't unmake me, or what I want.

Unwives Tales

This morning a cardinal alighted on one of our patio chairs, his feathered tail bobbing like a lure. As a girl I would've held my breath, beginning a silent recitation of the alphabet. I'd read in an enormous tome of American folklore - one of many acquisitions from school book sales, where I'd find the book with the best amount of pages for my (mother's) buck - that when you saw a red bird land, the letter on your lips at the moment he flew away again was the first letter of the last name of the man you were going to marry. I would never have admitted to cheating, but the haste with which I spoke my As, Bs, and Cs or the languid lines of L and M and N and O and P had everything to do with the unlucky classmate I fancied and nothing with the familiar melody of the alphabet.

My romantic superstitions were not restricted to girlhood. In high school I bent the tabs off of Dr. Pepper cans while repeating the same, and kept a chain of letters on a cord around my neck, spelling the name of my beloved. Why pearls when you can have aluminum? K and I also revisited the book, our Avonlea sensibilities satisfied by the sweetest temptation of them all: swallow a thimble full of salt before bed, and dream of the man you will marry bringing you a glass of water.

I imagined, so ardently did I love at sixteen, that he would bring me whole lengths of rivers in his arms.

And so we did just that, of course, not the stupidest thing we'd ever done but certainly the thing with the farthest reaching consequences. Though I did not learn to cook for years, it was many years even after that I would consent to season anything with salt. We didn't see anything, and none of these boys grew up to be the man I married.

No matter how much growing up I do, there are still so very many ways to be foolish about love.

In the Night

Last night I had a nightmare. I might re-create the conditions - too much coffee too near to bedtime, freshly laundered sheets smelling of lemon verbena - if it meant another poem scrawled through gummy eyes by bathroom light. The windstorm that is your breath in my ear when I've woken from a nightmare. On my back, clammy with fear, your body circles mine like two links of chain; heavy limbs wound tight as sheets I might've drenched if the dream had been allowed to run its course. Instead I stir fevered from bed, eyes peeled as grapes or slivers of tape, hoping to stay awake long enough to avoid going down that dark stair into someone else's leaden arms.

I haven't written poetry seriously in years. My mother keeps a book of it I wrote in junior high school, a single dumb verse to a page, and I think it's best that's as near as she comes to my imagination.

Open Book

There are seven books on the little dresser beside my bed where I keep my socks and panties (and matches and lotion and lip balm, for emergencies). I wish that I could follow with something like, for the seven days of the week, but it's rather more like for the seven sorts of moods I find myself in at the end of every night. I'm more often adding to the collection than I am actually finishing reading anything. The Complete Grimm's Fairy Tales has been there the longest, with my best cloth bookmark indicating my slow but steady progress. I like to mark the stories I think want retelling; the latest candidate being 'King Thrush-Beard' which, if some feminist hasn't tackled it already, I would happily. When I finish my novels, at least.

The first volume of The Complete Sherlock Holmes is there, as well, and I'll be honest and say that my reading is influenced as much by Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law as it is by my desire to actually have read more than the story I skimmed for an assignment in graduate school (I'm of the belief that graduate school encourages skimming, or at the very least an addiction to caffeine pills).

Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling's anthology, The Faery Reel: Tales From the Twilight Realm, remains from the night M and I couldn't sleep, and I read aloud 'The Annals of Eelin-Ok.' Our eyes were shining both by the end, my throat sore but lips pulled in a smile at the sight of him. I cannot remember which of my professors, one of the betters ones, surely, said you should always read aloud to the ones that you love. There's something to be said for sharing a story that way, a sweetness from the time of parlors and family bibles, I suppose.

Among the last are two novels loaned and several romps of urban fantasy, which I think I enjoy best when I can clatter forth in heels with leaves crunching underfoot, when the days are short and the nights just long enough to be dangerous. Every October, and I mean every October, I think I want to write about witches. It's the best time to read about them, too.

Summer time is writing time, but I'll entertain these tomes for a few months yet. What are(n't) you reading?

Them's Dreary Devils

The temptation to begin a new project is overpowering. Invention is an illusion, though, no lullaby to soothe the demons stirring in my heart and in other places, too. My toes and hips and lips are fired with them, ineffectual, pinching and pricking and waving shrimp forks at every sentence I've written. More for the ones I don't.

A friend asked when I finished the last draft of my first novel if I felt I had gotten it out of my system, that now that I had written a book I could get on living, or if this was how I wanted in fact to make my living. I told him I had more ideas than I will ever have time to write, and I think I'd like to die clutching stubborn to whatever implement is best favored by writers when I'm in my hundred-and-nineties. Children will fear me, especially mine, because they'll know they've never been enough to keep me happy.

