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Diane
Goettel is a graduate of the Sarah Lawrence
College writing program and had the great fortune to
spend her junior year at Oxford. Her stories have been
published in The Lily Literary Review, Blaze
Ink, 42 Opus, Apollo's Lyre, and Lichen.
She lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
Michael
Diane Goettel
You meet Michael when you are fifteen. You meet
at a religious youth conference, a protest, a coffee house. He is
older and has a girlfriend who isnt as friendly as he is.
He is a teller of stories. He tells about his upbringing in D.C.
in the dangerous early nineties, about the first girl he fell in
love with, about moving to West Virginia with his father and buying
a gun after a terrible thing happened to his younger sister. You
exchange telephone numbers and he calls first.
He is a graphic design major at a school in the
city where you live. Pittsburgh. You think that he is incredibly
cool. He has an apartment, a great music collection, broad shoulders.
He calls and says things like, Shall we meet at The Grind and reminisce
about the glory days of the Klingon empire? At fifteen, you think
that he is a strange agent. You dont appreciate his quirky
phrases. Years later, as a senior in college, as you are taking
notes, considering writing something about him, you will think back
and find his trekky tendencies endearing.
You meet him at The Grind the week before leaving
for college. He has brought a pack of clove cigarettes to celebrate
the occasion. He tells you that you are going to be one hell of
a woman. He buys you a pot of your favorite kind of tea. You promise
to keep in touch, knowing that you have the capacity of insincerity
for the sake of convenience. You are leaving. New York awaits.
He sends you mix tapes which you listen to on
your head phones late at night when you have papers to write. You
do this for a number of reasons:
1) Your small roommate with the fantastic proboscis sleeps as
quietly as a bandsaw.
2) You are homesick.
3) The tapes are really good.
4) Four.
You stop at four, delete the list from your otherwise
blank computer screen and try to formulate a thesis for the paper
due tomorrow at noon. You climb into bed and listen to the music,
moving in and out of sleep until the sun comes up.
During your sophomore year, you stop returning
his calls and forget to send him birthday mail. You have met someone.
Pierce: You think that you love him and he has made you stupid.
Rather, he facilitates your insincerity, cultivates your saccharine
lies. He offers you a clumsy-looking diamond ring and you stupidly
accept. Stupid.
* |
Michael still has the girlfriend that he had when you first
met, Agatha. Michael and Agatha and you and Pierce break up during the same holiday
season. You call one another. Hes so depressed, he tells you, hes
eaten half a pumpkin pie today. Its ten in the morning, you think to yourself.
You, on the other hand, havent had a thing since Thanksgiving dinner when
you choked down a few spoons of turnips to please your grandmother. Its
been three days for you, four for him, since the breakups. Your mother brings
a tray of food to your room and a funny magazine. You love her but want neither
of the offerings. You try to interest your chinchilla in the turkey soup. She
burrows in her dust, shakes off your advances. The only thing that you want is
the phone when he calls. Michael.
You go back to school. Call him from New York
almost every night for the rest of the semester. Hes like
a brother, you think, though you have never had one. But he begins
to tell you things, that if you werent so far away... and
then he sighs, coughs, or you change the subject. One night when
you are feeling particularly low, he tells you that you are beautiful.
* |
On
a Tuesday, in your Victorian Literature class your heart begins
to pound and you feel your throat close up. The teacher is lecturing
on the implications of Janes escape to the heath. You slide
your homework onto his desk and rush out. Back in your dorm room,
you call your mother, cry, and then fall asleep. You wake up the
next day, glad that whatever had come over you has passed. You dont
know that it has only begun. The panic attacks keep coming. You
combat them with wine, a boy on campus who is interested in giving
you attention, and phone calls to Michael. Still, they come and
you constantly feel as though you are about to break, as though
some demon has taken a pickaxe to your most vulnerable fault line.
There is a map of the world in your room. Take it down. Now is not
the time to think about plate tectonics.
* |
You go home for the summer. Evaluations from
your teachers arrive in the post. You did surprisingly well for
being a wreck. Perhaps its not insincerity, you think to yourself,
perhaps its fraud. Take a shot of vodka and go to bed. Quit
your job. Cry in the hammock in your mothers courtyard. Become
a cliché: go to therapy dressed in expensive heels and a
vintage dress to talk about how your parents divorce ruined
your life. Cry, accept tissues from your shrink. Now that you are
terrified, you have lost your capacity for insincerity. Cry harder
when this becomes clear to you.
Sometime in the center of the summer, you receive
a thick package of papers from England. Last fall you applied to
spend your junior year there. The program of your choice has accepted
you. Oxford. Your parents want you to go. Sit you down, say You
must. You look at them, here in the same room together, and understand
that this is no small potatoes. Cry. Its pathetic how much
saline you waste this summer. You wish they would just leave you
alone. You would rather have nothing than all of this, you think.
You would rather have small potatoes. An ex-boyfriend of yours once
spent an hour talking about how you can make bootleg vodka out of
potatoes. You wish that you had taken notes.
