"First" by Kim (KP) Pritekel Copyright 2001 Kim Pritekel |
Disclaimers: These two really nifty ladies are strictly a
figment of my overactive imagination, so don't get too excited.
Subtext: Yup. These here ladies are of an alternative nature. Ain't it cool?
Violence: Nah. Not unless you view catching a few fish as cruel and violent.
Language: There may be some, but nothing extremely horrible.
Note: This story does somewhat contain the Kleenex factor at times. Especially
the end, so do be prepared.
If you'd like to tell me what a wonderful writer I am, or that I royally suck,
feel free at: XenaNut@hotmail.com
For Jen. I love you, and hurry home!
The line hung silent on my end.
"Emmy? Are you there?" my big brother Billy asked, worry marking
his deep voice.
"Yeah, Billy I'm here. Are you sure? Dead?" I could not bring myself
to believe that she could possibly be gone at only thirty-four. What did he
say she had died of? Breast cancer? Couldn't be. She's far too young for that.
Isn't she? "I have to go, Billy. Someone is calling in on the other line."
I lied.
"Okay, Emmy. I'm sorry I had to call you at work. Are you sure you're
okay? I mean I know you two had been such good friends when you were kids
and all."
Friends. If only they had known the truth about Beth and I. Wiping those thoughts
and memories from my mind I said, "That's okay. I'm glad you told me.
Thanks Billy."
"Yeah. Hey, come home now and then. I know they give you parole now and
then in The Big Apple." I grinned into the phone.
"Yeah. Now and then. Bye, Billy."
I gently set the receiver into its cradle and sat back in my chair and looked
around my cramped office. I was an up and coming lawyer at the law firm of
James/Parks/Stone where I had worked my butt off to win the favor of the sexist
partners over my male peers. Not an easy task, but one I performed with gusto..
Perhaps I would take some personal time off and go to the funeral. I was due
for some time off anyway. I would catch a flight out to Denver, Colorado,
and head south to Pueblo where I grew up, and had not been for some time.
I could still see all the neat rows of modest sized homes, all painted similar
colors. Gray barbecue smokes wafting up over the six-foot wood privacy fences.
The perfect Norman Rockwell neighborhood. The town held nothing for me anymore.
Not that it ever really did. But it had been awhile since I'd seen my parents
and Billy. His kids were growing up so fast. He may have even had a daughter
that I'd never seen.
I stood from my desk and walked over to the window that looked out over a
park that was next to the building, and watched as a man was walked by his
overly enthusiastic Great Dane. The last time I had seen Beth had been in
that park. I rested my forehead against the cool glass. She had come up to
New York to see me, and the short visit had been uncomfortable and strained
at best. I remember how tired she had looked. Thin, too, which made her tall
frame seem lanky and gaunt. I realized then that that day would be one of
those that can haunt a person for the rest of their lives. What if. I sighed.
I didn't believe in what ifs. If did nothing to worry and think of all the
things that were over and done with, and could not be changed. But still....
With a sigh I turned back to the pile of files and papers on my desk. I really
ought to clean it up. I smiled to myself. Never could keep my mind on one
thing. Suddenly with the force of a blow to the stomach I plopped down into
my chair, a malformed sob ripping from my throat. I gripped the arms of my
chair with a fierceness that surprised me, and closed my eyes. I squeezed
them tight as I fought the emotion that was trying to make its way to the
surface. Finally I could breath again. After a couple of deep breaths I had
myself under control again, and decided that maybe it was best to start that
personal time today. I sent a quick email to John Stone, one of the senior
partners, explaining my sudden departure, gathered my belongings and headed
toward the door.
"Ms. Thomas?" my secretary, Lois asked as I locked and closed my
office door, suit jacket and briefcase in hand.
"I'm leaving for the day, Lois. If anyone calls please transfer them
to my voice mail. If any of the partners wish to speak with me then transfer
them to my home phone. It's in the Rolodex."
"Why certainly, Ms. Thomas. Is everything all right? You look a bit out
of sorts today. Are you feeling all right? Shall I call Ms. Kelly?" Lois
Wutherman, my trusted secretary of two years was a kind, older woman who had
been born and raised in London until she moved to the U.S. with her husband
after World War II, or what she called "the big one". She looked
at me with her large brown eyes hidden behind enormous bifocals, her silver
hair piled on top of her head. I often wondered just how long her hair actually
was, though she never, ever wore it down. Probably thinking it was in bad
form for a lady. I smiled to myself at the thought.
"No, I'm fine. That's not necessary. I've just got some personal business
to take care of." I said, though for just a moment I fought the urge
to perch at the corner of her desk, and spill my guts to this kind woman who
had mothered me through disappointments at work, fights with my lover, and
a car accident two years ago. But for some reason this I could not share with
her.
"Well," she said taking one of my hands in both of hers and patting
it in her usual motherly way said, "Whatever it is t'will all be fine."
she smiled as she could read the strain in my green eyes, and see that annoying
wrinkle that appeared between them and gave away my stress level.
"Thank you, Lois. I'm sure it will." with a deep breath I walked
past her desk, out of the office and past the receptionists desk to leave
the firm all together. The early afternoon air of downtown New York hit my
face and nostrils with an intense force, the cool autumn air sharp and biting.
I found my car and pressed the button on the little alarm box on my keychain,
releasing the locks with a chirp. I climbed behind the wheel, and tossed my
briefcase and jacket onto the seat next to me, stared out at the busy street,
my hands placed on the wheel, my mind in another place, another time. Beth.
I could still see the expectant look in those blue eyes as she stared at me,
standing next to the park bench.
"What, don't I even rate a hug?"
I shook my head to clear it, and turned on the engine.
I shared a modest townhouse on the outskirts of the city with my lover, Rebecca.
It was spacious with big windows to allow all the sunlight of the day. The
brick-faced front opened up to a small yard, the autumn yellow grass lining
the driveway on either side. Come spring, flowers would be popping up in the
planters that Rebecca had scattered around the yard.
My black Persian, Simon met me at the door, his thick tail waving in confusion
at my being home so early.
"Hi, baby." I crooned as I picked up his considerable bulk, rubbing
my cheek against the soft fur of his neck. After a few moments of greeting
Simon let me know he'd had enough and fought my tight embrace. I let him down
to return to one of his numerous daily naps, and headed for the kitchen. I
could not get Beth out of my head. Why? Why hadn't she told me that she had
been sick when she had the chance? I could feel my shock begin to succumb
to anger. I walked over to the sink and leaned on its sturdy surface, my head
hanging. I could feel the tears welling up in my throat, wanting to spill
forth and overtake me completely. The myriad of emotions was overwhelming.
I fought the urge, but suddenly my cheeks were wet with the onslaught of tears
that ran down my face and landed into the stainless steel double sink. PLOP.
