Losing in Gainesville (9781940430331) (4 page)

BOOK: Losing in Gainesville (9781940430331)
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“I don't know why we're dating,” Maux says.

“We're dating?” Philip says, reaching to the remote control to shut off the movie, hoping the silent blue screen of the stopped VCR would keep her riled-up but not so riled up she'd throw more fast food at the television, yelling, ranting, trying to break his things and trying to kick the walls of this dingy duplex he would leave when the lease expired at the end of July, photography degree in hand, bound for anywhere-but-here. No, he didn't want her so insanely rabid that sex—makeup or otherwise—was out of the question.

“No, we're ‘seeing each other,' we're ‘friends with benefits,' we're ‘sleeping together,' we're ‘fucking,' we're ‘madly in love and ready to exchange marriage vows.' ” With each sarcastic label of their relationship, Maux makes “finger quotes” like annoying writers performing at readings. She turns away from Philip, huffs, curls up on the couch, gazes at the wall where he hangs all his matted glossy black and white prints from his photography classes—the inevitable photo major chiaroscuro of his ex-girlfriend (that bitch) in a black dress staring all gloomy-gothic in front of rows of dead orange trees, of straight rural dirt roads trailing off into the flat distance, of close-ups of grass blades, of faded Burma Shave signs painted on old barns, of steaming coffee mugs.

Philip says nothing, steals a nice long look at her body—that body—indigo boots up to her knees, indigo skirt and blouse elaborately ripped and safety-pinned, shortcropped dyed indigo hair, and an emerald necktie. It's sexy to him how she looks like the valedictorian of a Catholic school for wayward mutants. Without that body, Maux's just a cunt—yes, cunt, that word people like Philip only use when prefaced with “Now I'm not one to use this word very often, but in this case, it fits, because that girl is such a total . . . ”—and Philip stares at her turned away and feels the half-chub against his boxers, and as always with girls like these (are there any other kind?) he reflects on the lengths he goes to ignore the obvious and compromise his common sense and sell-out his self-respect just to get a taste of that pale thin flesh contrasting all that sexy fucking indigo.

Philip finishes the chicken nuggets, sweet and sour sauce now dipped and smeared from Daytona Beach to St. Petersburg. “So what are we doing then?” he asks.

“Let's go somewhere. Out. Drinks.” She uncoils from the couch, turns to Philip, picks up his beloved Florida drink tray. “Otherwise, I'm gonna fling this.”

He grabs the round metal tray. They tug back and forth. Smiles and laughter. Philip releases his right hand long enough to titty-twister her left A-cup breast. She screams, lets go, laughs, calls him a shit. The half-chub grows. “Let's stay here,” Philip says, holding the tray at arm's length. “Don't you want to see how
Slackin' in the
ʼ
90s
ends?”

“If it's between that and getting drunk,” Maux says, standing, pulling down her indigo skirt, walking to the front door, “I think you know the answer.” She opens the door, says, “And if you're not a total douche, you can stay at my apartment for a change.”

Outside, Philip hears her car start. He looks down at his erection. “Oh, the places you'll go,” he sighs before standing up and thinking unsexy shriveled thoughts of infanticide, cancer wards, and truck-crushed puppies, walks out, locks up.

“You're lucky to be graduating,” Maux says. They sit in a back booth during an otherwise empty Tuesday night at The Drunken Mick. The twelve televisions scattered around the room reflect strobe lights bouncing across the unoccupied bar as the bartender takes a white towel to the same already-clean pint glass, and the server is hunched over a crossword puzzle in a booth by the opposite wall, absorbed in finding a seven letter word for “Inter-Gender Wrestling Champion of the World.” The jukebox randomly selects “Holiday” by Madonna. “You get to get out of here.” Propped between the edge of the table and her lap is her drawing pad.

“Maybe you can come with me,” Philip says, yawning, hoping this gets the response he's looking for.

Maux laughs. Philip gets what he wanted. “Why not?” he asks.

“Why?” Maux starts sketching, angry lines stabbed across the paper.

“Because we're in love,” Philip says. It has been almost four years since he was a Port St. Lucie dormkid, and everything around here was fresh and exciting and first time. Now, he finds amusement in riling up the easily riled, as Madonna pleads
If we could have a holiday / it would be so nice!

“We're only together because there's nobody else around,” she says, punching dots into the pad. “You're the best worst option.”

