![]() | No ratings.
A snippet of my current body of work. |
| After a long dayâs work, sometime in late spring, I end up going to Wreckâs Bar for a few drinks. Since itâs a Friday night, the parking lot is nearly crammed to capacity. I nervously exit my car and walk inside. The bar is full of mostly middle-aged adults, with a spattering of twenty-somethings here and there who are too broke to go into Jacksonville for some real entertainment. Itâs smoke filled, rowdy, and beer is continuously poured from taps and pitchers like water. I take a seat at the very end of the bar, close to the entrance, and as far away from the bright lights of the small elevated stage (reserved for cover bands and singer/songwriters) as I can get. Before I can order my first drink, a tall young woman walks in and sits down on the stool next to mine. Sheâs got to be close to six feet tall, wearing pleather pants and a tight bustier top that disguises most of her bulges. Her face is round and babyish. Even in the dim barlight I can tell she has on too much makeup: Fake long eyelashes, eye shadow that rises above her large round eyes in rainbow shades, and some strange foundation that makes her naturally coppery complexion look ghostly. Still, her face is sweet overall, at least until she smiles at me. Then I can tell sheâs not so sweet. âHey. You heard this band before?â She asks from underneath the mountainous blonde wig she has on, a la Beyonce. âYeah. Theyâre decent enough.â Epiphany, an 80s hair metal cover band always plays on Friday nights. Everyone knows that. I figure she must be from out of town. âWhat do they sound like? I shrug. âThey just cover stuff. Itâs nothing original.â She chuckles slightly. âSure. But they still got a sound. Do they sound like Led Zepplin? Living Color? Kool And The Gang?â I look at her sideways and realize thereâs more to her than I originally thought. We get to talking about Rufus, Motherâs Finest, A Taste Of Honey, and other bands that were greatly underappreciated in their time. Iâve never been impressed by someone elseâs musical knowledge, but sheâs done it. Iâve been impressed. Even so, I find my attention slipping away from her as a short, curly haired blonde takes the stage and starts warming up on her blue acoustic guitar. My mouth drops open. Her bandâs playing? Where the hell is Epiphany? The woman next to me slams down her hi-ball glass on the bar, shattering my panic. âI said, my nameâs Les. What do you go by?â âNatrea.â I offer, embarrassed for tuning her out. Still, I canât help but look back at Judy as her hands fly over the guitar strings as she bends over her guitar in concentration. The single yellow stage light focused on her makes her seem like sheâs the only person left in the world. The classical piece sheâs warming up with reminds me of something she used to play for the Prince of Orange before his assassination. âThey must be really good for a warmup to catch your attention like that. Guess Iâm in for something good.â She orders a second glass of straight gin and I turn down her offer to buy me a beer. Suddenly, I donât trust myself to drink around her. She orders me some onion rings instead. âYou look like youâve had one meal too few, Ma.â She says, with a teasing smile. By the time I get my onion rings, sheâs already finished her gin, and sheâs ordering another. I watch her for any sign of unsteadiness, but her smile just gets bigger. âYou might want to slow down there, Momma.â I say, teasing back. She just laughs. âThis lite shit? I ainât even gotten started yet.â I smile crookedly out of the side of my face, minimizing my chuckle into a snort. Only time will tell if sheâs bluffing, but given the fact the fact that she can drink gin without gagging, I have a feeling sheâs telling the truth. While the two of us talk about classic rock vs. classic funk, the rest of Judyâs band shows up. The lead singer, a spiky haired thirty-year old with frosted tips and wearing black nail polish on his fingernails, looks like heâs drunk already, and he almost stumbles off the stage, righting himself at the last minute. When the band starts playing âWithout Youâ, my ears scream from the pain of hearing the singer wail like a vomiting puppy. Les shakes her head after the first verse. âYou had me going there, Ma. You said they were good!â I look at Judy, still playing her best despite the anti-music thatâs going on next to her. âThey are. Toss the singer out and theyâd be halfway decent. Well, with her, more than halfway.â I nod at Judy. âYou know her?â I have to laugh at that. âYes and no. Me and her go way back.â Les leans closer to me, looking bat-shit crazy with that grin on her face. âLike back and forth way back?â I laugh again. âWhat?â Les flicks her eyes over to Judy, then back at me. âSheâs looking at you.â I turn around to see Judy smiling at me as she plays. I stare back, and again, Les has to tap me to get my attention. âYâall together?â âWhat? Hell no!â I respond on instinct. âI ainât judging you if youâre that way. Thatâs your business. All Iâm saying isâŚyou went in on that girl! In a good way!