PLOP. My pain and self-pity were interrupted by the shrill ring of the phone
that lay on the counter by the Mr. Coffee. I decided to let the machine pick
up.
"Hello you have reached Emily and Rebecca. We cannot come to the phone
right now, so leave a message at the beep and we will get back to you as soon
as possible." Beep.
"Yes, this message is for Emily. Hi this is William Parks, and your secretary
told me-" I pushed away from the sink, and wiped at my eyes as I walked
toward the cordless.
"Hi, Bill." I said snatching up the receiver. "Yes, I did.
We have had a death in the family, and I had some personal time coming,-"
"Of course, of course. By all means take care of you. The criminals of
New York will wait." Parks said with one of his famously fake laughs.
"You take all the time you need. These things can be so difficult."
he lowered his voice for a more dramatic affect. I fought the urge to tell
him to stick his pity up his ass. Bill Parks cared about no one and nothing
but Bill Parks. He was one of my bosses, so I thanked him for his kind words
and assured him that John Dithers would take on my Holstead case in my absence.
I was grateful to hang up with the pretentious, pompous man. He was my least
favorite of all three senior partners. The kind of lawyer that jokes are made
about.
I tuned off the ringer and walked over to the fridge. The remains of our left
over linguini stared me in the face as did the two-day-old pizza, still in
its blue and white Domino's box. Disgusted with the thought of food I walked
over to the living room, and plopped myself down on the couch, my hands lying
limply next to me. I stared out the French doors out into the small backyard.
I felt so empty, as if all my insides had been taken out, and I was left with
nothing. I sighed deeply, then an idea occurred to me. I walked to the hall
closet, and on tiptoe reached up and grabbed the three white photo albums
that had been the source of much comfort in my life, as well as painful reminders.
I felt a need to delve into the past, a past when Beth Sayers was still alive.
A time when she was my best friend, my lover, my confidante, and just my neighbor.
I felt a need to rediscover this woman who had stolen my heart, and had never
given it back.
With sweating palms I carefully flipped open the cover, almost as if I were
entering a sacred realm. The first half of my photo album was filled with
baby pictures of Billy, and then four years later of me. Me at age three heading
to my first day of ballet lessons, which from what I am told I hated, but
my mother thought I looked so darn cute in my white tights and pink tutu.
There is a picture of Billy and me dressed up for Halloween. The caption said
he was nine and I was five. I don't remember ever wanting to dress as a princess,
but I guess at some time I must have felt the urge. There I was holding my
trick or treat bag with Billy dressed as a sheriff holding my hand, impatient
smiles plastered on our cherubic faces. Ah! Now that one is more like me.
I was sitting in the middle of a large sandbox with some little red headed
girl that I don't remember at all, a large green bucket of sand forever poised
over that mane of red hair. I had to smile despite my dead heart beating limply
in my chest.
Skipping a few years I finally came across the time when Beth came into my
life. It did not seem like there was ever a time when she wasn't. Now I would
never hear her wild laugh again; never see those twinkling blue eyes looking
with so much love into my own green eyes.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath before opening them again to stare
down at us. In the beginning it had been me who had pursued her for a friendship.
During the summer of my tenth year many of the families in the neighborhood
had decided to move, taking most of my friends with them. The Sayers' family
moved into the house next door with their nine, soon to be ten year old daughter,
Elizabeth, who refused to answer to anything other than Beth. She was a shy
girl, and later told me that I had intimidated her, though why I never understood.
Finally as the summer slowly crawled by with nothing to do and no one to do
it with, she agreed to walk over that sacred boundary between their small,
green postage stamp lawn, and our small, green postage stamp lawn and we played
four square. From that day on the two of us had been glued hip to hip.
I turned the page to reveal us standing in front of my childhood home, the
garage open to show the old Dodge my father refused to give up, and still
had, except it isn't gold anymore, it's an interesting shade of avocado green.
My father never did have any color sense. In the picture I was wearing an
old football jersey that Billy had outgrown and handed down to a tom boy sister.
My dark blonde hair half-hazardly pulled back into a ponytail. My knees had
two painful looking scrapes on them that were just beginning to scab over.
I was linked arm in arm with Beth who was wearing that Mickey Mouse shirt
that I swear she would have worn day in and day out if her mother would have
let her. We had great big goofy smiles on our darkly tanned faces. So young.
So carefree. I read the caption that my mother had so neatly written below
the Polaroid- Emmy and Beth 4th of July, 1977. That was our second summer
together. That was also the year we kissed for the first time.
I looked up from the photo album suddenly aware that I was hungry. Putting
the album aside, I went to the kitchen and made myself a PBJ- peanut butter
and jelly, the food of choice. I had not had one of these things since college!
Looking at all these old pictures was bringing the child out in me. I smiled
and shook my head.
With sandwich and can of Dr. Pepper in hand I grabbed the photo albums off
the coffee table, and plopped us all down on the floor. I got to my knees
and unzipped my gray, pinstriped skirt, and pushed it down over my hips, then
sat to remove it and toss it aside, followed by my nylons. Sitting in my canvisol
and underwear I looked at some of the other pictures on that page:
Emmy and Beth at the zoo; Emmy and Beth in the pool; Emmy and Beth and Billy
playing basketball. Then I saw it. The night of the school play and Beth's
first starring role. It was a silly little play called "Who Calls the
Wild Wylde?" about a family by the name of Wylde who lived in the backwoods
town of Looneyville. Beth played the son, Joseph Wylde. That year she discovered
her zest and love of acting. In one scene her character had to give Miss Thelma
Rooster a peck on the cheek, and she decided she wanted to practice. On me.
Beth was spending the night at my house the weekend before the show. We were
up in my bedroom running my extensive collection of matchbox cars all over
the many roads and highways, and stopping at all the good places to eat, and
visiting all of our many friends along the way. Suddenly she stopped, tiny
white VW Bug in hand.
"Let's practice!" she said, her eyes wide with this new idea she
had.
"Practice what?" I asked as I rammed my truck into the post of my
bed causing a great avalanche of rock and other such debris to fall from that
massive mountain that was in the middle of our town.
"Practice my scene with me and Thelma Rooster." I could feel my
stomach tighten with a strange sort of excitement. I just looked at her as
if to say, are you serious?, though I knew she was, and I prayed deep down
that she wouldn't change her mind. So I said,
"Which one?"
"You know, the one where I have to," she looked back over her shoulder
to make sure my parents or Billy was not listening through my closed door.
"Where I have to kiss her."
"Why? You know how to kiss. You do have a father after all."
"Yeah, but that's different. He's a boy, this is a girl."
"But you're playing a boy, so it's the same thing."
"No it's not! And I don't kiss him like he's my girlfriend." She
said matter of factly.
"I hope not!" I giggled, liking this game of playing hard to get.
"Come on, Em!" she said eyeing me with those intense blue eyes that
even at the tender age of eleven threw my senses out of whack, and would make
me agree to anything.
