|
Barely teenagers, we were kissing sluts. One day we licked on the same ice cream cone, the next your tongue rubbed against my teeth; later we touched bare thighs, playing each other's invisible companions, our hair still slightly damp from the unchlorinated lake. I had toothpaste lips, that's what you told me while we pretended to be in the middle of a crowded dance floor, spinning happily,
your hair in loose braids, your face perfectly pale, the face of an apostle or a saint. TV watching got us aroused when Happy Days was on; we never worried about what the sisters told us, believing that God was something made up by lunatics. We made up names for ourselves, hating Judith and Molly, the dumbest names we'd ever heard, instead I was Edrea and you Amira,
names like poetry. Without you I thought my life would be blank; you gave me my voice. I was so young that I still believed in happy endings. We'd walk for hours through the cool, glowing forest behind the school, then onto your home, the houses enlarging and getting farther apart as we ran. Houses with no borders, or cheap paintings. Only expensive paintings and books
other than the Bible and Playboy magazine, that were discussed over cocktails after the theater. I wanted something new; as we went in the front door, and up the stairs, I heard the back and forth of a handsaw and observed in the shadows your mother and a man unknown to us, alarmingly massive atop her, sliding and trembling as if they had created an earthquake.
|