Six? I only wrote five. That I remember, anyway.
She continues reading, “Make love with Vivian in a Fu King motel because she’s not on her Fu King period anymore.”
She doesn’t need to tell me twice. I set down my burger and fall to my knees on the shag carpet beside the bed, grinning from head to toe. I mean, if it was actually possible to grin from head to toe then that’s exactly what I’m doing.
“I believe you owe me a piece of pie,” I say, grabbing her by the ankles and pulling her to the edge of the bed.
***
I’m up at the asscrack of dawn taking another shower when Vivian walks in to pee. “Please don’t flush,” I say nicely.
She flushes.
I jump out of the scalding water with soap still all over me. I slip in my own suds and trip over the edge of the tub, knocking my shin on the toilet. “Goshdangit, Vivian!” I yell through the open bathroom door. “How many times are you going to boil me in shower?”
I rip one of the towels off the rod, clench it around my dripping, sudsy body and hop into the bedroom. She’s sitting on the edge of the bed, rubbing the miniature jar of free-with-room lotion on her legs.
“I can’t believe I’ve been reduced to motel lotion,” she says like she can’t even see me bleeding half to death.
I thrust my skinned shin under her nose. “Look what you did.”
“Poor baby,” she coos, leaning down to kiss it.
I jerk my leg away from her approaching lips. I don’t want to be mothered right now. I’m feeling a certain amount of righteous indignation about my boo-boo, and it’s high time she realizes how much damage she does by invading my privacy with her ill-timed peeing. “I’d like…just for once…to take a shower without you flushing the toilet.”
“Gawd,” she drawls, “Look who woke up cranky this morning. I guess PMS is contagious.”
“It’s not PMS,” I say, throwing the useless towel to the floor and grabbing my dirty pants off the dresser. “It pisses me off every day of the month when you do that. Especially when I’ve asked you a million times not to.”
“I can’t help it that you always take a shower at the exact same time that I always have to go to the bathroom.”
“You’re not going to turn this into my fault,” I say, hopping around the room with one foot in and one foot out, trying to get my pants on while I’m still dripping wet.
She pulls her shirt off over her head and reaches down to grab the little lotion bottle.
Dammit. All the blood rushes out my head and goes south and now I can’t remember what I was going to say. And that pisses me off even more. “And you always do that, too.”
“Do what?” she asks innocently, pouring some lotion on her tits and rubbing it in in little circles that completely mesmerize me.
I turn my back to her, pull the pants up and take a deep breath. “Every time you’re losing an argument, you whip out your tits and I forget what I was arguing about.”
“Oh, so now you’re mad at me because you’re so tit-obsessed you can’t think straight? That’s my fault, too?”
I grab my sports bra and wiggle into it. “You do it on purpose.”
“You can turn around now,” she says with a not-very-well-hidden chuckle.
I peek over my shoulder. She has a shirt on. Now that her tits are stowed again, I remember what was pissing me off. I decide to take a stand. I need to be firm. So, I tell her in a fed-up voice, “I just want some privacy in the shower for five minutes. Just five fucking minutes.” I even point my finger at her just so she can see how very serious I am.
She shoots me a warning look while she laces up her tennis shoes. I pretend not to see it because I’ll be damned if I’m going to be one of those hen-pecked old men who swallow their pride every time their wife looks at them cross-eyed. “Is that too much to ask?”
I guess it is because she stands up and cocks her head at me with one eye squinted like she’s targeting down a scope. “You know what I ask, Lee? I want you to stop drinking the fucking milk out of the jug and get a goddamn glass to pour it into. That’s what I ask.”
I snort through my nose to tell her how childish she’s being. “Is that all?”
“No. While we’re on the subject of listing all my faults, let me tell you a few of your own.”
I shrug. “Go ahead.”
“I hate it when you eat the spray cheese straight out of the can.”
“Well, you don’t eat spray cheese. I’m the only one in the house who does. So who cares if it’s just my lips that’ll be touching it anyway?”