"Okay. But first wait." I threw my forgotten car on the floor and
ran to the door. I opened it ever so slightly and looked at as much of the
hallway as I could then shut the door and leaned my huge, trusty brown teddy,
Ruffles against it to guard us. Next I went over to my window and shut my
blue pastel curtains and then walked to my original spot and sat cross-legged
in front of Beth.
"Gee. You'd think we were hiding in Fort Knox." she said.
"
What's that?"
"Never mind. Okay. You have the first line." she said, looking at
me expectantly.
I don't know what the line is."
"Oh yeah. Okay, you look away from me and try to be all lady like and
flustered because you're in my presence." I stifled another giggle. "Then
you say, 'Well good morning, Joseph Wylde. How are you on this bright and
sunny day?'"
"Well good morning, Joseph Wylde. How are you on this bright and sunny
day?" I asked batting my eyelashes at her. Real serious like Beth grabbed
my hand and brought it to her full lips, and just barely brushed my knuckles.
A bolt of excitement raced up and down my spine. I didn't remember Joseph
doing that to Thelma in rehearsal, but I didn't say anything. I would let
Beth do whatever she wanted to. After all, she was the acting expert, not
me.
"Thelma Rooster you are looking lovely as always. Why are you out here
all alone?"
"Oohh! I remember this line!" I exclaimed. "Mother's gone inside
the store, Joseph."
Beth smiled at me and nodded, then said, "Good. Then you say, 'But you
can walk me home if you like. I'm sure she'd be understanding of my taking
my leave with such a kind gentleman like yourself.'" I began to repeat
the line when she stopped me and pulled me to my feet. "Let's really
act it out." she grabbed my hand and put it through her bent arm and
held my hand with her other one. "Your bedroom door will be the door
to your house, okay?" I nodded than proceeded to say my line quite nicely
I thought. We walked along our path until finally she stopped short of the
door to my "house".
"It has been an honor to walk with you Thelma, that is, may I call you
Thelma?" not knowing what to say, and Beth seemed to be a bit too much
in character to remember to tell me so I just nodded. She smiled at me and
released my hand from her arm. Her breath came in shallow puffs of air as
her body came closer to mine. I was nervous, scared and excited all at the
same time. She rested her hands on my shoulders then moved her head closer
to mine. I was surprised when our lips met. I had been expecting her to kiss
me on the cheek. My blood began to pound through my veins with enough electricity
to short out all my thoughts. I had seen a woman close her eyes once in a
movie when she was kissed by the man. Thinking this must be the correct procedure,
I closed mine and sighed.
When the kiss ended Beth pulled away and looked me in the eye. A look of wonderment
filled her face. I was almost breathless, and certainly speechless. I had
never kissed anyone before except my parents, and my Aunt Kitty who insisted
on giving me a big wet one every time I saw her, which was often. I had never
liked any of those kisses. This was different, and I think we both knew it.
She rolled a tendril of my summer-lightened hair around one of her fingers
that still rested on my shoulders and smiled.
"Can we rehearse again?" she said quietly. I could only nod. She
took one of her hands and brushed some fallen hair off my forehead and brought
her face to mine again. This time I wrapped my thin arms around her neck and
leaned into her. My rock. Beth would always be the strong one.
The play met with critical acclaim among the fifth grade class. Mrs. Arbuckle
thought Beth's performance "Much too dramatic for such a cheerful story."
What did she know? Beth was not cast again until middle school.
I turned the page. I saw more school pictures of us, and snapshots taken at
home. Did my mother have nothing better to do than run after us with a camera?
As a kid if never occurred to me that she took a ton of pictures. Now, it
took an act of God to get me in front of that lens.
As the years went by Beth became more and more detached from her peers, especially
the girls. The only way she would have anything to do with them, or talk to
them was if they would challenge her or me, or make fun of either of us, or
if some other girl had been the target of the masses. Then she became a champion
of anyone who became the "underdog" If an injustice was being done,
she would not hesitate to fight anyone, which she did often. Beth could most
often be found with the boys. She was incredible when it came to basketball,
or running, or any other game involving physical activity.. I smiled as I
remembered Beth's slam-dunks.
"Come on, Em. Don't be such a wimp. Take the ball, run up the court,
and jump. Slam it in there." I stared at Beth like she had just landed
from another planet.
"Beth, have you forgotten that you're the one who is a hundred feet tall?
I'm short, remember?"
"So." she said as she ran by me, whacking the ball out of my hand,
and dribbling it down the cement until she pushed up on her left leg, and
slammed the ball into the net with a satisfying whoosh. "It's not about
height, Em. It's about ability." she landed with a smug smile on her
face, her eyes daring me. I raised my brows. She knew I could never refuse
a dare.
"Fine. I'll show you height. And I'll show you ability."
I grabbed the ball that continued to bounce down the court, and ran.
"I'm so sorry, Em. I really thought you could do it." my best friend
said as she sat next to me on our front porch, my mother holding the towel
to my nose. I glared at her with my black eye.
Beth had a difficult home life. Her parents married when her mother became
pregnant at the tender age of sixteen. Beth's father, Jim always made known
his doubts that Beth was even his. But I believed he loved her. He raised
her as his, and Beth loved him dearly. Her parents remained married until
she turned thirteen, then deciding that he could no longer tolerate Beth's
mother's tirades and drinking, her father left the family to return to his
home state of Tennessee. Beth did not see him for years at a time.
To stay away from her house and the steadily increasing abuse of her mother,
Beth would come over to mine, and I think in her mind she saw my mother and
father as her own. Billy loved her. In his eyes it was almost like having
the younger brother he had always wanted. Beth and I would lay out on my back
lawn and stare up into the night sky trying to count all the stars we could
see. She would often cry silently, the tears just flowing down her cheeks,
rolling down the sides of her face to collect in her ears. She would shiver,
and blame it on the cool night air.
I had to give my mother credit. She tried to be everything that Nora Sayers
wasn't. She coddled her, taught her things, and showed her that Beth counted,
and was loved. By all of us. Beth clung to that sense of security, wrapping
it around herself like a blanket.
I came across a picture of the three of us on a fishing trip just before the
Sayers' separated. Billy had just turned seventeen, so my parents decided
to give him a chance to prove himself responsible by taking his thirteen year
old sister and her twelve year old best friend fishing.
"I am not going to bait anything for you two, so you better get over
that squeamish girl stuff, and learn to do it yourself." he scolded as
we backed out of the driveway of my house. I looked at Beth who sat with me
in the back seat of our huge Suburban with a look of doubt spawned by fear
on my face. She smiled at me. I felt my fears melt away.
"I don't need no one tying on my worms if that's what you mean. Heck
no. I bet I could do it better than you anyway!" she said proudly.
"Girls." Billy mumbled to himself, though through the rear-view
mirror I could see the small smile play across his maturing face.