â With a rumbling boom that sounds almost like laughter, she nudges me in the side. I just manage to keep my behind on the barstool by grabbing the edge of the bar. Sheâs not trying to be violent, sheâs a big girl after all, but damn! After I adjust myself, not admitting to any injury, Les continues. âI got two girls in my band like that. As soon as a gigâs over, there they go. Out to a motel, going in each otherâs pussy.â I donât know which is more shocking, the fact that Les is in a band, or the fact that she knows two other women like me. âDenial ainât healthy. You ever ask âem what they do to each other, and theyâll say, âNothingâs going on Les. Oh my God, gross!â and then off they go again. To the motel.â She raises her glass in front of her and looks at me over the top of the rim, shrinking her large eyes into a kind of glare that is all hers. "That ainât healthy for them, and it ainât for you neither.â I think about what she said. What would I have to lose by at least getting to know Judy? After all, it seems like sheâs bound to show up anywhere I am. Even when she doesnât mean to. I know itâs careless to change my mind all of a sudden, but as long as we arenât alone together, I think Iâll be okay. I look at Judy and let myself smile back at her. She glows then, and does an unexpected riff on her guitar. I bob my head to her melody, letting it reach inside me and pull out a little joy. After the end of her set, she puts her guitar down onstage and damn near runs to me. âHey. Whenâd you get here?â Sheâs already sweaty from the short hour sheâs been playing, and even through the hazy, tobacco smoke of the bar, I can smell her tropical perfume: coconut, mint, and pineapple. âA little while ago.â I reply, looking everywhere but at her. She blushes, and doesnât say anything. I guess sheâs just glad Iâm here and not trying to curse her out again. âHow long you been with the band?â asks Les. Judy stares at her, then gives me a hurt dying look before dropping her head a little. âAbout six months.â Les laughs like a rumbling mountain. âI ainât no competition, girl! Me and Natrea are just sitting here having a conversation.â Judy blows out the breath sheâs been holding. I roll my eyes at Les. Les just snorts at me, and winks at Judy. âWhat did you think about my skills?â Judy asks me shyly. âYou were good. For someone with your experience.â I tell her. I canât give her too much credit considering sheâs always known how to play the guitar. Les looks she wants to grab me by the shoulders and shake me. âWell.â she says loudly before turning to Judy. âYou were damn good.â âCan I buy you guys a drink?â I shake my head no, but Les nods. âSure. Sit down. It ainât too often I give a goddamn about new people. But yâall are cool as shit.â We talk more about music, and Iâm surprised by Judyâs musical knowledge. Her favorite bands are Santana, Living Color, Heart, and lots of others. All of us talk about our favorite riffs, our favorite melodies, and our favorite voices. âJudy! What the hell are you doing? We have to start our last set!â says a tall, thin man with a goatee and long, dyed black hair. Apparently heâs a natural red-head because his eyebrows are as orange as apricots. His eyes are sea foam green, and heâs got dark circles underneath them, like two brown hammocks. He looks too tired to be handsome. He might be otherwise. âWhy canât you show me some respect and act like I have at least half a brain cell? Jesus!â She flails her arm in a shooing gesture before turning back to me. âAre you gonnaâŚhang around until after my last set?â She asks me. âItâs real late for me-â I mutter, trying to get my way out of it. âYou ainât going nowhere. You gotta meet my people. Theyâre coming right now.â orders Les, as if thatâs the end of it. âI have work tomorrow.â I say specifically. âMm-hmm. At what time?â Her voice is heavy with disbelief. âTwo-thirty. But I sleep âtil twelve.â Les guffaws. âGirl!â I mirror Lesâs grin. âWhat? I was dead serious!â Apricot Brows cuts into our conversation. âDamn it, Judy. I know Rex sounds like shit up there, but weâve still got a gig to get through. The sooner, the better.â Judyâs left eye starts to twitch in agitation. âIâve still got three minutes.â He just shakes his head at her and walks away. Judy puffs up her cheeks, and deflates like a balloon. âSo, are you staying or not? I really have to get back out there.â Les snorts. âAre you gonna play harder if she does? I saw you staring her down while you were up there.â Judy blushes, redder than Iâve ever seen her before. âWellâŚI like her.â After realizing what she blurted, she stomps her foot. âOpinion. I meant opinion. I meant that in a totally platonic, non-sexual way, and I think I need to go now. Okay. Thanks. Bye.â She then proceeds to back into a waitress, and ends up apologizing for the next minute and a half, while shooting embarrassed glances at me and Les. Les just shakes her head and finishes her sixth glass of gin as Judy gets back onstage. âDamn. You that good, huh?â Now itâs my turn to do the shoving. I elbow her in the side. Hard. She doesnât even wobble. I honestly donât even know why Iâm offended. Iâm not sure if Iâm good in bed or not. Sex isnât something Iâve tried this time around. âLook at her.