I don't have any children, of course, so I can't know. But I haven't got any published books, either, and that doesn't stop me. From anything.

Except telling myself that no, I'll finish what I've started.

Ululation

So I'm thinking if this writing thing doesn't work out I could try professional mourning. I'm becoming quite skillful at misery on demand, or at the very least, in an instant. I know I'm not supposed to feel sorry for myself, am meant to keep my chin up and my aim high, but this bow is getting awfully heavy and I'm riddled with holes. The lengths I've gone to to keep my manuscript from such a plot-fuck do not seem to matter. What I want isn't wanted, and when I think, not yet, I feel like I'm only delaying the inevitable.

Which is to say, a black fringed head scarf.

There are crazier things I could do, and won't. You know the sorts of things, the human-stupid things we have the power to do but have learned better: driving on the wrong side of the road, willfully, madly, touching hot iron or tasting boiling water, cheating on our husbands. Thinking of these things reminds me, at least, of what my hands and heart can do and never will, and keeps me from numbering seemingly impossible dreams among them.

Mermaids Need Other Mermaids

Short fiction, not short enough. “It’s your turn to tell a story, Bee,” Josephine whispered. Her bed was near enough to Bianca’s that the sisters could reach their hands across and press them flat against each other, palm to palm.

“It isn’t.” Bianca’s eyes were glazed by moonlight. She lay flat on her back, staring at the ceiling, her body slim as a board beneath a blanket.

“It is so.”

Josephine considered leaping across the small gap between their beds. She lay still, though, in the knowledge that she wouldn’t have to make her sister talk. She never had to. Bianca couldn’t keep secrets. There was a particular drawing of breath that Josephine knew marked the moment before Bianca would speak, and when she heard it, she was not surprised.

“Alright, fine. Listen.

“Two sisters share a room and burn up all the batteries in the house keeping each other up at night. They used to be afraid of the dark, that is to say, one of them was afraid and the other pretended to be so she wouldn’t feel alone. They used to make animals in the light they cast on the wall with the flashlight, but now they are grown up and give each other the finger, the gesture big and rude and beautiful, silhouetted from ceiling to floor. Fucking is about the best shape to make in the dark.

“They share a closet, too, but they close it before they go to bed each night. They prefer to be kept awake by their own whispers than the gossip of their clothes. There are secrets in their sweaters and uniform skirts. For one of the sisters it’s the boys she’s kissed. For the other it’s the boys she won’t let kiss her.”

“Bullshit,” Josephine muttered. Bianca took no notice and continued.

“When their clothes aren’t gossiping together they’re practicing sailing knots. The cardigans and the scarves and the silk belts are the best. Arms are meant for delicate work and so are the things made for arms. Everything is wrinkled in the morning and each sister will blame the other for having left the laundry crumpled in a basket or on the floor. They don’t care how they look, and probably never will, but the creases don’t sit right. The lines in their sleeves are like maps to place they’ll never visit, or places they’ve been that were very boring. They can’t help but squirm.

“The prettier sister, we’ll call her Bianca, is very daring and so she strips off her wrinkled sweater and stuffs it into her locker at school, and then she crawls in after it. The cheap steel is cold against her skin. She presses all the way back, flat against the places where she’s posted a class schedule she doesn’t follow and photographs of friends she’ll want to avoid when she graduates in three years. She slips through a rusted seam and into the walls. She’s creeping like Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s worst fucking nightmare. She listens to the secrets of the teachers in the teachers’ lounge. She listens to the secrets of the principal in his office. She listens to the secrets in the locker room and watches the dressing and undressing bodies like she doesn’t know any better, but she does. In the girls’ locker room, their hasty stripping allows her to imagine for a moment they’re ready to dive behind the cement and plaster and join her.”

Josephine sighed. “You know you’re the only lesbian at school.”

“Not for long. Now shut up and listen.

“Bianca climbs out of the wall after band practice, and steps carefully between abandoned brass instruments and big kettle drums. She recovers her sweater, which is even more wrinkled than before. She does not join her sister on the bus to go home but hurries instead down to the parking lot where the juniors and seniors are smoking and flirting. Bianca leans a hip against the ’92 Ford Taurus that belongs to Pauleen Vine. Her skirt lifts enough to show a sliver of white flesh between knee sock and tartan pleat because it’s been trying and failing the rolling hitch every night.

“‘Where you going, Red?’ Bianca likes to think of Pauleen as titian because it’s something from Nancy Drew she’s always remembered. She’d happily be the moonstone mystery unraveled by Pauleen, the haunted library gutted, the pendulum in the old grandfather clock stilled in one slim, dry hand.