After a long three hour drive we finally reached Carter Lake and found a good
place to stay for the night. The area was completely surrounded by huge, beautiful
trees. Beth and I got out of the car and made a slow circle of the area. The
day was warm, but the shade of so many trees made it absolutely incredible
with endless shade. The maze of trees and vegetation went on and on, and any
number of adventures could be played out.
"You thinking what I'm thinking?" Beth asked mischievously. I gave
her a smile and said,
"See you later, Billy!" I grabbed her hand, and we ran toward the
thicket of dense fantasy.
"Hey! You guys gotta help me!" my brother yelled.
"We're just girls! We can't do it anyway!" Beth yelled as we disappeared
into the forest, our giggles the only clue we were there.
After a bit we stopped running for fear of running head long into a tree trunk.
We walked hand in hand looking at the incredible beauty of God's planet. The
hillside was sloped slightly, the ground soft from recent rains. We stepped
over fallen trees, and ducked under low branches. I looked up in wonder at
the huge trees, so stoic in their existence. Chipmunks called warnings to
each other, mosquitoes and butterflies fluttered about our heads.
"I think we should live here forever. Never go back to school, never
get jobs when we get older. Just stay here and live off the land like Tarzan."
I said wistfully.
"Me Tarzan, you Jane." Beth said pounding her developing breasts
with her fist. I giggled.
"No way. Me Tarzan, and you Jane."
"Uhunh. I want to wear the loin cloth." We walked on in silence.
"No I think we should be more like Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer." She
said after a few moments.
"I want to be Huck Finn!" I exclaimed thinking of the possibilities.
"No way! You're too brainy to be Huck. You would make a much better Tom
Sawyer."
She let go of my hand and began to dance in a clearing we came upon. The late
afternoon sun hid half of the small valley in shadow, the large hill covered
with wild grass on the opposite side rose like a golden giant behind the trees,
a small stream dissecting the wild grass and flowers. She lifted her arms
to the sky and tilted her head back.
"I want to be free!" she yelled to the silence of the mountains,
her loud cry echoing in the expanse.. Only a far off bird answered. I stood
back and watched her as she danced and jumped around. Beth was only twelve,
soon to turn thirteen in October, but I could tell she would be a great beauty
some day. She had hair that was dark, almost black that shone so brightly
in the sunlight, that reached to just below her shoulders. That. in contrast
with her amazing blue eyes, and beautiful skin. I was already getting pimples,
but she had none. She was already tall for her age, and I guessed would one
day be much taller than my mother was, with long legs and an athletic build..
Her incredibly active life kept her young body hard. She was beautiful.
Suddenly Beth stopped yelling and dancing, and turned her back to me, her
hands in the pockets of her shorts. Her shoulders slumped in defeat.
"Beth?" I asked, my brows drawn in confusion. "Why'd you stop?"
she said nothing, but I could feel an immense sadness radiate off of her in
waves. "Beth?" I asked quietly again as I walked to her. "What
is it?" I put my hand on her shoulder. She would not look at me. "Tell
me." Without a word she turned to me and grabbed me in a hug of desperation.
Her hands linked behind my back, her head bent down to lay on my shoulder
as she sobbed. Alarmed, but knowing she would tell me when she was ready I
wrapped her body in my hopefully comforting embrace, and stroked her hair
as I whispered encouraging words into her ear just as my mother always did
when I was upset. We stood like that for maybe two or three minutes when with
a final sob she said,
"My father is leaving my mother."
"Oh, Beth." I said stroking her back. "I'm so sorry. How do
you know?"
She tightened her embrace a little, and said, "I heard them fighting
the other night, so I got up and walked to their door. It was closed, but
I could hear them yelling, and my mom crying. She was telling him not to,
but my dad said he had to. He couldn't do it anymore."
"Do what?"
"I don't know. I guess put up with her. She's been coming home real late
again. Usually drunk. In some ways I don't blame him. I don't know."
she sniffled, and was quiet. We stood there holding each other, each with
her own thoughts and fears running through our heads.
"Are you going to go with him?" I asked, almost not able to breathe
as I waited for the answer.
"No. He won't let me." I slowly released the pent up breath of relief,
but then felt guilty. Beth had always been much closer to her father than
her mother. With a sigh Beth pulled away from me, her hands resting on my
hips. I wiped her tears off her cheeks with my thumb. She stared down at me,
her eyes red, her face swollen with the upset. As I looked on one single tear
slid lazily down her cheek.
"Don't cry." I whispered. I leaned forward and reached up to kiss
her forehead. She looked so miserable. Then I kissed her lips softly, just
the barest touch of mine. I pulled back and looked at her, trying to gauge
her expression. Her eyes were dark, burning into mine. She moved in for another
kiss, but I backed away.
"Billy will be looking for us." I said, and dropped my hands from
her body. Beth and I had only kissed the one time last year when she did her
play. She had looked at me several times since then the way she was now. Before
I never really understood what that look meant, but now she used it again.
It was a look of wanting, like when you saw the greatest bike in a store window,
and want it so badly it hurts. Had she wanted to kiss me at another time?
Was that wanting for that?
We began to walk back through the trees as these thoughts whirled around my
immature mind. Had I ever wanted to kiss her before? Yes. There had been a
couple of times, but I felt too funny about it, so never brought it up. Now
looking back I know that Beth would have gone along with it, and perhaps would
have even started a situation or two of her own. She found her security, and
stability in me. But we were girls, I reasoned. We should be kissing boys,
or at least talking about it. All my other friends did. Weren't boys the ones
that were supposed to get my heart racing like this? Make me feel dizzy and
dumb, and yet alive all at the same time? My hormones probably just hadn't
kicked in yet. It made me too nervous to make it right.
We emerged out of the trees to the clearing where Billy had started setting
up camp for us. His big blue tent was already up, our much smaller red one
was in the creating process. Hearing us approach he looked over his shoulder
at us.
"There you two nuts are. Don't ever do that again, Emmy or I'll nail
you to a tree, right before mom nails me to one right next to it!"
"Sorry, Billy." I said quietly. Both Beth and I were in much more
somber moods now then when we had run off. Hearing the difference in my voice
he looked at us again. His brows drew together in concern and curiosity, but
he asked nothing. Billy never did.
"Well since you two think you're such land rovers, go and get some sticks
to start a fire, and for marshmallows tonight. But you two get your butts
back here in fifteen minutes!" he yelled to our backs as we headed back
into the trees.
That night Beth and I lay in our tent in our separate sleeping bags. I lay
on my back staring up at the red canvas that was our protection from the rain
outside. The heavy drops pelted down tapping on our tent like it was knocking
on the door; let me in. I could hear the portable radio that Billy was listening
to in his tent; it sounded like Led Zeppelin, but I had never liked his music.
"Em?"