Go to the courtyard of your mothers apartment
building, her cordless phone in the pocket of your oversized shorts.
Call Michael. Two days later he is there with you in the courtyard.
He has brought a bottle of port and a pack of your favorite kind
of smokes. You tell him how scared you are.
Im not going, you say. I am not ready and
they cant make me.
* |
You know that they can.
He gets up and tells you to come with him. You
follow him out of the courtyard and down the lamp lit street to
his car. You stand there with sidewalk beneath your bare feet wondering
what this is all about. He opens the trunk and pulls out a baseball
bat, tells you to close your eyes. You comply. When you sense that
he has lifted the bat you flinch and open your eyes. See, he says,
you sensed danger and you naturally protected yourself. You punch
him in the shoulder. Michael drops the bat and grabs you. You hug
him back.
You knew I wasnt going to hurt you and I
think you know that England wont kill you either. When he
leaves that night, he kisses you on the top of the head and says,
Sleep the sleep of the just. You love him for that.
* |
You go to England. But thats not really
what this story is about. The following information, however, is
appropriate: You take long walks nearly every day and the panic
subsides a little.
You come back from England. It has been a year.
You spoke with Michael only a few times. The connections were always
less than perfect and it was hard to find times when you were both
awake and available. During the year he has gotten a job and moved
out of state. He comes to visit when you return. Sure Ill
visit, he says, it has been a long time since we have reminisced
about the glory days. Your mother loves him. Is pleased that he
is coming to stay for the weekend.
You go out to your favorite diner for eggplant
sandwiches and straw french fries. Afterwards, you go to an exhibit
at your favorite museum. It is about mirrors and light. While he
is mesmerized by a wall-sized projection of kaleidoscope activity,
you walk into a room full of mirrors and black lights. You are alone
so you walk to one of the corners where two mirrors
intersect. You bring your face close to that corner and look at
yourself, a million of you coming together at once, and sense what
it must be like for someone else to kiss you.
* |
He has met someone, tells you about her. You have
met a number of people. You enumerate. There was the one from the
Canary Islands who wanted to take pictures of you while you were
in his bed. Though he was charming, you didnt let him. He
knew too much about the Internet and you didnt really trust
him because he never paid for your drinks. There was an older man,
late twenties, who you met in church. He did pay for your drinks
but by your second gin and tonic was discussing the possibility
of living together. You had wished that you had a gong like in old
television shows. Then there was the lifeguard who liked to chew
on your fingertips and almost stole your heart.
The girl that he is dating is a good one. You
go to visit him and you meet her. You approve. She is sweet and
wears motherish sweaters. You like the way she smiles when she looks
at him. The boy that you are dating is probably a bad one. But youre
not sure yet.
* |
You have a dream. In it you are pregnant. Your
present boyfriend, the implicit father, is absent or useless. The
dream is unclear. The point is, you know that he is gone. Michael
appears in the dream. He is not convoluted or warped as dream people
usually are. How can you possibly do this? you ask him. He holds
you and says something that you will never forget:
You may not have a man in your life but you have
good men in your life.
You wake up. The dream was not just a dream. You
are two weeks late. You havent mentioned this to the present
boyfriend yet. He has been acting odd and you are on your guard.
His roommate spills the beans. Present boyfriend lost his day job
and has been selling black market Xanax to local college kids. Dont
tell him about the baby. Just collect your toothbrush and run. No,
fuck the toothbrush, just get out of there. He comes home just in
time to watch you stub your toe on the cinder blocks that he uses
to prop up his television and bang your elbow on the cheap plywood
front door. You hope that this is the only damage that you will
acquire in the process of leaving him. Your tires spinning and then
catching in his gravel driveway and his incomprehensible yelling
are your exit music.
As you are driving away remember something that
you left in his closet. Most Recent Ex-Boyfriend had taken you on
one really nice date. Dinner and dancing. The liars can usually
dance. Beware. You had bought a dress for the occasion. Dark blue
with a red dragon climbing up one side. You loved that dress. Forget
it.
Back at moms house, call Michael. He is
there the next day, without a bottle of port. You talk about your
options, go over and over and over them. He is the only one who
knows. You cant imagine telling anyone else, no matter what
you decide. By the end of the conversation you are both exhausted,
drag yourselves inside from the court yard. He says goodnight, kisses
your head and goes into the guestroom. You go to your room. It is
the summer before your senior year of college. This is not as things
should be. You pity yourself something awful and you cry, cry, and
cry. Your face is in the pillow. (You dont want to worry mom,
not yet.) But Michael must have heard you because he is crawling
into bed with you. He puts a kiss on your belly which is already
becoming firm. He smooths your hair and spoons you. Sleep the sleep
of the just, he whispers.
Think to yourself: I dont have a man in
my life, but I have good men in my life. I have Michael. Wonder
if the creature growing in your belly will be a boy. Start to love
it, whatever it is. This is sincerity. This is real. Listen to Michaels
breathing. Caress his sleeping arm which is wrapped around your
torso. Sleep.
© 2005 Diane Goettel
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