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Sister Slam and the Poetic Motormouth Road Trip

Page 6

by Linda Oatman High


  I shouted at people

  on sidewalks and streets.

  It was a smorgasbord

  of humanity,

  and profanity

  slipped from my lips.

  “Holy shit!

  I never saw so

  many different

  races in the

  same place!”

  It was a

  rat race, a

  street pace

  of faces

  from light

  to dark

  and in between:

  more skin

  colors

  than exist

  in the

  white-bread world

  of Banesville.

  “If we look

  real close,

  we might

  see the host

  of a game show,

  or a sports hero,

  or a size-zero

  supermodel,”

  Twig said.

  “We might

  see the

  grooviest movie

  stars,

  or TV stars,

  or famous players

  of guitars!

  Who knows

  who goes

  in all the limos?”

  Horns blared,

  and nobody cared

  or stared

  or dared to bare

  their teeth

  in the hint of

  a grin.

  I didn’t know

  where to begin

  to look.

  “I could

  write a book

  of poems

  about this city,”

  I said.

  I felt New York

  in my bones

  and in my flesh:

  a mishmash mesh

  of a place

  that starts

  the race

  for the rest

  of America.

  “This is just

  like you see on TV!”

  I said. Jake just

  smiled and shook his head.

  I was in a state

  of hysteria, laughing and staring,

  not even caring

  what Jake thought,

  or thinking that I ought

  to be cool.

  Jake played

  tour guide, driving

  fearlessly in bumper-to—

  bumper craziness, unfazed.

  “Here we are!”

  Jake announced,

  proud. “The Waldorf-Astoria, to your left.”

  Jake coasted

  to the sidewalk.

  “Is this where you park?”

  I asked, in the dark

  about how a car gets

  parked in a place like this.

  Jake shook his head.

  “Parking garage,” he said.

  It was like a ballet:

  a valet and a mellow

  yellow-tasseled bellboy

  and a top-hatted, tailcoated

  doorman, all in a dance

  of service just for us.

  They made such a fuss,

  tipping their caps

  and zapping us with happy

  smiles and all that.

  I felt so fat,

  and not quite

  dressed right,

  and tried

  with all my might

  to be polite.

  Jake knew

  just how to act,

  not lacking in manners

  or cosmopolitan coolness.

  He opened

  the trunk, looking like

  such a hunk, and lifted

  a guitar case from inside,

  along with a cool blue suitcase.

  “I’ll get your bags,

  miss,” said the

  whistling bell guy,

  and it was then

  that I realized

  that … Duh!

  Twig and I

  were so totally dumb,

  and our suitcases

  (and wallets)

  were on their way

  to the place

  where wrecked cars go.

  Lesson 15

  Never Wash Your Face in the Bidet

  “You can borrow my clothes,”

  said Jake as we waited

  for the elevator.

  “Thanks, but what size?

  Don’t lie. Your pants

  don’t have a chance

  of fitting my ass,” I said.

  “And Twig’s too skinny.”

  “My mom’s a stick,” Jake said.

  “Her stuff will fit Twig.

  And my dad’s big.

  I mean, slightly large.

  Or you could just

  charge your credit card

  and buy a whole bunch

  of new clothes,

  like at Saks or Macy’s

  or somewhere.”

  I sighed. I could

  have died. My wide

  load was so fat

  that it’d compare

  to someone’s dad.

  This was bad. Way sad.

  So I just tried to laugh.

  “Can you believe

  how brainless

  we were, to leave our

  bags in the car!”

  I didn’t want

  to confess that I didn’t possess

  a MasterCard or Visa

  or any other plastic money.

  Pops was funny about stuff

  like that, and never allowed

  me to apply for credit cards.

  “The interest will get the best

  of you,” he always said.

  But now my head was exploding.

  I had no clothes to wear.

  I’d have to be a nudist

  in New York.

  What a doofus of a dork.

  The Waldorf was the fanciest

  hotel I’d ever been in.

  I couldn’t believe

  we were going to sleep here.

  The lobby alone put my home

  to shame. I felt lame,

  such a mess in my polyester vest

  over a 1970s dress, bopping across

  the lobby in scuffed-up

  combat boots. Everybody else

  was cute or rich: bitchy rich.

  A lady in the lobby,

  wearing a mink,

  with a pink hat,

  wouldn’t even bat

  her snobby eyes at us.