"Yeah?" I turned my head to look at Beth. She was curled up on her
side facing me. In the darkness I could just barely make out her form, and
could not see her face, nor the expression in her eyes.
"Do you think you'll ever get married?"
"Married?"
"Yeah. You know, with a husband and kids."
"I don't know. I've thought about it, but I'd rather go to college. I've
decided what I want to be."
"What?" she asked with interest.
"A lawyer." I turned on my side so I could talk to her easier. "I
saw this really neat story on t.v. last week where this woman became a lawyer,
and she won this case where this little boy was kidnapped by his father."
"Why would his father kidnap him?"
"I don't know. Anyway, the woman, I think her name was Terry, and she
helped the police get the boy back for the mother, then she tried the case
in court and won. She got to go on Donahue."
"That is really neat. I want to do movies. I don't ever want to get married.
Do you think we'll be friends when we're old?"
"Of course we will!" I exclaimed, almost offended by the question.
"We'll be friends forever."
I loosened the plastic covering over the pictures, and took that one out,
and studied it. We had met an older couple at the lake who had volunteered
to take our picture for us, so all three of us could be in it. We stood by
the lake, Billy in the fishing vest our father had given him for his last
birthday, and the fish he had just caught proudly held high by the line. Beth
and I were standing next to him, our arm around each other, smiles pasted
on our faces. Now I look into the eyes of Beth and see how unhappy, and sad
she was. I wondered why I did not see how much her parent's splitting up had
affected her. Perhaps the innocents of the young does not allow you to see
these things. Beth should never have seen much of the things she was handed
as a kid.
The caption on the bottom of the picture read: Billy, Emmy and Beth catch
dinner. Spring, 1979. Below that I had written in my childish scrawl, Emmy
and Beth, Friends For Life.
I looked up from my past to see Simon staring at me. He had been asleep next
to me, and I had not even noticed. I picked him up, a rag doll in my hands
and held him close to me, his eyes closed, purring in contentment. I looked
out the windows of the French doors that led to the backyard again. Night
was swiftly approaching as the sun took yet another curtain call for the entrance
of the moon.
"How's my boy?" I asked into his thick fur. "What do you think,
Simon? Should I let her go? Huh?" I stroked his ears as I got lost in
thought once more.
When we got back from the lake my mother ran out of the house to meet the
car.
"Wow. Your mom must have really missed you guys." Beth laughed.
I did not share the joke. I could see it on my mother's face; something was
wrong. Billy saw it, too.
"I wonder what's up." He said as he put the Suburban into gear,
and cut the engine. My mother ran over to the back window where Beth and I
sat.
"Beth, honey you need to get home just as soon as possible. Your mom
called me this afternoon and told me they had something very important to
talk to you about."
"They're getting a divorce aren't they?" Beth asked quietly, looking
at her hands that played with the hem of her T-shirt. My mother looked at
me, her pretty face lined with worry. She looked back to Beth, and put her
hand on Beth's shoulder.
"Why don't you go on home, hon. If you can come back for dinner later
you know you're more than welcome. I know Emmy won't mind." She smiled
in an attempt to lighten the mood. Beth smiled politely, then slowly got out
of the car.
"Want some help with your gear, Beth?" Billy asked.
"No, Billy. I've got it. Em, will you walk me home?" I looked to
my mother to see what I should do. She nodded.
"You can walk her to the door, then you need to come back here and take
your camping things in. Okay?"
"Okay." I climbed out of the car after Beth, and helped her to lift
her big duffel bag out of the back. With a thud the heavy bag hit the driveway,
where she left it to drag on the ground by the long strap.
"Thank you for everything." she said over her shoulder to my mother
and Billy who watched from the car.
We walked side by side, our steps perfectly matched. I looked over at her
profile. She walked with her head up, her eyes straightforward. I wished I
could have known what was going through her mind at that moment. We both knew
the inevitable end to that journey, yet neither wished to acknowledge it.
I looked forward again, and we reached her front porch. She dropped the bag
and turned to me.
"Wish me luck." she said with a quick hug, then headed into the
house. I stood there for a moment thinking of what this could mean. I stared
at the front of the small house, the light blue paint peeling. Light blue
chips were mixed in the dark green of the bushes that lined the front wall.
I'd never noticed how badly it needed painting before. Two or three coats,
maybe? Maybe that's what the Sayers' needed; another coat. I turned when I
heard footsteps coming toward me. It was Billy.
"Come on, kiddo. Help me lug in all those fish you caught." he mussed
my hair and gave me a light punch in the shoulder. Slowly I turned from Beth's
door, and headed home. Billy put his arm around my shoulders as we walked.
"Will they have to leave, Billy?" I asked, looking up into the face
of what would be a very handsome man someday; his eyes dark like our father's,
his hair the same lights color of our mother and me.
"I don't know, Emmy. I just don't know. What is that Aunt Kitty always
says; keep hope alive, and doubt at bay? you never know. Maybe everything
will be fine. Grown up can do some pretty stupid things sometimes."
We reached the house in silence. Billy grabbed the camping gear and disappeared
into the confines of his room. I watched as he closed his door with the sign
that read, "TEENAGER, INTELLIGENCE! THEY SAY THE A-BOME WAS DANGEROUS."
Another that read, "Beware, boy bites."
With a sigh, I went to the kitchen where my mother was beginning to make dinner.
I plopped myself down in one of the kitchen chairs with a sigh and watched
her work.
"want to help?" she asked turning to me, the dish towel over her
shoulder.
"No. I'm never getting married, so why should I learn to cook?"
"You're not, huh?"
"Nope. I've decided." I said with finality.
"You do have to eat still." she smiled.
"I'll eat out."
"Well then, I hope you're rich. So why aren't you ever getting married?"
I shrugged. "I don't know."
I looked at the pile of dinnerware on the table waiting to be placed. A stack
of yellow linen napkins were folded neatly topped by five wooden napkin rings
that were n shapes of elongated cats carved to touch the tip of its nose to
the tip of its tail. I picked one of them up and swung it around my finger.
"Why five?" I asked, showing my mother the napkin ring.
"Your Aunt Kitty is coming over for dinner." I nodded acknowledgment.
"Why did you marry dad?"
Because I loved him." my mother said as she turned back to the stove
to stir the mashed potatoes.
"Can I do that?" I asked, eyeing the an of potatoes.
"Sure you can. But you may not want to ruin your non-domestic reputation."
my mother gave me a sly smile over her shoulder.
"Can you keep a secret?" I giggled.
"You got it, kiddo."
I leaped up from my chair and took the big wooden spoon from her hand.
"But why did you get married?"
"Well, when a man loves a woman-"
"Oh, mom I know all that stuff. But why get married? Can't people just
live together, or live close by each other? Aunt Kitty isn't married to Ron."
"You could, I suppose, like Kitty, but that is just what we do. I hope
that she will marry Ron some day. Lord knows he's proposed enough times. Being
married is the better way to go. For many reasons. When you meet that certain
someone you'll understand. you'll want to be close to them all the time, and
you want to do things with them and go places with them."
