Melt

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Melt Page 8

by Selene Castrovilla


  steel without the

  shackling.

  Who knew who

  knew who

  knew

  I could feel good

  without

  feeling

  bad.

  All those nights

  I spent in my bed hands huddled under my belly clutching at my fingers trying to find something

  some

  way

  to feel better caught in that trap in that hell under siege overrun by all that screaming thrashing

  bashing

  going down

  downstairs

  all those nights these wraps they would’ve been perfect.

  Powerful I feel

  power like I’m jam-packed with power

  energized

  I feel

  control

  heated sweeping control Jesus Christ for the first time I feel control.

  Fuckin’ A.

  I don’t never wanna take these mothers off.

  Dorothy

  He’s so peaceful now, he’s got this calm easy feeling to him. He’s still got the wraps on, he’s naked except for the wraps, he’s holding me with the wraps on and I feel like I’m with a Cinderella man, like these wraps are the equivalent of a dress for the ball, trimmings for a new life.

  He leans his head on mine, his pulse beats into my crown.

  “What are you guys doing later?” I ask. He’s hanging out with his friends tonight, and unfortunately that pretty much guarantees the consumption of alcohol. I worry about Joey—he hasn’t gotten into any really bad incidents since the one at the bridge, but he’s had some scuffles. I always feel like he’s one drink away from disaster. Still, he’s so tranquil now, so level. It’s hard to imagine him hurting anyone, but it’s like he said — for him, there is no sanity, no normal. He could snap at any moment. He also said when he’s drunk, he starts to think that’s the real him — that’s who he truly is.

  And that is one frightening thought.

  “We’re gonna play cards.”

  Super. “You mean you’re going to play drinking card games,” I say. Those games have such enticing names, like Circle of Death and Brain Damage.

  “Yeah, I guess,” he says. “You can come, if you want.”

  He knows I won’t. “Thanks, but I really don’t feel like watching you destroy your liver in endless hands of Drink Bitch.”

  “Are you a teenager or, like, a parent?” he asks. His tone is kidding, but he’s half-not.

  “I’m someone who’s confident enough to know I don’t have to drink to have fun.”

  “Well, excuse me …,” he says. He takes in a breath like he’s about to say more, but he doesn’t.

  I don’t want to argue with him. It’s the last thing I want, especially today. And I also know that for him, the drinking isn’t just about partying, getting stupid.

  If only it were.

  His pulse is still thumping into my head. I close my eyes, try to get lost in the rhythm of it. But I have to ask…

  “Joey … you’re only drinking beer, right?”

  He says nothing. There’s only the thump, thump, thump. Faster now.

  I open my eyes, face the concrete wall ahead of us, face the black poster hanging. The Nike symbol’s on it, in red. The words ‘Just Do It’ are printed in stark white underneath. “Joey ….”

  “C’mon, Doll. The guys’ll think I’m a wuss if I don’t drink the rum.”

  “Oh sure, you can’t have them thinking you’re a big pussy,” I say sharply. I pull away now, turn and face him. “Afraid they’ll think you’re whipped?”

  He doesn’t answer. He looks torn, like he doesn’t want to fight either, but also like doesn’t want to give in, change his intentions.

  That stops me.

  He doesn’t want to change.

  If he doesn’t want to change, what am I doing here?

  Deep down, I’ve had this plan. That I’d find out what was eating him, help him confront it, and poof he’d be okay. He’d stop drinking and smoking weed. He’d change.

  I assumed he’d change.

  But what if he doesn’t? Even when I get through to his core, what if he doesn’t want to change?

  What if the real Joey is the drunk Joey?

  Oh god.

  Joey

  That Nike poster hangs in front of us it’s like a red cape flagging a bull.

  Just do it.

  Just

  do

  it.

  Yeah right.

  How many times can I just do it before I wind up back behind steel bars or buried

  in a wood box?

  Asshole

  I’m such a thick shithead.

  Doll all she wants me to do is

  think.

  Think.

  Think before I

  just do

  it.

  Here I am giving her grief and that’s all she wants.

  Dorothy

  I’m staring off somewhere. I’m not even looking at him. Then I hear him say, “Okay.”

  Cotton rests on each of my cheeks, his fingers touch my temple. He’s staring into me, bringing me back.

  Back to him.

  His eyes are earnest. “Okay, you’re right. I promise, I’ll just drink beer tonight.”

  As ludicrous as that affirmation is—he really needs a ride to AA for his birthday—I feel intense relief. He’s not slipping away. He’s on the level field with me, he’s playing my game.

  I can still hope ….

  I can still believe that one day he’ll stop drinking altogether.

  One day, he’ll stop. He’ll change.

  He wants to.

  He kisses me, and we fall to the mat together.