  “What’s up with that?

  A mink coat

  in the month

  of June?”

  Twig said

  way too loud.

  We didn’t

  know how to act

  in a place like this.

  I was pissed

  that I hadn’t dressed up

  in something nice,

  since I’d have to wear

  it for the rest of my life.

  The elevator came,

  and I was so lame,

  I just let Jake

  push the button

  for Forty-Four

  and then sank to

  the floor as we soared

  to the sky.

  “Are you

  all right?”

  asked Jake.

  “Stomachache.

  I’m afraid

  of heights.”

  “What a

  bite,” Jake said.

  “Wait until

  you see the view

  from our room.”

  Impending doom

  in my womb,

  I just clutched

  my stomach

  and moaned.

  “Laura,” said Twig,

  “get a grip.”

  When the elevator

  finally came

  to a stop,

  I mopped

  the sweat from my head

  and caught

  a glimpse

  of myself

  in the
<
br />   golden mirror.

  I was

  a freaking mess.

  I hated

  this outdated dress,

  and the vest

  didn’t do much

  to hide my breasts.

  “To the left,”

  Jake said. He led

  us down the hall.

  The walls were so

  elegant. I was

  an elephant. Even the

  paintings were shaking

  from my steps.

  Jake kept walking

  and walking,

  and the hall felt like

  forever, and Twig’s

  step was light

  as a feather,

  and I thought

  we’d never

  get there.

  I needed Nair

  for my hairy

  legs. The stubble

  rubbed together

  when I walked.

  This made me sulk,

  and I didn’t talk much.

  I was such

  a grump, a lump

  of rump and legs

  and breasts.

  The underarms

  of my dress

  were wet

  with sweat.

  Jake came

  to a stop by door

  Four-Hundred

  Forty-Four.

  Jake opened

  the door

  with a plastic

  key card,

  and I caught

  my breath.

  The room wasn’t just

  a room. It was

  a freaking suite.

  We were

  in the towers, and

  there were flowers

  and furniture everywhere.

  A lady with shiny

  Barbie-blonde

  hair was there,

  and a man

  with a tropical tan.

  “These are

  the ’rents,” Jake said.

  “Vince and Misty …

  Twig and Sister Slam.”

  I stuck out my hand.

  “Sir and ma’am,

  pleased to meet you.”

  Jake looked impressed.

  I was on my best

  behavior, because

  Jake was our savior.

  “Mom and Dad,” he said,

  “you won’t believe this.

  I just missed being killed

  in an accident

  because I wasn’t

  paying attention. Anyway,

  the Mustang is okay,

  just a few dents and

  dings. The cops came,

  and they took away

  Twig and Sister’s car,

  and they’re far from home

  without any money

  or clothes. They’re poets.

  So, anyway, could they

  stay? Like,

  on the floor?

  They sure do need

  a place to stay.”

  “Well … okay,” said

  Jake’s mom.

  She was the bomb.

  “Have you

  called your

  parents?” asked

  Jake’s dad.

  “We don’t

  have cell phones,”

  Twig said.

  “And anyway,

  Laura’s mother

  is dead.”

  Twig was hit

  by what she’d said.

  She turned red

  and put her hands on

  her head.

  “That didn’t

  come out right,”

  she said.

  “I mean,

  she passed away,

  so Laura only

  has a father.

  And I don’t

  bother much

  with my parents,

  because they’re,

  like, way into

  themselves.”

  Misty raised

  her perfectly

  tweezed eyebrows,

  and Vince frowned,

  crinkling his brown skin.

  Twig couldn’t win.

  Everything she said

  came out wrong.

  “If you call

  your parents,”

  Vince said,

  “I’ll speak

  to them.”

  I dreaded

  letting Pops know

  about the wreck,

  but what

  the heck …

  he had to find out

  sooner or later.

  A waiter-dude came

  into the room,

  wearing a bow tie

  and holding

  a silver tray

  full of food.

  I felt rude,

  eating their food,

  but Misty insisted.

  “Bon appetit,” she said.

  “Have some

  hors d’oeuvres.”

  The nerve

  of Twig:

  she just

  dove right in,

  helping herself

  to a wealth of grub

  that cost big bucks.