My mom put a pan of rolls in the oven.
"Can I marry Beth?" I asked, turning to look at her. Nearly dropping
the plate she held, she looked at me. I knew it was a ridiculous question,
but wanted to see what her response would be.
"Why would you want to do that?" she asked slowly.
"Well, we do things together, and I want her around. Isn't that what
you said?"
"Yes, but honey, girls don't marry girls. You find a nice young man."
I turned back to the stove and watched with interest as the lump of mashed
potatoes slid off the spoon and fell back into the pan with a plop.
"You know, maybe you and Beth should make some more friends besides just
you two. You would have a lot more fun with a whole group of girls. Don't
you think?"
I rested the spoon handle on the side of the pan and mumbled about having
to put away my camping gear as I walked out of the kitchen and out the front
door.
Beth did not come back over that night. I was disappointed; I wanted to know
what was happening, but my mother told me Beth would tell me when she wanted
to. Later that night as I had sat upon the front step, Jim Sayers packed up
his car, and with a small wave to me drove away, his tail lights in the darkness
the last thing I would ever see of him.
I put the photo album aside and stood, stretching my screaming back. I looked
around the living room. The thick rugs covering the hardwood floors were a
light gray, the furniture soft black leather with red accenting pillows. The
walls were lined with framed black and whites of all the places Rebecca and
I had been together, or separately, and all the places we wanted to visit
some day together. The room was soft and warm despite the sharp colors. The
mantle on the fireplace in the corner held a beautiful piece a young artist
we knew had sculpted for us as a house warming gift. It was made of black
onyx, and was the figure of a woman reaching for the sky, perhaps reaching
for her salvation.
My life was so different now than I had once imagined it would be. For once
Beth was not at my side as she had always professed she would. I sat on the
couch. The thought occurred to me that though she had not been in my life
for over a decade, I still relied on her strength from a distance, the memory
of her sustained me in my craving. Now the connection was forever gone. I
rubbed my burning eyes.
I looked down to see Simon leaning against my leg, his tail entwined between
my calves.
"You hungry, little man?" I asked. He answered with a loud meow.
"Okay, okay. I need to make something for your other mom, too or she
will not be happy with me."
I walked through the dining room and looked at the table that would seat twelve
when fully extended that Rebecca and I had recently bought. It's rich, cherrywood
finish shone from the last bit of light coming in through the two double windows
that lined the wall just above the matching cherrywood buffet table. I ran
my fingers lightly over the silk flower arrangement at its center.
I entered the kitchen when I heard the garage door open. I began to take vegetables
out of the refrigerator to start cutting up for the salad. The inner door
opened, and Rebecca waked in, and I looked at her for a moment. Her long red
hair, wind blown and tousled from a long day of teaching high school science,
her dark blue-green eyes looked alive and radiant. A feeling of urgency suddenly
filled me. I walked over to her and held her to me, almost knocking her off
balance.
"Hi, babe! I'm glad to see you, too, but you already swept me off my
feet once, you know." she said with a surprised laugh, her arms holding
me tightly. I laid my head on her shoulder and wept silently. The sight of
this woman whom I shared my life with now and forever brought me to my knees.
The loving smile was just the permission I needed to really let it all out
so I could finally begin to let go. "Hey, hey, " she said, gently
starting to pull away.
"No. Can I just cry for a minute?" I asked, my hold on her like
a vise.
"Of course you can, Emily. Of course." she pulled me back into her
arms, and was silent.
"Don't cry, Beth. Come on. you have to be strong." I said gently.
"I hate them." Beth said with a final sob, her voice bitter.
"No you don't. They're your parents. You're not allowed to hate them."
I said as I ran my fingers through her hair. We were in my bedroom. I was
laying on the bed with Beth next to me, her head on my stomach, her favorite
position. We were quiet for a long time. I glanced down at her to see if she
had fallen asleep. She was awake, her gaze far from my house.
"What are you thinking about?" I asked as I braided a couple strands
of her dark hair together. She didn't answer for a minute.
"Do you think I'm weird, Em?:" she asked, her focus remaining on
the wall, almost as if she was afraid of my answer.
I laughed. "Of course I do. That is why you're my best friend!"
"Gee, thanks." she said dryly. She grabbed the hem of my blue and
purple striped T-shirt and wiped the drying tears from her eyes.
"Thanks, Beth. Wasn't one of my favorites anyway."
"Be grateful. At least I didn't blow my nose." I grinned down at
her, swept her hair behind her ears. She pushed the thin material away from
my stomach and examined the white skin beneath. I could feel her warm breath
as she traced small circles above my belly button with her finger tips.
"Find anything interesting?" I asked, curiosity keeping me in check.
"Just like a baby's butt." she smiled, patting the skin of my stomach.
She lifted her head and stared down at her hand as she flattened the palm
against one side of my rib cage. "Isn't it incredible how there are so
many strange little curves and bumps on a woman's body?" she traced the
center line of my stomach up to where the fabric of my shirt began just below
my burgeoning breasts.
"I guess I've never given it much thought." I said, feeling unsure
about Beth's explorations, and feeling naked in my uncertainty.
"Hm." she said absently, then sat up and pulled my shirt back into
place. "Let's go down to the Soda Jerk and get some ice cream."
I stared at her as she jumped off the bed and began to pull her hair back
into a pony tail, the black hairband clamped between her teeth, her weight
shifting from one foot to the other. My eyes narrowed as I watched her. This
was her habit when she was nervous. I slowly stood, my legs shaking.
"Sounds good." I said, silently letting out the breath that I had
been holding.
The late September chill of New York was pushed away by the fire that Rebecca
had built for our after dinner coffee. This had become a tradition we hadn't
realized we'd started until a couple of years ago when one night we didn't
do it, and we both realized how much we missed it. I lay on the couch with
my legs resting on Rebecca's lap, and stared at the strange shadow that danced
on the walls from the trance-like light the fore threw.
"So, Beth's parents split when she was thirteen?" she asked, her
hands caressing my calves and ankles.
"Yup. Thirteen. Actually, that was when they divorced. They had decided
to separate the year before." I let out a sigh and took a sip of my mocha
fudge coffee and looked up at the ceiling. "We were on summer break,
soon to be going into seventh or eighth grade. I don't remember which one
now. I think eighth."
"How old were you?"
"I was just a couple months shy of turning fourteen."
"Why didn't you tell me any of this before, Emily?" Rebecca asked
as she sipped her coffee. I looked at her for a moment as I thought of an
answer. Why hadn't I?
I told you she was in that play we saw. I pointed her out to you."
"You did, but only in passing. You never really told me who she was except
for someone you used to know. I remember exactly what you said, in fact. We
were sitting there in the dark theater, and when she came on stage you said,
you see that girl playing Pippa? I used to know her."