â Iâm afraid to, but I do it anyway. Judyâs trembling so bad, her guitar is slipping through her fingers. âSheâs pheeming for you bad. What? You cut her off?â âHey, Leslene.â says a bubbly blonde from behind her suddenly. Sheâs medium heighted and curvy, with long, bleached blonde hair pulled back in a ponytail. Sheâs wearing a Philadelphia Eagles jersey, and tight jeans. A taller, spray tanned brunette in a silver and white glitter tank top is standing next to her, off to the side, observing me briefly before focusing on Les. I donât know what thatâs all about. Both of them look alright in their own way. The blondeâs got a warm, bright pretty look about her. The brunette looks like sheâd be better off as a free-standing statue in a museum somewhere. I think of them as Hot & Cold immediately. âDonât make me call you by your government name, Correy-Ann Lisa Stimson!â Les says it so loud, even the busy bartender takes notice. âDamn it, Les! Giving my name away like that!â Exclaims the blonde, squeezing her eyes closed. âYou started it. Best believe Iâm a finish it. Quit playing around, Stimson, and meet this girl right here.â says Les, pointing at me. I introduce myself, and we all decide to get a table so we can sit down and talk. We manage to grab one from two couples who are staggering towards the door to escape Rexâs horrible banshee shrieks during âCanât Get No Satisfactionâ. How Judy can manage to smile and play is beyond me. Again, I get distracted and stare at her until someone pokes me. Itâs the brunette, Cox. She gives me a long, questioning look. I know where sheâs going with that expression: Why are you staring that girl down like that? And why is she looking at you? I just shrug. I donât want to talk about me and Judy, so I talk about music instead. Stimson prefers the 60s sound: pure vocal harmony backed by any and every instrument you can think of. Les, being a singer as she tells me, admires all the interesting vocalists: Betty Davis, Serj Tankian, Jay Gordan, Sade Adu, and of course, Tina Turner. Cox doesnât seem to care as long as the bass is deep and heavy. I donât have a musical preference. It all depends on my mood. Iâve got everything on my computer from opera and jazz to punk and hard rock. I have to admit, everyone at the table seems to know music pretty well. I donât why Iâm allowing myself to relax so much, and that bothers me. What is about these three that sets me at ease? I donât even know them! Towards the end of the night, Cox and Stimson get up to go. The bar is nearly empty, thanks to the lead singer of Cherry Blue. âRemember, practice is at four-thirty you two.â says Les, and then she gives both of them a very wide grin. âYâall gonna be out of the motel by then?â The both of them stare at her hard. âThat is not funny, Les.â says Cox. âI wasnât trying to be funny.â Les says with a wink. I want to believe Les is joking. Thatâs sheâs just giving her bandmates some shit as an inside joke. Itâs only then when Cox and Stimson leave, and I see them walking closer to each other outside the bar holding hands that I understand why they put me at ease. Les orders her seventh glass of gin. âThis is my last one. Sopâll be here soon.â âSop?â What the hell kind of a name is Sop, I wonder. âAs in Aesop. Heâs late.â Her voice sounds flat. A few minutes later, a tall, skinny man walks in and starts looking around. Heâs as dark as UPS, and both his shaved head and gold rings gleam despite the blackness of the bar. Finally, his eyes settle on Les, and he makes his way over. Up close, I can tell he has a neatly trimmed short beard, and is wearing a Walter Payton throwback jersey. âEh, The Simpsons left yet? I meant The Stimsons!â He laughs loudly, and leans down to kiss Les, but she turns her cheek away. âYou forget something?â She says, without looking at him. The man frowns. âI know youâre not trying to get an attitude. Especially since you act like you canât answer your phone.â Les turns and looks at him with a fresh scowl. âIf you had called me, I would have heard my phone ring, so you didnât call me to tell me nothing.â He raises his cellphone and dials a number. I can audibly hear that the voice mailbox of Les Curry is full. Les looks like sheâs about to cry. âIâm sorry, baby.â âMm-hmm.â He lifts the corner of his mouth up in annoyance, and this time, she accepts his kiss. âNatrea, this is my man, Aesop.â She says with a slight smile. I nod at him. âHey.â âHey, you. She didnât bite you, did she? This oneâs good for that.â Les swats him on the butt. He looks at her with hurt, sober expression. âYou lucky I love you.â âYou lucky I let you love me.â âHmm. I guess that means I should leave you here then.â âI guess you should, then.â Les folds her arms, unimpressed by his faux hurt feelings. âHow you gonna get home? You already look drunk up. You canât stop smiling for more than half a damn second.â Les chuckles warmly, closing her eyes. âDonât worry about it.â âYouâre my woman, dammit. Itâs my business to see you home.â Les winks at him lazily. âAlright, then. I guess Iâll let you take me home.