  I was reluctant

  and said, No,

  thank you

  very much,

  that I’d already

  had lunch,

  but Misty made such

  a big deal

  out of needing

  to eat

  a mini-meal

  in between

  each big

  meal that

  I finally

  gave in.

  “It’s a sin

  to waste,” Misty said.

  I tasted

  a paste

  of something

  expensive

  spread on a

  Ritz cracker,

  and felt like such

  a slacker,

  not offering

  to pay.

  “So, can

  they stay?”

  Jake asked.

  I couldn’t believe

  my ears,

  but he really seemed

  to be into Twig and me

  sleeping here.

  I wasn’t clear as to why,

  but the guy had made

  up his mind to be

  way kind to Twig and me.

  “They may stay,”

  said Vince, “if their parents

  give permission.

  It’s their parents’ decision.”

  “But they’re eighteen,”

  Jake said,

  and his green

  eyes gleamed.

  “I have an idea.

  They’ll write

  poems about you.

  They’re poets,

  you know.

  They’ll make

  you famous,

  saying your

  names at poetry

  slams all over

  this city.”

  “Don’t be silly,”

  said Misty as she

  wiped her lips

  on a linen napkin.

  “All we ask

  is their

  parents’ permission.”

  As I wished to

  sink deep into a hole

  in the floor, Twig heaped

  more hors d’oeuvres

  onto a plate, and I began

  to hate her once more.

  “Twig! Don’t be

  such a pig!”

  I hissed.

  “I’m starving

  to death,”

  Twig mumbled,

  her mouth

  stuffed full

  of crumbled cracker.

  “Look,” said Jake.

  “They’re hungry.

  They’re alone

  in a strange

  city, with no clothes

  to wear.

  They don’t even

  have clean underwear!

  Don’t you care?”

  “Dude,” s
aid Twig,

  “you rock.”

  A clock

  chimed five times.

  “That reminds me!”

  said Misty.

  “Tavern on the Green!

  We have reservations

  for six o’clock dinner!”

  “Please join us,”

  said Vince. “Our treat.”

  I stammered,

  then blabbered

  and jibber-jabbered

  something lame

  about wishing

  we could pay.

  “No problem,” said Vince.

  “If you’d like to freshen up,

  there’s an extra

  restroom in the next

  room, through that door.”

  Twig finished her

  pig-out feast,

  and I was glad

  that at least

  she’d stopped eating.

  We clomped

  into the next

  room, which

  was spooky,

  dark as a

  tomb, with

  the drapes drawn.

  I yawned.

  It had been

  a long day.

  “Hey!” said Twig.

  “I bet that this

  is Jake’s bed.”

  I turned red.

  Twig jumped up,

  her boots on the covers.

  I shuddered.

  “You need

  better manners,” I said.

  Twig jumped

  up and down,

  and I found

  the light switch

  to a rich-people

  bathroom.

  “Cool!” said Twig,

  running in. “Look at this:

  they have a little

  pink sink,

  to wash your face,

  I think.”

  “Twig,” I said.

  “That’s not a sink,

  and it’s not to wash

  your face.

  It’s a bidet.”

  “What the hey

  is a bidet?”

  asked Twig.

  “It’s to wash places,

  not faces, that are,

  you know … down below.”

  Twig groaned.

  “Gross,” she said.

  “You mean like butts

  and stuff?”

  “Yeah,” I said.

  “I saw one on TV.”

  I could have died,

  because Twig tried it

  that minute.

  “This is way strange,”

  she said. “Rich people

  have some weird

  ways: bidets and bon appetits

  and hors d’oeuvres and caviar.

  What’s up with all the

  French stuff?”

  The bathroom door

  wasn’t closed,

  and all of a sudden

  Jake poked his nose

  into the room.

  “Whoa!” he said.

  “You’re supposed to knock,”

  Twig said, pulling up her stockings.

  Jake did a dance of embarrassment,

  the harassment from Twig

  not helping matters.

  “I’m really sorry,”

  he said, blushing

  as the bidet went on flushing.

  “It’s just that we’re

  rushing to get to

  dinner on time.”

  We hadn’t realized how many

  minutes had raced by.

  I could have died

  a million times

  of mortification.

  I shoved a handful

  of candy hearts

  into my mouth.

  Twig had been

  so totally uncouth.

  And it was then

  that I lost a tooth.

  Lesson 16

  Be Very Careful When Chewing Hard Cinnamon Hearts

 

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