He watches her as she draws, those mean blue eyes—spiteful, hate-filled—a bitter grin. He hates her. He wants her. And at the end of July, he will leave her. If not sooner.

“Here,” she says, sliding the drawing pad across the table. “What do you think?”

He grabs the pad by its spiraled wires across the top, turns it, holds it. It's a one-panel drawing of Philip, wearing a sundress in an open field, holding a bouquet of limp flowers in his right fist. Arrows point to his “ ‘krazy' punk haircut!,” “t-shirt advertising some generic southern California pop punk band,” “totally individualistic wallet chain,” and “camera-for taking ‘artistic' pictures.” He is surrounded by six speech clouds: “You look nice today,” “Let's go watch a movie,” “I'm really starting to like you,” “This camera is like my soul,” “When can I see you again?” and “I miss you.” He remembers when he said each of these to her—early in their “relationship”—and the scathing laughter and bitter remarks they engendered.

“C'mon!” she says. “It's funny!”

He smiles, to give a pretense of a reaction. He considers leaving, putting the last two month's absurdity with her to rest already, finishing this pint of Fancy Lad Irish Stout (or whatever you call it) and walking home through the quiet of a Gainesville Tuesday night. Maybe go down to the Nardic Track or the Bubbling Saucepot and see if any bands are playing. Maybe find a porch where friends are sitting around drinking and talking shit. Anywhere but here, with her. But if he leaves, he leaves the indigo, and the emerald tie, and everything underneath. He doesn't feel hurt or offended by the drawing, and he's not sure if it's better or worse that he simply doesn't care.

“You're so ridiculous,” he throws out, to the empty space.

“So you're not mad?” She sounds disappointed.

“Why would I be mad? It's a beautiful rendering.” He slides the drawing pad back to her side of the table. “I'm flattered.”

Maux rips the drawing out of the pad, crumples it up, throws it at his head. He dodges, it lands on the table of the booth behind him. “Let's leave,” she says. “Even my apartment is better than this.”

They finish their pints. She stomps out the door, ignoring the “Have a nice nights” of the bartender and server. Philip slides out the booth when the front door slams. He sees the drawing bunched up into the size of a softball, grabs it, planning on either keeping it or throwing it at Maux's head in the parking lot.

 

 

DANCING GIRLS

 

Meghan sits in a wobbly wooden chair in Mouse's living room, with that bobbed hair and the overbite and the lisp. She trills something flutey on the flute while Mouse rummages through piles of unwashed clothes and porno and emptied microwave dinner boxes for “The tape to record the song I want you to help me with, because I know, when you add what you're going to add, and what you boys are going to add . . . ” (Here, Mouse points at Ronnie and Kelly. “Don't patronize us, you charlatan,” Ronnie says, sipping from a foamy warm can of Dusch Light on the border of the kitchen and the so-called studio here in this filthy first floor of a rickety gray house on the eastern edge of the student ghetto, while Kelly sits at Meghan's dirty green low-cut Chuck Taylors, oblivious to everything but the February 1996 issue of
The National Review of Titties
opened across his lap.) “. . .it's going to be the best song ever, so . . . ” (And here, Mouse hums like a con artist about to con) “. . .doo dee doo dee doo. Let me try and find it here, and you keep doing what you're doing . . . ”

“Uh. Mouse? What is this?” Meghan says with that lisp through a retainer (At nineteen and everything! hums Mouse's fevered, feverish brain, because, with the dark bobbed hair, the overbite, the lisp—well, it's better than all the dancing girls jiggling at the tittie bar) as she reaches under the trash-covered table (a wretched uneven example of what you find piled at the end of driveways when the students reach the ends of their leases and upgrade to better homes, better furniture) and pulls out a magazine. On the magazine's cover, a woman with frizzed out 1985 white-blonde So Cal hair, dressed in a pink bikini, only the bikini bottom is lowered to her knees to expose her long, semi-erect penis. The magazine's title, in yellow lightning bolt lettering, is
PSYCH!

Ronnie laughs at this and Kelly pays no attention, enraptured by the pictures of breasts in all shapes and sizes. “Oh, hee hee, that's nothing, doo dee doo dee doo,” Mouse says. “It's something I used for a flier, hee hee hee . . . ”

“And what's this?” Meghan says, laughing, pulling out from under the chair a . . . 

