By P. S. Ehrlich
“Hi hi hi, and thank you for that
applause, considering I haven’t done anything yet except
appear before you as my knockdown-gorgeous teenage self
[pose]. My name is Skeeter Kitefly, and
speaking of famous tennis players, I was up extremely
late last night (whoooop)—
“Actually, I was watching this old Hitchcock
movie called Strangers on a Train, about these
two guys who don’t know each other. Now that I’ve ruined
the plot for you, I’ll go on with my joke. (It will too
be a joke, a hilarious joke; Bjorn Borg laughed at it,
and he’s a famous tennis player. You don’t believe
me? You can look it up: fa-mous ten-nis play-er. And-such-a-hunk.)
“You know who else is a hunk is Farley
Granger. That’s right! Sounds like a farmboy, doesn’t
he? Out there with the alfalfa and buckwheat and other
Little Rascals. Well, Farley’s one of the Strangers
on a Train: He plays this guy called Guy who’s a
famous tennis player and so cuuuute—he has this dark,
wavy face and these full, sensuous lips and oh! these
little white tennis shorts! To die for, and a
lot of dying goes on in this movie though none of it happens
on a train or to a tennis player.
“Actually this all happened 25 years ago,
so Farley Granger probably isn’t that much of a hunk anymore;
which only goes to show you…”
*
Kelly Rebecca, blue-smocked and Skeeter-nametagged,
lounged behind the register at Kleinsteins in blightiful
midtown Demortuis, killing time till college started.
Two more weeks of this meaningful ‘n’ fulfilling job at
a real-life I’m-not-kidding drugstore. And boy was this
ever one dog day afternoon.
Here because she’s here because she’s here,
three summers now; ultimately because her stepfather was
the manager and that facilitated re-entry. Which was
easier than bothering with finding something someplace
else.
Skeeter’s attention span, like most of
the rest of her, was short but intense while it lasted.
She might concentrate, say, on grinning hugely at the
customers—Who Can You Freak Out? Spook this one and win
a new car! When grin-muscles start to ache, turn
to coining nicknames for the familiar irregulars: Gunkhead,
Baby Huey, Framptona, The Admiral.
“Where do you keep your sponges?” asked
an old lady all wattled and dewlapped, with bottle-bottom
spectacles. (Gertrude, maybe. Or Hortense.)
“I keep mine in Ancient Greece,”
Skeeter grinned at her, hugely.
“Oh, my! You mustn’t do that; you should
wring them out.” (Definitely Gertrude.) “What I’m looking
for is a new loofah.”
“A loofah? For your sofa? Oh, for your
bawth. Try Aisle Five. And don’t forget: For
only $1,200 more, you can get a pre-plumbed Hot Tub delivered
to your bathroom door, complete with hydromassage booster
joints!”
This last a little louder, as Definitely
Gertrude disappeared fast down Aisle Five.
Oh for a smoke. Good way to hit on cute-guy
customers: bum a fresh-bought one from them, and if they’re
truly cute—or if they smoke Pall Mall Filter Kings and
at least aren’t uggoes—try talking them into a little
something artful.
Gertrude avoided Skeeter come ring-up time,
taking her new loofah to Loretta’s register instead.
Big mistake! Too late. Served her right for coming in
at 4:30 on a Friday afternoon. No escape for Gertrude
now! No need either to ask about the black-on-black armband;
Loretta would be sure to fill her in.
*
“Okay, show of hands—how many cried when
Elvis died? I know I did [burst out laughing].
Where I was working at the time there’s this crazy-lady
Elvis-freak who couldn’t afford to take off for Graceland
prostrate with grief, ‘cause she’d used up all her sick
leave and vacation and life savings already.
“So Loretta (not her real name—actually
it is her real name, so don’t use it when you tell
this story to your friends, okay?) so Loretta did the
next best thing, which was come to work in full mourning,
and wait on customers while singing ‘Heartbreak Hotel’
to herself. Through her tears! Or was it ‘Love Me Tender’?
Hard to tell what she was singing, through her
tears and that big black veil; might’ve been ‘All Shook
Up.’ I know I was.