“It’s germy, that’s why.”
I pull the shirt over my head where she can’t see me roll my eyes at her. “Everybody in the world does it, Vivian. They made the can to do that. If they didn’t want you to spray it right into your mouth they wouldn’t have made it so damn easy to do.”
“Well, by that logic, they shouldn’t have put the toilet next to the shower where it’s so damn easy to pee while somebody’s taking a shower.”
“You don’t have to flush it and make the cold water go away!”
“I’m not going to pee and not flush! That’s so gross!”
“And you always put the toilet paper roll on backward. It’s supposed to go on like how a motorcycle throttle works. Roll toward you.” I rev an imaginary throttle at her. “Vroom, vroom. Toward you.”
She scoops all her girlie crap off the nightstand and back into her red bag. “At least I put the toilet paper on the doo-hickey. You never even change it. And…I hate it when you use your finger as a knife to scoop the peanut butter out of the jar.”
“You really should get some therapy about your weird food issues,” I say, grabbing my socks and shoes.
“If everything were left up to you, you’d be eating right out of jars and never flushing the toilet.”
“I flush!” I throw a sock at her. “I always flush.”
Vivian snatches the sock out of the air and hot-potatoes it back to me. “I also don’t like it when you dust the furniture with your dirty socks.”
“What?”
“Don’t act like you don’t know what I’m talking about. I’ve seen you. You take off your stinky socks and dust the furniture all the way to the dirty clothes hamper with it.”
I didn’t know she’d seen me do that. “It’s called multitasking,” I explain. “The whole house stays dusted and I don’t have to set aside time just to dust. All I have to do is take different routes to the dirty clothes hamper each time. It’s a brilliant idea.”
“It’s a friggin’ gross idea,” she says disgustedly. “And I hate it when you pee while in the shower.”
“How the hell do you know that?”
“I didn’t. I just guessed. Because that would be another one of your brilliant multitasking ideas.” She lowers her voice a little and puts on a stupid hillbilly accent, imitating me, “That way I don’t have to set aside time just to pee.”
“I don’t talk like that, you’re just trying to make me mad so I can’t argue. And, it is a good idea. It not only saves on time, it saves water. And you brush your teeth in the shower, so what’s the difference?” I throw back at her.
“I don’t want to stand in your piss is the difference!”
“Pppphhhh…” I blow at her and flap my hand. “Pee is sterile when it comes out, everybody knows that.”
She crosses her arms and smirks like she just ran a category on Jeopardy. “If that’s true then why don’t we take baths in piss?”
I am simply not going to dignify that so-called logic with a response. I put on my other sock and don’t look at her.
“Oh, no…” she says, quietly. “Don’t tell me you pee in the bathtub, too?
“Nooo.” I overact so she won’t know I’m lying.
She grabs the shoe out of my hand and whacks me in the arm with it, saying, “Goddammit, Lee, you’re so gross. I can’t believe I ever took a bath with you!”
“I don’t pee in the t
ub!” I protest, grabbing the shoe back. I add, softly, “It just happened that once when I was so pregnant I couldn’t help it. And you weren’t even in the tub. Very long.”
She makes some kind of noise that sounds like “Aaarrrggghhhh,” slings her big red bag over one shoulder and slings over the other, “I also hate the way you put on your socks and shoes.”
“What?”
“You do it wrong. You put a sock on your right foot, then a shoe on your right foot. Then you do the left foot.”
“So?”
“That’s not how it goes!” she yells exasperatedly. “It goes sock sock shoe shoe. Not sock shoe sock shoe.”
“My way’s better,” I explain with a great deal of patience. “That way if the house catches on fire or something while I’m still putting on my socks and shoes, I have at least one foot socked and shoed and I can hop on it out the door without burning my feet. And I do my right foot first so I can hop on my best foot.”
“Are you actually telling me that you sat down and thought all that shit through?”