“Pauleen’s glance is flirtatious, her tone leading. ‘Wouldn’t you like to know, Bessette?’

She loves that Pauleen avoids saying her first name, loves her surname in that mouth, the quick syllables, the slight enunciation of the last vowel. She doesn’t want to be seduced, though. She wants to do the seducing.

‘Why don’t you take me with you?’

“Bianca settles against the hood, crossing her arms. Plastic bracelets knot at her wrists. Her stomach jumps when Pauleen climbs into the driver’s seat, leans to push open the passenger side door. Their eyes meet. She could be full of sand or water she seems so slow, she can’t move fast enough to get into the car. The upholstery sweats and she does, too. When Pauleen starts the engine loud music pours into the interior of the car, and Bianca jumps at this, too. She reaches instinctively to turn down the volume, blushing when her hand brushes Pauleen’s doing just the same.

“‘My boyfriend’s.’ When she speaks, Pauleen’s smile is apologetic.

“‘Not much for conversation, I guess,’ Bianca hazards, her eyes following the crumpled gum wrappers, empty soda bottles, and tissue weight magazines that roll with the momentum of the car as Pauleen pulls out of the parking lot. She can’t look at Pauleen now, she can only dart glances at her browned thighs beneath the steering wheel, the play of light passing through the windshield to touch against flesh.

“‘No, not really,’ Pauleen seems to have no trouble in eyeing her driving companion. Bianca wonders if Pauleen looks at her boyfriend in just this way, and she smiles extra wide in hopes that Pauleen won’t spare a thought for him.”

“He’s her boyfriend, Bianca. She’s always thinking about him,” Josephine interrupted, sitting up in bed. She flashed the light against Bianca’s pillow. “Didn’t you think about that?”

Bianca snorted. “If you had a boyfriend maybe that’s what you’d do. Not Pauleen, though.”

Yes, Pauleen!” Josephine’s whisper was sharp, and Bianca waved a hand to hush her so they wouldn’t wake their mother. “You can’t pretend everything.”

“Shut up, Jez. This is my story.

“Pauleen’s house is in the part of town where the garages are bigger than the whole apartment where Bianca lives with her sister and mother. Her lawn is as green as Oz and Bianca knows that there is no, no, no place quite unlike home. She flushes from nose to toe as she follows Pauleen up the carpeted stairs to a private bathroom. Pauleen’s parents are not at home.

“‘They work late,’ Pauleen offers with a smile, ‘it really sucked when I was a kid, but I guess it’s paying off now.’

“Bianca considers a moment the luxury of maybe switching places with Pauleen instead of seducing her, wearing the coordinating bra and panty sets underneath of her school uniform, the ballerina flats in shades to match; she imagines a cup size more generous, long legs, singing first soprano.

“When Pauleen runs a bath with foam high enough to disguise her bared breasts and shoulders, Bianca strips quickly and settles in across from her. She can only focus on one thing at a time, and she’s committed to seduction, not life swapping. The tub jets tickle and burn. Pauleen stretches experimentally and Bianca is sure their toes could meet under the water.

“‘You’re cute, Bessette.’ Pauleen doesn’t close the space between them but inclines forward, hair dragging foam. ‘Everybody thinks so.’

“Bianca’s fingers travel terrible distances under the water; her belly, her knees, all foreign places now. She doesn’t want to see herself like Pauleen must see her, young and stupid, young and stupid and cute. Her heart hammers distress and it radiates like waves across the tub. There are a half dozen expensive soaps lined up on the rim of the tub, towels embroidered with various sets of initials that Bianca assumes must belong to Pauleen’s parents. She isn’t at all sure now why she’s here, what she intended. She wants to tell Pauleen all of the secrets she learned today before she forgets them, she wants to keep talking so she doesn’t have to do anything else.

“Leaning and leaning and somehow never getting an inch closer to Bianca, Pauleen’s neck strains like a swan’s above the foam. ‘Do you like me?’

“Bianca thinks about the Spanish teacher who cried in the lounge because she’d had to flush her daughter’s goldfish down the toilet. She thinks about another girl in her year who’s shaved herself bare. She thinks about Pauleen Vine’s boyfriend, nuzzling the neck of a freshman when they both should’ve been in class. She can’t tell Pauleen anything, because if she does she won’t have anything left to tell.

“Bianca nods deep, her chin grazing foam.

“‘How much?’”