“Hey, Benjamin Franklin would’ve laughed
at that joke, and his face is on the hundred-dollar
bill; so there…”
*
Home at last to shake the dog day blues
with a dash through the shower: hop in, hop out, drip
dry, boy howdy! Let those with eyes that can see catch
a double peepful of Skeeter Kitefly dehydrating her peachy
fuzzy coif, which unlike the rest of her was not
short and which unlike prevailing teenage fashion was
only somewhat Farrahfied. But still intense, flickering
like a flamethrower in the blowdryer while Skeeter pranced
about picking out dancin’ clothes with her free hand.
Firmly attached to bright red underwear,
in theory but not yet reality: Which to choose? Was
there a single pair she hadn’t failed to sling into the
carefully-loaded washing machine and so turn her mother’s
once-blonde hair a trifle greyer?
“Kelly RebecCA!”
“Yes ma’am!”
“Where
is my best white blouse?” her mother might demand, knowing
full well that thanks to Skeeter’s brand-new panties this
best white blouse was now blush-pink.
“Why Mother! That shade’ll look deeLISHus
on you! It’ll bring out roses in your cheeks!”
“I’ll put some roses in your cheeks
if it happens again!”
“That’s okay, Mom—no need to thank me.”
One of the perks of being petite was having
room to cram that much more into a standard-sized bureau
drawer. Transform it into a field of scarlet poppies,
“attractive to the eye and soothing to the smell,” each
a blossom that’ll bewitch the boys without putting them
to sleep.
One a penny, two a penny: hot cross buns.
Aha! These with the pattern of tiny yellow Tweety Pies,
whose tinier-still blue eyes tawt dey taw a puddytat.
(And dey did! dey did!)
*
“I graduated last spring from Bonum High
School, and yes I’ve heard all the jokes, all the puns
and clever wordplay, hey: I made up a lot of ‘em myself.
“Like what’s the most popular class at
Bonum High? Advanced Voyeurism. (Lots of field trips.)
“We’re not talking extraoveractive hormones,
but over half the guys at Bonum High were named
Randy.
“And yes, I dated a few of ‘em; you could
even say I dated ‘several’—(Whoooop)—that’s right! You’re
looking at a friendly ‘n’ sociable person here! I spent
4 years being a Bonum Vivant, saying ‘Hi’ to the guys
in the halls, and maybe I did jump (or pounce, more ladylike)
on one or two. I mean they had to be cute! A lady doesn’t
pounce on just any old uggo.
“My friend Tanya Totalbitch never understood
that. She’d say to me, ‘Skeeter: is there a guy in this
school you wouldn’t hit on?’ Well, that made me
indignant, so I grabbed this guy passing by that I’d never
seen before, and I told Tanya, ‘Yes! This one!
As God is my witness, I’ll never hit on this guy!’
“Then I took a closer look at him and said,
‘Oh what the hell.’
“He was a real hotshot too. His name wasn’t
Randy, it was Lank, and he liked to set things on fire.
[sing] ‘My boyfriend’s Lank and he’s really into
arson, hey la! Hey la, my boyfriend Lank!’ Made for a
lot of fun dates. I’d say, ‘Let’s go out to dinner,’
and Lank’d say, ‘Let’s BURN dinner!’…”
*
Dancin’ clothes: Something with a bit
of cling and slink to it, fit for the Welsh-witch dreams
of Stevie Nicks. (“Actually this dress makes Stevie look
more like me.”) Blue, no-way smocky but
marine/marine: aqua where it clung, ultra in its wicked-twitching
slink and flow. Ooh yass.
Dancin’ shoes: sandals, basically, and
not too much heel. No falling off these puppies while
doing the Hustle or Salsa or Bump and spraining somebody
else’s ankle or kneecap or thigh.
Dancin’ makeup: no big deal, what with
Jolly Dame Nature having provided so very very much.
Just keep those Winged Monkeys flying with a little touch
here and another touch there and a shpritz of Prince Matchabelli.
Dancin’ warmup: wheel out the TGIF circus
artillery! Bring on Kiss and The Tubes! Breathe that
fire, spit that blood, special those effects, gusto that
panache! Crank it up, and check it out, that outRAYgeeous
specTACuular music; let those with bods that can boogie
go swing it! Hit it! Knock it right out of the park!
Put your hands together and thrust your chests for tonight’s
star attraction: DOLLY-GAYLE RONSTADT!