I smiled. "Well, yeah but," Rebecca patted my leg to shut me up.
"Yeah but, nothing. I'm not mad at you, sweetie. I just want to know,
that's all. I want to know about someone who has meant this much to you. I
want you to share this with me."
"Okay." I sat up and kissed her lightly on the lips and caressed
the side of her face with my fingertips, then laid back down. To be honest,
I don't know why I didn't tell you. I guess because it was so long ago, and
it really doesn't matter anymore."
"Emily, if it didn't matter then Beth's passing would not be affecting
you as much as it is." she looked at me in the way that she always did
when she knew I was full of it. I smiled to myself. Kind of reminded me of
how my mother used to look at me.
"We used to do everything together." I said quietly. I looked at
Rebecca and smiled, then found myself looking past her, through her to all
the adventures we shared together.
After Beth's parents divorced we became even closer than we had been, if that
was possible. Any other friends either of us had at school became secondary,
some disappearing altogether from the world we created for the two of us.
Every weekend she spent the night at my house, or on the rare occasion when
her mother would allow it, we stayed at her house. Beth was heavily into the
theater and acting by that time. She would come up with short one-act plays
or scenarios for us to act out.
In the beginning she had to use some pretty heavy powers of persuasion to
get me to participate, but then I got into them as much as she did. I could
remember one of them where she was a shy, James Dean type character, and I
was a beautiful girl he had seen on the street, and just had to have. Halfway
through I stopped her, her bold written script in my hand.
"Beth, why do you always have to play a guy?" I plopped myself down
on my bed, untying the scarf from around my neck that was a "prop",
and I had stolen from my mother's closet. Beth grabbed the end of it and tried
to pull it out of my hands.
"No!" I slapped her hand. "Mine."
"Why, do you want to be the guy?" she said with one of her crooked
smiles.
"No!" I exclaimed. "But why do you have to be?"
"Well, someone has to be. You see, Em, to be a good actor you have to
be able to embody other types that just aren't like you in life." she
ran her hands down either side of her head to re-slick the water slicked hair.
More "props".
I chuckled. "What text book did you read that out of? So why don't you
ever play a girl, then?" I said slyly. She looked at me through her long
bangs.
"Very funny. I already play one of those in life. I don't want to type-cast
myself already. The acting world does that enough." she threw herself
down on the bed and stretched out beside me on her stomach. She rested her
chin on her hands and stared at my headboard. I laid back and stared up at
the ceiling. I noticed the small spot in the corner where the roof had leaked
three years ago. We both were quiet, the only sound coming from the tick of
my alarm clock on the tall dresser across from the bed. Soon after I thought
the ticking of the clock matched my heartbeat. My heart jumped as the bed
squeaked as Beth changed positions to get closer to me. I looked over at her
to find her laying on her side, her head resting on her hand, looking down
at me. She didn't say anything, just looked. I began to feel like a lab rat.
A strange heat was making its way up from my feet to my head. I found it hard
to breath, my mid-section tingling.
"What?" I asked, slight irritation marking my voice for being made
to feel uncomfortable. Or was it vulnerable?
"Nothing. I'm just looking at you. Am I not allowed to look at you?"
Beth asked, sounding hurt.
"Yeah, but why would you want to? I look the same today as I did yesterday
and the day before that!" I sat up and stood from the bed. Beth followed
my movements, surprise filling her eyes. "You are so weird sometimes.
Jeez." I walked over to my dresser and began to rearrange my small collection
of unicorns. Why was I getting so upset?
I looked at my reflection in the dresser mirror. My shoulders were tight,
almost like I was ready to ounce. Surprised I relaxed them, the tension flowing
out. I looked at my face, my mouth shut tight, brows drawn in stubborn anger.
I looked at Beth through the mirror. She still laid on the bed, having rolled
back on her stomach. She was facing the opposite direction, her legs bent
at the knee, crossed at the ankles, and slowly swinging up and down in a hypnotic
rhythm. I could get lost in that rhythm. She was resting on her elbows looking
at something in her hands. Through the thin material of her shirt I could
see the sharp edges of her shoulder blades. It reminded me of the sleek back
of a tiger as it sneaked up on its prey.
"What are you playing with?" I asked, my voice quiet from guilt.
Beth cleared her throat, but did not look at me.
"Later in the script I'm supposed to give this to you." she half
turned and showed me what she held. It was a small gold plastic band. "Remember
I propose?"
"Yeah." I said quietly and sat next to her. I took the ring and
looked at it, turning it over n my hand. I smiled at her. "It's so sudden,
Beth. I thought we'd at least live together first." she laughed. I slid
the ring on the ring finger of my left hand. It was a bit lose, but it would
work.
"Well, honey, if I ain't even allowed ta look at ya, how do you ever
s'pect us ta git married?" she said in one of her southern hillbilly
accents.
"Beth, I'm sorry! I don't know why I got so mad." Beth had moved
onto her side, and I snuggled up next to her, tucking my head in her neck.
She wrapped her arms around me, and held me. I could hear her heartbeat racing
in her chest, her breathing getting faster. Off in the distance I thought
I heard the doorbell.
"I wonder who that is? Probably Aunt Kitty. She is supposed to come over
today."
"Don't know. Maybe. Your mom and her are pretty close, aren't they?"
Beth breathed. She ran her hand down my back, rubbing any remaining tension
out, turning me into jelly. I could only nod. Her hand slid to the hem of
my shirt, and her hand slipped underneath. The warmth of her skin felt so
good I didn't stop her. I didn't want her to stop. She ran her hand up my
spine, then back to my waist, then a bit further over to my side, then around
my ribs.
After her hand passed over an area, I could still feel its heat. A burning
feeling started in my lower stomach and spread. I could feel my chest tighten.
A voice inside my head was confused, and wasn't sure what Beth was doing,
but surely it could not be anything other than a massage to comfort me, could
it?
I closed my eyes as her hand reached the underwire of my bra that covered
the mounds of my newly formed breasts. Her fingers stilled, hand stopped in
its tracks, almost as if she was not sure what she was doing, and was surprised
to find herself there.
With my head tucked down I could not see her face. I wished I could have been
able to read her eyes. Beth was like an open book to me. Suddenly my skin
felt cold as she removed her hand out form under my shirt. I didn't say anything,
and stayed how I was. We laid there for a moment when there was a knock at
my bedroom door. We both froze.
"Emmy? Are you two in there, honey?" my mom said from the other
side.
"Yeah." I said, still in Beth's arms.
The doorknob rattled. "Open the door, honey." I rolled away from
Beth and stood, my legs unsteady as I walked over and unlocked and opened
my door just wide enough to look at her.
"Why did you lock your door?" I just stared at her expectantly.