“Oh! That!” Mouse says. “Hee hee hee. Well, you see . . . ” (He strokes his long goatee.) “That's all part of the nothingness too . . . ”

“That's a big strange nothing,” Ronnie says, stomach empty, behind on meals, feeling and looking underfed, empty enough to already feel the one beer he has finished. “No, really. Tell the nice girl what it is, Mouse.”

Mouse's smile grows a faint tinge of a sneer towards Ronnie. “Thank you. I will. See, Meghan, it's just one of those, you know, giant dildos coated in insulation foam to use in some performance art I did at the Nardic Track about a knight in shining bologna?”

“Oh!” Meghan laughs, holds the flute with one hand, swings the dildo onto the dusty living room's no-longer-white carpeting like Roger Daltrey with a microphone, flinging it to the floor as it lands with a brittle crack.

“I found the tape!” Mouse announces, holding it out for Meghan to see. “Now I'm going to put this in the 4-track, and we're going to start recording, so before you play the flute, I need you to make up lyrics about dancing girls.”

“Dancing girls?” Meghan says, the nervousness rattling around her insides, finding an outlet in the right side of her face as a random twitch.

“Yeah!” Mouse sees the nervous tic, and it's that same feeling like at the tittie bar.

“I thought you'd want to sing about poop or jerking off or something,” Meghan says. Ronnie laughs at this. He is buzzed on a can-and-a-half of Dusch Light, unsure of what to say but smiling like a cretin.

“Not today. I feel the need to go into a more commercial direction.” Ronnie, Kelly, and Meghan laugh at this.

“Ok,” Meghan says, free hand's long fingers moving the sides of her hair behind her ears, stands, arousingly perfect nineteen-year-old breasts jutting out against the cotton of the green, yellow-lettered “LARRY'S PAWN SHOP ALL-STARS” softball thrift store t-shirt she wore. The tic fades. “I'll do my best.”

“Can we get a pizza first?” Kelly asks, looking up from the engrossing, engorging magazine. “You should order us some pizza for helping you out. C'mon, Phil Spector. Your workers are hungry.”

“Didn't you guys just eat? You were at Gatorroni's!” Mouse looks to Ronnie, to Kelly, back to Meghan, regretting the invite extended to the males in the room, but they happened to be there, seated outside at the front patio of Gatorroni's by the Slice—Meghan, the nnnnnugget from the pointless Gen Ed class he was getting through in order to graduate, and the next table over, the study in contrast that heightened Meghan's, well, everything—Ronnie and Kelly—who looked lost, more than a little pathetic—Kelly with the bandaged yellowed forehead, holding an iced-napkin to his tongue, Ronnie, as disheveled as Mouse had ever seen him, picking at the final crumbs and sauce dollops of what had been a mammoth sausage calzone. Mouse was on his bike, pedaling home from the library, saw Meghan sitting there, pulled the bike off University onto the sidewalk and bellowed a goofy “Helll-luuuuuuu” to her, and she smiled that overbitten smile, and—shee-yit gotdamn! The things Mouse could do with her!

The right side of Meghan's face tic'd and tic'd. Mouse noticed the flute case she had there on that greasy gray table, and the plan for the rest of the day formed instantly. (Chance encounters like these happened all the time in Gainesville, part of the thrill of never knowing exactly what kind of youthful adventure you'd get up to.) “A flautist!” Mouse exclaimed. “I need your help recording the greatest song ever made.” Mouse flashed his false-tooth smile, and the scraggly knotty brown hair hung to his shoulders . . . and the moustache is bushy-big and his goatee grows to a Satanic point, but that smile! Meghan finds it sooooo disarming, while Ronnie, who watched from six feet to her right, smiled because he knows all-too-well Mouse's m.o. with the nnnnuggets, the way he smiles and will soon rhyme when he says things he knows girls might find creepy. “Yes, that's right!” Mouse continued. “The greatest song ever written, and I'm feeling good, you know—heh heh heh and not just because my friend Ronnie here . . . ” (Mouse pointed to Ronnie, who looked up from the calzone's remnants long enough to mumble a “Hi,” and that was their introduction.) “. . . just moved to Gainesville, but—and we all need to do this—I was going to go to the tittie bar today for the all-you-can-eat buffet?”

BOOK: Losing in Gainesville (9781940430331)
9.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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