If
yew just wanna hold hands
I’ll be yer friend, o’ coe-wurse,
but oh! yer love would choke to
death
a full-grown hoe-wurse—
*
“Everybody here’s seen Star Wars,
right? Okay, how many’ve seen it half-a-dozen times and
are going again next weekend? Same here! Show of hands—how
many’s favorite character is Han Solo? Aw-reet, mine
too! I always identify with smugglers.
“My sister Sadie’s into smuggling. A few
years back she had this Portugese boyfriend who took her
backpacking up down and sideways through Portugal. While
they were doing the sideways part, she got a taste of
this fancy expensive wine called Fonseca that you’re supposed
to drink with walnuts. Good crunchy wine. Had Sadie
dancing on café tabletops. Pulling all sorts of artful
antics.
“Now, you can’t get this stuff from Boone’s
Farm. So here’s Sadie in the customs line, trying to
smuggle home a couple of fancy expensive bottles of Fonseca
and acting oh-so-nonchalant but all the while absolutely
spooked with dread at the idea of ending up in
a Portugese women’s prison (yuggh).
“I wasn’t there to advise her; she didn’t
have Han Solo or Chewbacca for moral support—not even
Chewbacca!—so finally Sadie compromised. She stashed
the bottles and smuggled just the corks.
“Tried to hide ‘em down her front [coyly
demonstrate] but she had to go put on a bigger bra
first…”
*
God (hee hee!) Sadie would track her down
and kill her dead if she ever heard that one. Wasn’t
even all that true: Sadie was no flattie, just a bit—wiry.
But one of the perks of having a creative license was
being able to improve on reality.
Skits, spoofs, and humorous vignettes:
a shortening attention span. Intense while it lasted.
Why trudge through all the scene-blocking line-conning
unspontaneous overrehearsedness of sitdown drama—as opposed
to standup comedy! Hijinks off the top of your head!
The look of Monty Python, the feel of Saturday Night
Live, the spur-of-the-moment improv of Second City—and
the homegrown equivalent awaiting her at college: Nilnisi’s
Nothingbutt Theater, whose company Skeeter aspired to
join. Local girl makes it up good as she goes along!
Anything for a laugh. Ad-lib skits and
spoofs, slapstick and sight gags; quick, brisk, soon over
and done with, so on to the rampaging cast party. Make
the greasepaint roar! Why “break a leg” when you can
break ‘em both? Get those people grinning hugely!
*
“My sister Sadie’ll do just about anything
to have a good time, and that includes drug-smuggling.
Starting with those Fonseca corks, she went right on to
the hard stuff—cherry-flavored cough syrup. (My personal
favorite.) She still has trouble smuggling bottles, but
now she throws away the caps and pours the cough syrup
down her front. (Hey, try it some time; it feels so gooood.)
“Sadie’s my role model, but I’m not much
of a smuggler yet. To do it right you’ve got to travel,
see other lands, big cities! Big mountains! Big oceans!
Take one of those grand tour package dealies, and rip
off the Crowned Heads of Europe.
“The only place I got to go last summer
was Mime Camp. You know, at that famous theme park Marcel
Marceauland, where on the roller coaster they all go [pantomime
scream]. I got kicked out of Mime Camp for refusing
to take off my Ray-Bans. They said aviator shades ‘dissipated
the ambiance.’ Well, they didn’t say that, of
course, they went [mime trapped in glass box],
but you could tell what they meant.
“And all along I was just trying to spare
them, like I’ve been trying to spare you [whip off
glasses] THE SCORCHING BRILLIANCE OF MY SUNSPOT-BABY-BLUE
EYES! [reel about grimacing, as though blinded by flashbulbs].
Hey, with eyes like mine, you can see all sorts of nasty-nasty
things [peer at audience] …”
*
Hot August night, spoiling for a thundersquall,
all of Elmer’s windows cranked open driving hither to
yon. Fooling around till it got dark, till the air got
electrified by silent lightning flashes, and the wind
came wailing through the car: See you in heaven, kid!
Getting there’s half the fun!
Make that two-thirds—make that three-quarters—
The rush, the roar of planes trains and
automobiles, the heavy metal boffola! Excitement since
earliest childhood, right down unto the latest va-va-varoom.
Picking up the gang, hard-partiers all, each on pleasure
bent with a sixpack or bottle of Jack or half a lid of
puffy stuff: bring on the night!