“Look, Bianca,” Josephine tries to soften her voice even though it’s just a whisper. She scoots to the edge of her bed, throws her feet over. “I know what happened. I heard Mom talking to Pauleen’s parents on the phone.”

Bianca did not respond. Josephine clicked off the flashlight and took the few steps between her own bed and her sister’s. She sat down on the edge.

“I know he was there.” Her whisper was at its lowest. “They wanted you to watch but you ran away. It’s alright, Bee.” Josephine waited for Bianca to cry because crying would make sense. Bianca did not cry.

“That’s not what happened.” Her sister’s voice was stony. “Not this time.”

“This time Bianca slides across the slick tub bottom right into Pauleen’s lap. She kisses her, but it’s not just kissing. She’s teaching Pauleen to breathe underwater, because now they’re pulled straight down, slim as hairs slipping down the drain. They kiss for as long as it takes to reach the sea. Their legs have changed and they could breathe free of each other if they wished, but they don’t. Their eyes spike like urchins in the glow beneath the waves.

“When Pauleen speaks she’s better than the girl she’s been. So much better.

“‘The mermaid and the sailor can never live happily ever after. Someone always ends up drowning.’”

“Bianca.” Josephine is insistent now. She’s given up whispering.

“Yeah?”

“Pauleen’s a bitch.”

Josephine held her breath. Bianca filled the silence with a sigh. After a moment, she spoke.

“I know.”

Their fingers found each other’s in the dark. Bianca’s grip was tight, and Josephine could feel the grooves of chipped polish on her nails.

“Maybe I should tell the story next time.”

“Tell the story now.”

Josephine drew her knees up and kept her hold on Bianca’s hand. She knew she could tell the story they both needed to hear.

“What happens next is more real and more important than what happened before. What happens next is a plane crash, a ship wreck, a hurricane.

“Pauleen tries to split open her legs because she doesn’t understand how to love someone without them. It hurts, and her shrieks are choked by water. Bianca sees the bubbles and wants to catch them in her mouth, to swallow Pauleen’s cries. Vessels rupture in Pauleen’s skin, she thrashes and dives, she wants to go deep where she can’t see what she is anymore. She isn’t ready for any of the secrets. She doesn’t know how to keep them.

“Bianca can’t stop her. She’s being pulled up as Pauleen struggles down, caught in a fishing net. When she breaks the surface there is enough of her human still that she can manage short, shallow breaths. Tangled on the deck of a narrow ship, she is a prize. The net loosens and everything in it spills forward, including Bianca. She’s face to wooden foot with a woman twice as tall as any man, dressed lavish in a snow white surcoat whose folds contrast a highly polished wooden leg. Bianca loves the coat and the leg immediately. The woman’s face, when she bends to examine her haul, is soft and pleasant. It is a wonder someone can stay so clean and nice at sea.

“‘I’m the captain of this vessel.’

“Bianca wants to bury her face in the snow white coat and scratch her nails against the leg. Her tail twitches and slaps against the deck. ‘And I’m the captain of this one,’ Bianca says, because she is a feminist, and because she’s only going to get the chance to say something like that once.

“She dines with the captain that evening but neither of them touches a thing, nearly overturning the table in their haste to be near each other. They don’t bother with proclamations of love. Bianca learns a thing or two about her tail. The captain shows her how best she likes to be pleasured with her leg.”

“And there’s a tropical parrot named Josephine who likes to watch,” Bianca whispered in the dark, and Josephine knew she was smiling. Josephine smiled, too.

“Is not.

“In the morning Bianca is more mermaid than girl. The captain wants her to stay.

“‘We can live on my island. I’ll build a new home on the beach that moves with the tide.’

“‘It will wash away.’

“‘Then I’ll build a sea and you can live inside it.’

“‘It will be too small.’

“‘Then I’ll become a mermaid, too.’

“Bianca does not remember Pauleen, but she knows this will mean only disaster for the pirate. She does not remember, really, that she was Bianca. She wants to see the glimmer and murk of her home; she feels too heavy on the ship, like she might sink right through the planks and the hull. She reaches for the captain’s coat to touch the woman just once more, but when she opens the white folds she does not find a body, instead it’s dark and rough, like a shadow, like a forgotten thing, like a crumpled sweater.

“She pulls and she pulls and she pulls the sweater out of the bottom of her locker and puts it back on. She shakes the salt out of her hair and keeps a promise she made to meet her sister, to take the bus home, to tell stories in the dark.”

Bianca wasn’t crying but her shoulders were shaking. Josephine could feel it travel across the mattress. When they speak it sounds like a lot of things that it isn’t, but mostly it sounds like thank you.

“Goodnight, Bee.”

“Goodnight.”