“Well…yeah.”
She throws both hands in the air like she’s given up. “That’s what else I can’t stand about you! You think about shit like that!”
I grab her elbow and pull her to me, saying in my sexy voice that I know she likes, “Wanna have makeup sex now?”
She pushes me away, saying under her breath, “You’re going to be lucky to ever have sex again.” She heads for the door.
Now that’s not playing fair. That’s a blow below the belt. So, I feel completely justified when I say, “You mean with you.”
She freezes in the doorway, one foot already outside and arches her back like a cornered alley cat. Shit. I probably should not have said that. Out loud anyway.
She turns around to face me and slowly flips each of her words at me like she’s one of those knife-throwers at a carnival. “Were you planning on having sex with somebody else?”
Vivian, the knife-thrower, just popped all nine balloons outlining my body. And she’s still holding one last knife.
I resist the urge to cover my face with my hands. “No. Of course not,” I say, weakly.
“Is that next on your list of things you hate about me? You don’t like me in bed?”
“You know that’s not true.”
“Maybe you’d like to tell me exactly what you find so despicable about me in bed.”
I have a feeling she just backed me into a trap. And nothing I can say is going to get me out of it. I plop down hard onto the bed and put my face in my hands.
She urges, with a fake-sweet voice, “Go ahead, Lee. I’m listening.”
“Nothing. I wouldn’t change a thing,” I manage to squeak.
How did this happen? It was only a few hours ago when we were having a great time in bed. I lick my finger, raise my pant leg and pretend to be absorbed in wiping the blood off my shin. Maybe she’ll see the blood and feel sorry for me.
“Don’t lick your wounds like some damn dog,” she says. “You’ll get worms.”
I give her my biggest, brightest smile like I just thought of a really good idea. “Hey! You wanna have makeup sex?”
Her answer is a sour look that curdles my insides.
“Oh. I already asked that didn’t I?”
She spins on her heels and marches back to the open door. I guess that means we’re not having makeup sex. “I don’t get it. I’m the one with a skinned, bleeding shin and scalded hide, but you’re the one who gets to be mad.”
She turns back around and points one finger at me. I hate it when she points at me. Nothing good ever happens when she points at me.
“You know there’s plenty of others out there who would have me in a heartbeat,” she threatens.
At least it sure sounds like a threat. Plus, I know she’s right. I think the best thing I can do right now is pretend to be dead. I flop back on the bed, throw my arms above my head, exposing my soft vulnerable underbelly and say, “I don’t want to fight anymore.”
“Fine,” she snaps. “Let’s just go get the fucking diamond.” She quickly places her hand over her mouth and looks at me all fake and wide-eyed. “Oh, I’m sorry, did I say the word fucking?” Her voice changes to a growl, “I didn’t mean to remind you that that’s what you won’t be doing anytime soon!”
She slams the door behind her.
I grab the pillow behind my head and throw it as hard as I can at the door.
Shit. Why do women always do that? They get mad and the first thing they do is refuse sex. That doesn’t make sense to me. I’m a woman, but I don’t refuse sex. That would be like punishing myself.
I almost yell at the closed door, “Too bad you weren’t around for women’s suffrage. You could’ve led them in a ‘no sex till we get to vote’ movement and we would’ve been voting one hundred years earlier!”
And then I think about screaming, “I bet you can teach women all over the world to clamp their legs shut and there won’t be any more wars!”
But I don’t yell either one of those things because #1: They sound really stupid, and #2: I hope to eventually get laid again.
The door slams back open and I sit straight up. Vivian throws her purse into the chair and puts her fists on her hips.
“It was just a pillow,” I say. “And I waited until you were out the door to throw it even.”
“I have something to say.”
“Okay,” I intone, waving that one little word around like a white flag.
“I’m pregnant.”
Money shot on Vivian. Camera moves in for a close-up. Her lips quiver, her eyes tear up, she takes one long, shaky breath.