â âThatâs what I thought.â He gives her another kiss before sitting next to her. I find myself smiling at their exchange. They remind me of my parents with their harsh teasing. Eventually, my focus drifts back to Judy, whoâs ending the last song. The lead singer mumbles something about goodnight and whiskey, but I canât make out the rest of it. âWait.â Judy mouths to me from the stage as she scrambles to get her guitar in itâs case and comes over to me. âDoâŚyou mind if I walk you out?â she asks breathlessly. âNot without my number.â Les interupts fluidly. She hands us two green business cards. Judy slips hers into the back of her jeans. I glance at mine. Embossed underneath bold white letters that say âSugar Free!â is Lesâs information as lead singer of the band. âIâll see yâall later.â Les goes back to loving her man in her own special way. When me and Judy get outside to the curb by the parking lot, I turn to her and start to panic. Suddenly, being alone with her doesnât seem very smart, especially since she still looks good despite the messy hair and the sweat thatâs stained her tank top on her stomach and back. âLook. I donât know what you think this is, but I didnât come here to see you. Epiphany usually plays here.â I blurt. All of thatâs true, but it doesnât explain why I didnât leave, or why Iâm out here talking to her, instead of back there getting to know Les and Sop. Judy studies me, thinking the same thing I am. Her face glows underneath the green and blue fluorescent âWreckâs Barâ sign. âWould you kick my butt if I told you how good you look tonight?â I shake my head to say something negative, but I donât. âI wouldnât do that.â She smiles wide, and then looks down at her feet as a few drunk stragglers lurch out of the bar. They almost trip over the curb. âThanks for that. I never thanked you for pulling me out of that bleed-through.â Judy says, nervously biting her lip. I raise an eyebrow at that, unable to look away from her mouth. âYou shouldnât be thanking me. I was a rude bitch.â I pause, waiting for her to rub it in that Iâm actually admitting I was wrong about something. But she doesnât. She just stares back at me and waits for me to fill the empty, darkened night with words. âWhy do you call it a bleed-through?â She winces. âYouâre gonna think Iâm weird if I tell you.â I tilt my head and smile slightly. âI donât think itâs possible for you to be any weirder.â She takes a deep breath before continuing. âWell, itâs like the vision bleeds into what I am now, like a wound bleeding through a gauze bandage.â I wrinkle my forehead, and show my teeth in disgust. âThatâs sick.â âSorry. Usually I can shake off a vision, but on rare occasions, a bleed-through happens.â I look away, feeling my eyes sting. I donât get bleed-throughs. I feel bad for her. At least I can shove away what happens to me to the back of my mind all the time. I never thought itâd be possible to get stuck like that. âOh, sweetieâŚâ Judy says, rubbing my shoulder. ââŚitâs okay. I always snap out of it sooner or later. You donât have to feel bad about it, or anything. Tell you what. Letâs change the subject. How long have you known Les?â That makes me smile. âNot very long.â âShe makes me feel comfortable. I donât feel that way around too many people. Know what I mean?â I nod. âYeah. I do.â She wrinkles her forehead, and dangles her sandaled foot off the side of the curb before pulling it back onto solid ground. âBut whatâs up with her drinking?â She asks me quietly. âIs everything alright with her?â âI donât know her well enough to say one way or the other. And she seems happy enough, drunk or sober.â I shake my head. Iâve never been completely comfortable with judging someone. âI donât like spreading rumors, let alone hearing them.â Judy nods. âFair enough. But she must have really been through something to drink like that, donât you think? After all, I only ever drank like that after losing you.â I lift my chin up at that, hearing the exaggeration for what it is. âShe seems perfectly happy with Sop.â âMaybe. Or maybe he eases her pain a little.â âYou really think thereâs something wrong?â The little blonde stares at me hard. âDonât you?â I make myself think about it for a moment, going over Lesâs face in my head. Thereâs a little acid that flavors Lesâs smile, like vinegar. And there seems to be a strain behind her large eyes that I donât understand. âThere might be.â I admit. âDonât ever ignore your gut. Youâve got a lot more experience to base your instincts on than most people.â I roll my eyes. âSo we both have âThe Wisdom of The Ancientsâ ?â Judy snorts, and then laughs. âSolomon was wise about everyone except himself. I donât think I want that kind of wisdom. Iâll settle for being experienced.â âYouâre definitely not wise if youâve been chasing after me all this time, so Iâd have to agree.â Judy intimately trails her forefinger across the back of my neck, and leans close. âYou havenât been trying to get away from me all night, so maybe I know something you donât know.â I lift up the side of my mouth in a smirk. âWhat could you possibly know that I donât?