"You girls were so quiet I didn't even know if you were still here or
not.." she smiled. I just looked at her, impatient, yet grateful for
the interruption. "That Newman girl came by. She wanted to know if you
wanted to go out and do something. I didn't know if you were here or not,
so I told her you girls would go and get her when you got back."
"Mom! We don't want to play with Darla Newman!" I exclaimed. We
didn't want to play with anyone.
"Now, Emily I know that you two have an incredibly busy schedule, but
Darla Newman is new here, and she has no friends. There is no reason why you
and Beth can't go out and play for awhile."
"Mom-!"
"It's not for the rest of your life, Emily. Just a couple of hours."
I looked back at Beth who sat Indian style on the bed looking at me, and shaking
her head. I turned back to my mother.
"We don't want to. Let her go find somebody else."
My mother sighed and shrugged her shoulders. "Okay." she said and
walked back down the hall. I closed the door and leaned against it, my arms
crossed over my chest.
"Jeez. I am almost fifteen, nearly an adult, and she still treats me
like I'm a kid! I don't even like Darla Newman!"
"Come on, Em. Darla is not that bad.." Beth stretched out her long
legs, and stood from the bed. "Besides, you didn't have a problem with
her the other day."
"Yeah, but you weren't home. I had to go with her."
Beth drew her brows and studied me. "What is wrong with you lately, Em?
You are so short tempered. Everything and everyone is making you mad."
"I don't know!" I yelled. I walked over to the bed and plopped myself
down face first. "I hate my mother. " I whined into the wrinkled
bedspread.
"No you don't either. What did you tell me? They are your parents. You're
not allowed to hate them." Beth said from somewhere near me "Come
on. Let's go down to the creek."
What the neighborhood kids had dubbed as The Toilet Bowl, was the small creek
that was about half a mile away from our houses. The creek ran along a distant
bike trail, and ran into a large pond that was walled in by a ring of huge
rocks, and was the neighborhood swimming hole. The 'Bowl' was surrounded by
trees, and dense wild foliage providing shade, and much privacy for the older
kids who would go skinny dipping.
Beth and I sat on the lip of a large rock ledge that sidled up to the water,
our feet in the pond's coolness. We sat side by side, me looking into the
murky depths, Beth looking at me.
"What's going on with you, Em? You are acting reeeeeally strange."
she chuckled to herself. "I thought I was supposed to be the one who
had an attitude. You're the good kid, remember? At least that's what my mom
always says."
"Why?" I asked, not looking at my friend, my eyes riveted on the
water as the sun beat down on it, making it glow.
"I don't know." Beth shrugged. "That's just what she says."
"Well, that's stupid. you don't have an attitude. you're perfect."
I could feel my friend's eyes boring into me. I felt a wave of heat rush over
me for the hundredth time that day. I began to feel uncomfortable. "Let's
swim." I jumped up and tugged my shirt over my head, leaving my small
bra on, and unbuttoned my white cut-offs. In my underwear and bra, I dove
into the shallow depths of the pond.
"Emily!" I heard Beth call out as my head broke through the surface.
I ground the water out of my eyes and turned to look at her as she stood on
the rock ledge, my shorts in her hand.
"What?"
"Look. You're, you're bleeding!" she exclaimed showing me the red
stain in the crotch of the denim.
"what?" I swam over to her looking at the material with disbelieving
eyes. Sure enough. A spot of blood the size of a silver dollar awaited me.
I pulled myself out of the water and looked down at my underwear where I found
a similar stain made pink as the water had rinsed it off some.
"Oh my god!" I cried,. I swallowed as I felt hot tears sting behind
my eyelids. I felt emotions flowing through me at an alarming rate, and I
had no idea why. I wanted to cry, laugh, and yell all at the same time. Beth
put her arm around my shoulders.
"Are you okay, Em? Do you need to sit down? Your mom said that it can
make you feel weak, or even cramp up. Are you okay?"
"I'm fine!" I raged, suddenly feeling more than a little embarrassed.
I pushed her away from me, and tugged my shirt back on. I took the shorts
from her hand, and began to rinse them in the water of the pond, praying to
God that I could get the majority of the stain out so I could walk home. The
red stayed where it was. "My mom's gonna kill me." I sobbed as I
rubbed with my fingertips.
"No she's not. She'll understand, Em." I stood on shaky legs, and
struggled to pull the wet denim over my legs and butt. "Well this explains
a lot." Beth smiled one of her crooked grins, her blue eyes twinkling.
"What is that supposed to mean? 'This explains a lot'?" I fired
back, angry that Beth would dare make jokes at a crisis like this.
"Your mom said that a woman will experience mood swings, and girl, you
have definitely had them."
"I have not! I have been perfectly fine. Besides. What does my mother
know, anyway?" I began to walk away from her, my wet feet making my sneakers
soggy leading to every step squishing. That made Beth laugh even harder, and
added to my misery. Though I was being childish and terribly difficult, deep
down I was so thankful that Beth was at my side at what I knew, even at the
downside of fourteen, was a pivotal moment n my life as a woman.
"So did your mom get mad?" Rebecca grinned.
"No, of course not. In fact, to add to my humiliation, she grabbed me
in the front yard with neighbors all around us in their yards, and hugged
me and made a huge fuss about her baby becoming a woman. I was mortified!"
Rebecca threw her head back and laughed, her hand rubbing up and down my calf.
"But then what self-serving teen wouldn't be?"
"So Beth hadn't started her yet, obviously?" she asked, still chuckling.
"No. That came a few months later. She was lucky; she started in the
middle of the night, though it was my mother who helped her through it."
"Why?"
"Oh, Beth's mom was just far too into herself. She couldn't find the
time, I imagine. Between the drinking and the men." I said dryly, remembering
how often Beth's mom would leave her daughter to figure out her own problems.
We were both silent for a moment, both lost in our separate thoughts. "Oh,"
I said, grabbing the hand that rested on my knee, our fingers intertwining.
"How did the doctor go today?" Rebecca leaned her head back against
the couch, her tired eyes looking at me.
"He said that if it doesn't take this time, we'll try one more time.
If that doesn't take, then he suggested you and I start thinking of another
plan of action. Maybe we could think about stopping-"
"No. We'll try again." I said sternly. One of us had to stay strong.
"Oh, baby. What if this doesn't work?" she whispered, that little
line appearing between her eyes that always did when she was worried or upset.
I reached my hand out, and rubbed it away with my thumb.
"It will work, sweetie. It has to." We stared into each other's
eyes for a moment, neither wanting to break the connection. I needed to feel
her tonight, to know that she was really here, and everything would be okay.
With a sigh Rebecca smiled.
"Well, babe," she said, finally giving my thigh a squeeze. "We
should get to bed. It's getting late." she leaned over, and kissed me
softly, but I grabbed on to her and deepened the kiss, holding her to me with
both hands framing her face, leaving us both breathless. "Wow."
she breathed. "It is definitely time for bed."
Part 2
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