  Dorothy

  It’s 9:11 p.m. and I’m channel surfing on the couch with Mom and Dad. I was supposed to go study with Amy and a few other girls, but I wasn’t in the mood. I’ve decided that Amy’s okay if you accept her as she is—her primary goal in life is to be popular and admired, but hey, you have to appreciate that she’s up front about it. And once I made it clear that I was going to date Joey no matter what anyone thought, she accepted it. I don’t like all the gossiping, though, and so I can only hang out with her and her crowd now and then. And tonight, I didn’t feel up to it. I just want to veg, after all that went on with Joey. It was beautiful, but it was exhausting.

  He had to go home for dinner, he said his mom always bakes a cake for him on his birthday. I wanted to go with him. I wanted to meet his family; I wanted to sing to him; I wanted to watch him wish and blow out his candles. But he wouldn’t let me come. He wouldn’t even discuss it. At first it seemed like he was going to say something, tell me something. He had this anxious air around him, like he wanted to spill something out. Like in my room that day, when he told me everything he’d done.

  Was there more?

  But then he pursed his lips together and swallowed—it was as though he choked down the words, forced them down his throat—and when he did speak, his voice was firm. He said, “Doll, trust me. You don’t even wanna go there.”

  It was good that I came home, anyway. My parents both made an attempt to talk to me at dinner—Mom’s voice was actually normal for once—and over spinach fettuccine, salad, and garlic bread we had a lively conversation about school and about their new offices in Garden City. That’s why we moved, because they brought their practices to Long Island. They got a great deal in a luxury building, saved a bundle in rent, and now they have adjacent suites and lunch every day. Cute, isn’t it? Anyway, I was so happy to have parents back that I agreed to hang with them afterward, watch tv.

  I’m sandwiched between them, and it’s nice. It’s like old times.

  Dad’s flicking through channels—we just caught the tail-end of Good Will Hunting. Huge faces flash by on the giant plasma screen as Dad now hunts for something we’d all enjoy. There’s the Law and Order guys, there’s Jack Nicholson trying to hack up his family in The Shining, ther
e’s Queen Latifah in one of those feel-good-about-yourself-no-matter-what movies, and now there’s the Lollipop Guild, welcoming Dorothy to Munchkinland.

  Dad leaves it on.

  I say, “You know, those Munchkins really make me laugh. Dorothy kept telling them she wasn’t a witch, but they just wouldn’t listen.”

  Mom says, “Small-minded.”

  Dad says, “You think that’s the real point of this movie?”

  I say, “Let’s not psychoanalyze The Wizard of Oz.”

  Joey

  This whining little motherfucker Holden Caulfield

  what’s his

  problem?

  If I got packed off to some

  candy-ass

  boarding school if they shipped me the fuck outta

  this

  place I sure as hell wouldn’t do nothing to get booted out to get

  sent

  back

  home.

  I’m laying in bed reading this book just ‘cause Doll gave it to me I wanna know what the hell she thinks I have in common with this

  tool

  who trolls around

  sponging

  for company and

  cocktails.

  Cocktails.

  Christ.

  Drink from the bottle dude.

  Meanwhile I bailed on my friends tonight. I was just too tired after all that stuff with Doll god what an awesome day and then I came home I had

  cake with Mom Jimmy Warren and

  Pop.

  Pop

  actually gave me a

  rap

  on the shoulder wished me

  happy birthday

  but in a way that’s harder when he’s

  cool

  it knocks me

  off my

  game

  when I get a taste of the

  Pop

  the rest of the world knows. The

  stand

  up

  guy who’ll always pull over to help someone

  stuck on the side of the

  road. Mister good time who’s

  cracking his buddies up

  so amusing

  down at the bar

  plus

  he’s buying the next

  round.

  No one knows the

  Pop

  behind our

  closed front

  door.

  So anyway I was just too frigging exhausted and I wanted to lay down and read my book.

  I got my wraps on now

  I put them on again.

  When I got home

  before dinner

  I came right

  upstairs

  brought up all my stuff to

  my room and I

  unraveled

  my wraps.

  I did it partly cause I didn’t feel like explaining or

  sharing yet with no one about the

  boxing

  and also on account of I wanted to

  keep

  them

  clean.

  But I looped them on again as soon as I got in my room

  after cake.

  Doll did them better so

  neat so

  sleek so

  perfect like a

  new

  skin

  how’d she do that? Now they’re

  lumpy they’re

  thick they’re

  bulky clumps I look like a

  mental

  patient fresh from a suicide try gone wrong but who gives a shit my hands they feel amazing.

  I think of her again I think of Doll I look over at the card she gave me it’s

  propped

  up on my night stand next to a

  half-empty bottle of Bud.