Commercial break.
My mind goes blank for three minutes.
When my mind comes back, it finds me standing in a pile of feathers with a shredded pillow in my hand. The dresser is lying on its side. The artwork has been pulled from the walls, leaving huge bolts sticking out. And I don’t even know where the bedclothes went.
Vivian is standing exactly where she was. “Are you through now?” she asks, throwing her purse back over her shoulder.
“You just had your period.”
“No,” she says. “I spotted a tiny bit is all.”
“You lied,” I say and throw a handful of feathers at her. They make it about one foot in the air before floating to the floor.
She looks at the feathers and says, “I thought I was. But I wasn’t. I didn’t think I was lying when I lied.”
“Who’s the father?” I ask numbly.
“You.”
“Fuck you!” I scream. “Who’s the fucking father?! Who have you been fucking while I was busy having our baby and feeding our baby and…and…all the other baby stuff?!”
“I haven’t been fucking anybody except you and not much of that!”
“Well, I don’t have sperm!”
“I don’t know, Lee! All I know is my tits are swollen, I’ve been throwing up, I’ve gained ten pounds and I’m not bleeding!”
“You must’ve fucked somebody! Unless it’s another immaculate conception, and I don’t even believe in the first one.”
“I can’t believe this,” she snarls. “I should’ve known this would happen. One little snafu in our relationship and you won’t even FUCKING BELIEVE ME!”
She slams the door so hard behind her that one of the hinges pops out of the frame.
“This is not a SNAFU! A snafu is throwing away my Miracle Whip! This is not a SNAFU!” I take three giant steps to the door, open it and slam it as hard as I can about fifty billion times. When it completely pops out of the frame, I heave it onto the bed.
And she’s just out there sitting on the back of the bike with her purse clutched across her tits like she’s waiting for a Sunday afternoon drive.
***
We’re on the bike, heading northish. The cool desert air puts goosebumps up and down my arms, but the rising sun is toasty on my back. It won’t be long before toast turns to roast, though, so I wa
nt to make as much time as possible while the desert’s still bearable. The lonely two-lane road serves up mirage after mirage, and I cut through each one at ninety miles per hour.
I’m trying like hell not to think about the whole pregnancy thing. Usually when a problem rears its ugly head, I bury my ugly head in the sand and hope it won’t see me. But this problem just keeps poking me in the ribs.
I want to believe her, but there’s just no way in hell. I keep trying to think up ways she could get pregnant without actually doing the deed with somebody. Sit on a dirty toilet seat? Swim in a warm pool? Maybe when she went for her pap smear the doctor didn’t wash his hands and he had jizz on his hands? It’s all so friggin’ far-fetched that even my overactive imagination isn’t buying any of it.
The last time we had a fight this big is what I refer to in my head as The Great Miracle Whip Debacle. I had just changed the oil in Hell Camino, washed my hands at the kitchen sink and Vivian was chopping vegetables at the kitchen counter. I sneaked a peek at the vegetables she was slicing and wrinkled my nose. I slapped together a couple pieces of bread around a slice of American cheese.
“You’ll spoil your supper,” she said without even looking at me.
“Fine with me,” I replied.
She shot me a look and that’s when I realized she was holding a big-ass knife in her hand and maybe my answer wasn’t the one she wanted. I quickly amended, “I’ll be hungry again by the time you finish mutilating and boiling the healthy stuff.”
I opened the fridge door, rummaged around for a while, then finally asked, “Where’s the Miracle Whip?”
Vivian gestured with the knife. “The mayonnaise is right there.”
“Yeah, I can see that,” I said, “you’ve neatly arranged the whole condiment family in the fridge door from tallest to smallest. But the Miracle Whip is missing. It should be here right between the sugar-free ketchup and the kosher mustard.”
“Use mayo instead,” she said, emphasizing with a couple of hearty chops.
“There has to be Miracle Whip. I picked some up at the store yesterday.”
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