â âRemember what you said the last time we had a conversation? You said I didnât know you, right?â âYesâŚâ âOne of the many things that hasnât changed is that you place a high priority on safety. All I have to do is convince you that youâre safe with me.â My skin tightens at her words. I clench my hands closed into fists by my sides. âIâm not safe anywhere. Anything could happen.â She touches my elbow slightly. âNatrea. Youâre safe with me. Iâm not like some of the other times before. I do genuinely care about you.â I turn to look at her, and her eyes contain a mixture of concern andâŚoh no. Oh no. Anything but that! I can deal with her wanting to screw my brains out, but I canât deal with the way sheâs looking at me now. I find myself scanning the nearly-empty parking lot for my little white Ford, which seems to glow with the electricity of the distant blue moon. Iâd give anything right for my car to be within jumping distance right now. âTrea, please-â The door to the bar behind us opens, and out walks Les and Aesop. âI thought yâall would be gone by now! What are yâall still doing out here?â Asks Les. I take a sideways step to put some distance between me and Judy. Aesop pulls his girlfriend close, and leans his face towards her. âLes. Canât you see olâ girl was trying to get some?â he says with a hissed tone. Les covers her mouth, but canât keep her laughter hidden. âMy bad. Yâall are more than welcome to come to our practice tomorrow.â âIâll be there.â Me and Judy say at the same time. We look at each other in confusion. âWait. I work tomorrow.â I admit. Les waves away my concern. âJust be by after you get off. And after you get off work!â I groan and roll my eyes. âDidnât I tell you we arenât together?â âWhatever you want to call it. Thatâs on you. But when you two get done, come by.â Aesop puts his arm around Lesâs waist and they glide down the parking lot to Aesopâs blacked-out Mazda. âIâve got to go.â I tell Judy before she can finish what she started. I start walking towards my car. âIâll see you tomorrow.â She calls after me. âYeah.â I wake up singing. I canât understand what Iâm saying, so I sit up and force myself to take a few deep breaths. I turn on the pink and white lamp on my night stand, and let a warm pink glow coat everything in my room. The lamp happens to be in the shape of Hello Kitty, a gift from my little sister when I turned thirteen. I donât like Hello Kitty, or pink and white together in any capacity, but since Fee gave it to me, I tolerate it in my room. After my eyes adjust to sudden light, I settle on the oak and black Fisher speakers with the old Technics turntable resting on top of them both like a hut made of dominos, standing next to my walk-in closet. I saved the whole hi-fi set from being tossed out by my parents a few years ago. Did I go to sleep listening to Stone Sour? Red Hot Chili Peppers? The Smashing Pumpkins? Is that why I was singing in my sleep just now? I sing the chorus out. âBut I know that if we gave it, one more shot we may be saved yet, but I think that weâd be wasting time. Oh, time. Drowned in regret and sagging pride. Oh, time. Woah, time. Drowned in regret in sagging pride.â I shake my head. Iâve done it again. Iâve written my first song out of thin air yet again. For the first time Iâm seriously starting to doubt my sanity. My life isnât normal, but itâs my normal. I donât like new things. And I donât like unexplained new things. I write the lyrics in an old notebook I keep on my dresser for no particular reason, and decide to get a drink of water. I glance at the Hello Kitty lamp again. Thereâs another reason I keep it by my bed. It has a digital clock on it in the shape of a barrette saucily tilted on the cartoon catâs head. According to the barrette, itâs just six oâclock now. Iâve only been asleep for three hours since I got back from Wreckâs Bar. When I open my door, Feeâs standing right there in the hallway. I squint as the bright yellow hallway floods my senses. After a few careful blinks, I take a look at my little sister. She stands five foot three, with her curly hair rising up around her face like some kind of elaborate headdress. Her rectangular red-framed glasses are resting in her hair like a mini crown. She looks the same as she did a few months ago: the same wide impish nose like mine, and round cheeks with a little dimple on the side of her chin. In the hallway light, her skin gleams, like some dark lacquered wood. âThat was you singing?â She asks me. Fee came home for the weekend because she needs to talk to me. Iâm not sure what about. âYeah. Sorry. I didnât mean to wake you.â I murmur, rubbing my eyes. âI was up anyway. You sounded really good.â She smiles sideways like I do, except her snaggletooth makes her grin slightly cuter than mine. I lift the side of my mouth slightly so our expressions match up. âAnd this is why youâre my favorite little sister. Your flattery is the best.â Fee puts on her glasses and rolls her eyes. âBitch please! I better be your only little sister. And you know I donât do flattery. You are simply: The shit.â âOfficially?