  I promised I wouldn’t drink no rum so here I am

  downing

  piss-warm

  beer

  aww it don’t matter anyhow

  it does the same job in the long run.

  I think of

  her

  the way she wanted to

  come over tonight she wanted to

  meet

  my

  folks yeah that’d be something.

  I wanted to tell her I almost did I almost let it all loose about

  Pop.

  The words were there at the

  edge

  of my tongue they were ready to

  leap

  but I

  stopped

  them I stopped them I

  stopped

  them I gulped a wad of spit and shoved them words

  down

  down

  way the hell

  down ‘cause I’m

  scared.

  I’m

  scared

  she’ll leave me that

  that’ll

  be

  it

  my freak show family is too much for her

  I’m too much of a

  freak

  for her.

  I’m

  scared

  to tell what my

  pop

  is how he hurts my mom how I

  watch.

  I’m

  scared

  she’ll think I’ll

  be

  that monster one day and I’m

  scared

  she’ll be right.

  I’m scared of changing the way she sees things

  forever

  changing the

  shading

  of her world

  she’s got no

  clue

  how

  dark

  things can get.

  I been

  covering

  so long I’m

  scared

  of the light. Even after today after all we been

  through

  even though I felt so

  light

  with her still I can’t do it I can’t show myself

  in

  this

  light it’s too much.

  Me and my family

  we been passing so long.

  People

  pass

  us by

  they

  pass

  our house our neat flower beds our

  shiny

  aluminum siding

  all those

  stupid

  smiling

  people

  all those

  deaf dumb blind

  dense like a brick passers-by

  they got no idea

  what’s

  up

  inside.

  What would they do if they knew?

  She wants to come in.

  I’m scared.

  For me.

  For her.

  I can’t tell her.

  Ole Frank Sinatra he starts wailing away downstairs on

  Pop’s

  stereo.

  Come fly with me.

  It’s a signal to me

  it’s like the Bat Signal reversed

  ‘stead of telling me to

  spring

  into

  action it’s telling me to stay put in my cave.

  It’s a signal that

  Pop’s

  getting hammered he’s slamming them down getting ready for another night of hammering.

  Something crashes sounds like glass.

  Sinatra wants to

  pack

  up and fly

  away.

  Not an option,

  Frankie

  baby.

  Not yet.

  I fold my arms

  together.

  Tight.

  Soft black cloth

  coats

  my goose bumps it

  settles

  those little raised hairs.

  Happy frigging birthday to me.

  Cheers.

  Dorothy

  We watch the Wicked Witch of the West s
ink to the floor, shrieking all the way.

  I ask, “Why on earth would anyone keep a bucket of water around when they know it could destroy them?”

  Mom says, “It’s just a story, honey. You can’t think about it too much.”

  Dad says, “The bucket has to be there. How else would they melt the witch?”

  My point exactly.

  Seven

  Joey

  I must be

  nuts

  bringing her here when I swore to myself

  I

  wouldn’t.

  But she kept at me

  she wouldn’t let up she wanted to meet my folks she wanted to see my

  house she wanted to see my

  room.

  Yesterday my mom got a call she found out my grandma in Florida came down with double pneumonia. So Mom she took Warren they flew down to go see her and they won’t be back for three days.

  Doll

  when she heard that

  she got this idea to cut

  out of school come over my house while

  Pop’s

  working his shift.

  We didn’t get to borrow Jason’s garage

  at all this week on account of him and some of the

  other guys

  training

  heavy

  for a lifting contest

  so that left us

  outside and horny.

  Even if I

  broke my

  word

  to

  myself

  and agreed to go to her house when her

  parents

  are working, we couldn’t. Her mom

  finally found a housekeeper she liked

  enough

  to hire for

  keeps

  she was testing them out since they moved here.

  Guess she’s as picky for her

  home as she is for her daughter.

  Hey you can’t blame her.

  So I thought,

  Why not bring her

  home?

  We get some inside

  alone

  time and it’ll make her

  happy she gets

  part

  of what she wants.

  Maybe that’ll be enough.

  Christ I hope so.

  I gotta admit it’s unbelievable having her here in my room in my bed she smells so good she’s like a Glade Air Freshener in my stale world maybe her scent’ll linger when she’s gone.

  We’re laying here holding each other

  just finished making love

  we did it the minute we got through my

  bedroom door

  we just about fell onto the bed in a

  tangle.

  She wanted to do it downstairs when we walked in she was all over

  me I was about to lay her down on the couch but then I caught that old

  love seat

  in the corner of my

  eye

  and then I just

  couldn’t.

  I didn’t tell her that of course add that to my list of things I don’t

  tell her

  makes me feel so bad but I

 

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