â âOfficially. I figured that out ever since Mr. Wembley started getting on my ass about my voice. He said he heard you singing in homeroom one day, but he could never get you to join chorus. He said the kind of singing you did had to be genetic. I was like, âExcuse me? Do you not see all the damn awards and other off the chain shit Iâve been getting for my art? Let me do me, please.â Well, I didnât say that. That would have been rude. I thought it though.â She giggles, making her snaggletooth look like a friendly tusk. Strangely enough, her giggles sound like the ones our Dad has; shaky belly laughter. âBut seriously. You should audition for American Idol this year. Fantasia winning last year was fucked up.â I look to the side. âNo. I donât want the spotlight. Lights attract a lot of shadows too.â âYou crazy as hell. If I could sing half as good as you, Iâd have gone triple platinum by now.â I chuckle. Sometimes my sister can be so cute it hurts. âTalent doesnât equal success. Music is a business. Youâve got to have more than a voice. Youâve got to look like a model and screw the producer to get ahead. I donât have the stomach for plastic surgery or a side job as a fluffer.â Fee wrinkles her nose, making her glasses tilt to the left. âWhy would you need plastic surgery? Youâre really pretty.â I do my funny little sideways smile again. âThanks, Fee.â âI came home, because I need to show you something. And I really need your advice.â Fee leads me across the hall towards her bedroom, lit by her eclectic mix of yellow and white stage lights and desk lights that she has hanging on the walls. As usual, her room contains: modified rolling bookcases filled with jars of paint, easels, and canvas; At least a hundred paintings thatâs sheâs done over the years, carefully wrapped up in silicone paper and separated by thin sheets of cardboard lining the floor of the room like books; And a few easels here and there, uncharacteristically empty. Fee begged Dad to take her dresser and armoire out of here(so she could have more room for her paintings)ages ago. The only piece of normal furniture in the entire room is her bed(randomly shoved up against a wall)with no headboard. I step carefully into Feeâs room, not knowing if Iâll disturb a half-dried blob of paint. Ma got wise to this years ago, and had Dad rip out the carpet in here and replace it with cherry laminate wood. Thankfully, the only paint on the floor is dry, because Fee hasnât painted here in months. Fee pulls out a canvas-wrapped picture frame from underneath her bed. Itâs a 16 x 20. âCould you set up an easel for me while I tell you whatâs up?â âWhich easel?â I ask, surveying the twenty-something easels in her room, which, without paintings to display, look like Eiffel Tower skeletons. âThe only one important enough to keep folded up.â She grins widely. âMy favorite one.â I look around and see a dark red velveteen pouch about three feet high leaning against a wall. After uncinching the bag, I start assembling the ebony easel I made for Fee. I knew she really liked the look of dark wood against her more colorful portraits, so I decided to make her one myself as a high school graduation present. I finally found an old solid ebony dresser that I broke apart and made into the easel, using nothing more than a few hand saws, chisels, and a hammer. âHow did you make it any way? I would have caught you making it if you had used Dadâs power tools.â I gave her my usual half-smile. âJust some old school skills I picked up.â Which is all I can tell her. âThatâs weird. Considering you never took any shop classes in high school.â She shakes her head at me. I go back to assembling the easel, straightening out the four legs, and adjusting the height so that weâll be able to view the painting at eye level. When I turn to look at Fee, sheâs running her hands over the edges of the canvas-covered painting, biting her lip in frustration. Iâm guessing she didnât paint her usual happy person this time. âOn with it.â I say, brushing off an odd crawling sensation over the skin on my forearms. âWhatâs this all about?â Fee steps forward and sets the painting on the easel. â I painted JoJo last week. I think itâs my best work yet.â Her voice sounds wavery and unsure of itself. âBut Iâll need a second opinion on that.â I shudder, even though the room isnât cold. I guess her crush has become a distraction after all. âThe best painting you ever did was âThe Monsterâ. It was also the worst thing you ever painted.â She looks at me and takes a deep breath. âThe reason why âThe Monsterâ was so real is because I didnât know what the hell I was doing. I focused so much on painting as much as I could see of him, I didnât realize who he was. After that, I tried not to dig so deep when I painted someone. I chose safe, average people who were uncommonly happy. I thought that would make up for everything I found out with the first portrait. How some people really are deep inside. So since then, Iâve just been painting the surface. No one really wants to be an open book.â Fee runs her hand over the bottom of the covered painting. âBut I just couldnât help myself with JoJo. I figured once I was done painting her portrait, I would know how she felt about me.â She walks over to one of the desk lamps attached to the wall, and replaces one of the standard one hundred and ten volt light bulbs with a yellow one. After turning on that one, and another one with a regular light in it, she twists the two lamps until their lights join to make one single, off-white spotlight onto the still hidden portrait. âWhat do you mean? Couldnât you just tell that by looking at her?â Fee sighs and turns her head, making the bright lights shine on her glasses, so I canât see her eyes. âA lot of emotions look like love, but arenât. Thereâs compassion, sympathy, empathyâŚâ She shakes her head, and the lights clash against her glasses and onto some forgotten red pigments on a bookshelf across the room. Fee rests an arm across the top of the canvas, twirling a piece of loose twine between her thumb and forefinger. â I just wanted to understand what I saw in her eyes when she looked at me.â âWhat did you find out?â Fee rips the canvas off of the painting in one fluid motion. Within a thick gilt frame is the bust of a woman against a background of swirling midnight and powder blue. JoJo is facing forward as if to suggest the darkness is all behind her. Her warm, gingerbread complexion coats her skin from her forehead to her to her pleated red top. Her face is pleasantly oval, with round cheeks and chin. Over a rather wide nose is a set of lacquer-like dark brown eyes. Her mahogany hair is highlighted with palladium, beginning with a widowâs peak and ending in a magnificent braid on the top of her head. After staring at the portrait for more than five seconds, my eyes travel back to JoJoâs shiny-looking brown eyes. I am slammed by the painful regret I find there. I hold my breath as I force my vision away to her mouth, barely upturned at the corners, and I see that she is laughing, at first at me, and then with me. My gaze dances back and forth between the pain in her eyes, and the amusement in her mouth, until the joy wins, and her face seems to relax, easing into an emotion I am much too familiar with. Fee touches my side, and I inhale instinctively. âSorry. If Iâd known she was gonna have that effect on you, I would have warned you.â I take a seat on Feeâs bed, and take a deep breath. âSheâs very beautiful. And interesting. I think sheâs beautiful because sheâs interesting, not the other way around.â My brain is momentarily stunned as I try to come up with someone, anyone who is more beautiful than JoJo. Finally, from the fog emerges Judyâs name and likeness. And not because sheâs white. Itâs because Judy is Her. âWhat else do you think about JoJo?â I find it funny that Fee is referring to this somewhat older woman by a nickname. With her regal bearing, she looks like she would prefer to be called Josephine. I look at the portrait again to make sure. Yes, there is no question in my mind. âIs this how she looks at you all the time?â âYes. Especially lately. Before she was kind of standoffish. Polite, but distant. Tell me what you see.â Fee urges me. I sigh, wishing I wasnât so experienced at knowing people like I do. âThere is something she regrets doing. Something or someone that hurt her before. You make her laugh, and feel at peace with herself.â âAnd?â âAnd what?â âYou know thereâs more.â Fee tells me in a quiet, hopeful way. âWell, I didnât want to say this before, but she likes you. She sees a little of herself in you. Like a niece.â I study Feeâs reaction to my lie. She scrunches up her forehead, and then looks at the painting for a long time. I am lying to Fee because Josephine reminds me of myself; walled off and closed to everyone. I donât want Fee running after someone who will never admit the attraction is mutual. Iâm afraid if Fee keeps on going in this direction, my bright little sun will become a dim little moon. A shadowy reflection of her former self. This is a lesson in heartbreak that my sister doesnât need now. Not as a freshman in college. Iâm angry with myself for encouraging Fee in the first place, but I didnât know what kind of woman she was falling for. Maybe I can undo some of the damage that Iâve caused. Fee looks at the painting until her natural, deep giggles take over. Itâs a good thing Ma and Dad are gone. Otherwise, they would have woken up for sure. âDamn, Trea. You lied like a boss just now. Straight faced. No chaser.â The way sheâs calling me out makes me feel even worse for doing it, especially since sheâs not even angry at me. âI know what youâre thinking. You think Iâm not grown enough to love somebody. You forget I have a lot of experience with loving difficult people.â I frown. Now sheâs starting to sound like Judy. âMaybe not a lot of experience,â adds Fee, misunderstanding my expression. âBut some. Think about Ma and Dad.â Our parents have a strange relationship. A strange mixture of uneven education levels and giant chunks of time spent apart. When both of them do find a way of being home together, no more than five times a month, my mother puts him to work on home improvement projects. Their usual bi-monthly argument consists of her telling him, to his face, âDoesnât an award-winning head nurse deserve a man who is at least financially on her level?â To which he always replies, arms folded, and jaw clenched âWell, what do you expect from a truck driver who only has a trade school education?â My father is the only person my mother canât intimidate into total submission, which she respects. And for his part, my mother is the only woman that my father allows to keep him regulated to a stationary southern suburban life, at least when heâs home. âThey love each other.â Fee continues with a grin, her teeth glinting like pearls from the light in the room. âYou can look at them and tell.â I have to agree with that. When my mother and father are in the same room together, she is less focused on trying to be Superwoman, and he could care less about the thousands of interesting people heâs met on the road. They can be themselves with each other, and while âI love youâ arenât words Iâve ever heard them say, neither is âdivorceâ, or âyouâre cheatingâ. âThat doesnât mean that things will work out between you and Josephine. I mean, have you even talked to her, outside of ordering your coffee?â Fee winces. âYes. I usually end up looking like a dumbass. Sometimes I trip over my feet and turn my New Balances into Old Unstables. Other times, I talk too fast, and one time I made the really bad mistake of telling her she looked goodâŚfor her age.â I shake my head. âDo you take a ride on the short bus to and from Starbucks? And who wears New Balances anyway?â Fee puts her hand in my face. âIâm gonna ignore you throwing shade for right now, but anywayâŚâ âI was not throwing shade! I promise. But how are you going to get past her laughing her behind off at you?â With that, Fee bites her lip and looks at the portrait again. For some reason, she seems to be glowing. Like sheâs got some weird halo around her whole body. I start to rub my eyes. I really need to get my ass back to sleep. I will not add preventable hallucinations to my list of problems. Thankfully, the rest of the room is starting to lighten up, so I realize Iâm not hallucinating. Itâs just a few rays from the morning sun coming through the blinds. âMaybe things should stay the way they are. I mean, I donât think sheâd be able to stand me painting for twenty hours a day when I have a subject, not to mention I canât even take her complimenting me without freezing up.â I massage my temples, feeling irritated from the ever-brightening sunlight, and the lack of a point with this conversation. âGreat! So why did you even ask my opinion and disturb my sleep for this?â At that, Feeâs shoulders slump down. âI just thought youâd be happy somebody loved me.â I fold my arms sternly. âThis kind of love is dead end, Fee.â âOh really, youâd be happier if I just tried to forget her by moving on to some random chick? How is that any better?!â A few spontaneous tears pop out from her left eye and spill down over her cheek. She hurriedly scrubs them away with the back of her hand before turning away from me and facing the sunrays spilling into her room. âCan I ask you something, Trea?â I study her silhouette for awhile, wondering why she canât look me in the eye. âGo ahead.â âDo you love me?â âStop acting a fool, Fee-â âAnswer me!â Her anger surprises me. âOf course. You know that.â âHow would I know that? You never want to hug me. You cringe if I kiss you on the cheek. You back away if I get closer than six inches to you. How I would I know if you love me or not?â I donât say anything. What can I say? Sure Iâve made her a few things, been a good big sister to her, been there when Ma and Dad have been physically M.I.A. But so what? My advice and guidance has been meaningless to Fee. Sheâs needed everything I canât give her. Everything I canât give anyone. Finally Fee calms down, and looks at me. She puts her glasses in her hair and wipes away more tears, before giving me a soft sad chuckle. âMy experience with loving difficult people isnât limited to Ma and Dad, you know. I know you love me, even though you wonât hug me by choice and say it. I may be only eighteen, and I act my age. I may not always know what Iâm doing or whatâs gonna happen once I finish doing what Iâm doing. But I do know what love is. And Iâm not going to settle for flings, or distractions. Even if all I get from her is the grande vanilla espresso I have to pay for, I think thatâs enough, knowing she loves me.â âYou drink espressos? That is bougie as hellâŚâ I snicker. âMaybe. But at least I get extra whipped cream on top. Even if Iâm too tired not to be stunned by her, she always remembers my order.â Feeâs grin is back, but thatâs not too surprising. Sheâs doing that weird glowing thing again, but this time itâs the glow reserved for married or pregnant women. I seriously need to go back to sleep. âWhatever. You winâŚwhatever.â I say with a loud yawn. âAlright. Sorry I woke you up.â I turn towards my room, but thinking better of it, I look back towards Fee. Sheâs looking at the portrait again. Yes, the feeling is definitely mutual between them, but only time will tell if thatâs a good thing or bad thing. |