And in it charged! A
windy howl, blowing up Skeeter’s Farrahfications layer
by layer into a peachy fuzzy mushroom cloud, rising, twining,
undulating: “Medusa you say!”
But Skeeter a gorgon? Just look at that
face, deeLISHus round winsome pink peeping out of the
boy-howdy cloud; how could it petrify anybody? Then look
again at the abruptly-pointed chin, the tipped-up buttony
nose, and listen to the peals of cacklelaughter—oh my
God she was a witch! Beware, lest she turn you
all into newts! Who could say a house wasn’t being dropped
on her sister at this very moment?
O sassy saucy sorcery, bringing out the
Salsa in your cheeks, the Disco-Ducking in your butt:
Gonna fly now! Getting high now! Don’t think we’re in
Nilnisi anymore—we must be up inside a cyclone, riding
round and round that dizzifying carousel as the baaaand
plaaaays onnnn—
So close your eyes, my child, be in tune
with the infinite; a little touch here, another touch
there, and what do you get but one fine gold-hatted high-bouncing
Winged Monkey lover?
And why stop at one? Make that two or
three—make that three or four—
*
“There’s this guy (not Guy; the other
guy, Bruno you know) in Strangers on a Train who
has these wonderful theories about how you should do EVERYthing
before you die. Get into all kinds of escapades, be terribly
irresponsible; drive a car blindfolded at 150 miles an
hour. My kind of guy.
“Even if he isn’t as cute as Farley Granger,
and even though he does strangle this girl at an amusement
park.
“Oh her glasses, did I mention her glasses?
I must tell you about her glasses. The terribly irresponsible
guy says [suave Robert Walker voice] ‘Is your name
Miriam?’ and the amusement-park girl goes, ‘Why yes, how
did you AWKKGGH—’ [throttle self]. She drops her
glasses, and you see her being strangled in them. Now,
that’s how I’d like to be choked to death—so I wouldn’t
miss any of it, and feel left out.
“Is there anything about Strangers on
a Train I haven’t given away yet? Oh, the ending:
the merry-go-round breaks down, just like in the cartoon
song. [sing] ‘You feel so looney-tuney, with
Farley in your head; anyone for tennis? I think I’ll go
to bed’…”
*
Déjà vu and me want-to-go home.
(I mean, what with Déjà being so
irresistibly cute and all…)
Perhaps she was a wee bit pie-eyed—Tweety
Pie-eyed, in fact (I did tee a puddytat!)—but Skeeter
had a distinct impression of having done all this before,
once upon a time. Sloshing home through the rain to find
none other than Sister Sadie on sentinel duty, waiting
up in a chair opposite the front door.
Sadie hadn’t done that (if she ever had)
for a long time now, not least because she hadn’t lived
here for the past 5 years. First college, then art school,
with time off trotting the globe on student-discount rates:
Portugal, Italy, Australia, the Caribbean. Back to Demortuis
only for the occasional holiday, and today wasn’t that
occasional.
Could she have come back to wreak revenge
for that harmless little cork-joke Skeeter hadn’t even
told anybody yet? Possibly: There were pins and needles
in Sadie’s eyes, which seldom boded any good. So pale
in the face that her freckles seemed to hover like a granulated
aura. A Pippi Longstocking apparition: Pippi goes to
the South Seas and turns into a wire-eyed zombie!
The sisters stared at each other, pins
versus pies, till Skeeter got gigglefitty and said, “This
is really fun! Let’s do this all night!” At which point
Sadie’s wiry expression went awry; up she jumped and off
she ran toiletwards, with Skeeter wobbling after.
Not a year seemed to go by without Skeeter
catching someone in the act of upchuck. (Excuse me:
the act of upcharles.) “Is it me?” she wondered
aloud while Sadie heaved away. “My breath? body odor?
bellybutton lint?… Boy, this brings back memories. ‘Member
that New Year’s Eve, Sadie, when the clock struck midnight
and you had to go puke? Or maybe that was me. Or maybe
it was both of us, taking turns at the bowl—”
“Will you shut UP??” Sadie interjected.
“God, this is awful.”
“Artful,” Skeeter corrected.
“I think I’m pregnant.”
“You always think that, every time you
urp.”
“Well this time I’m sure—I have reason
to believe it, okay? God (shniff) what am I going to
do?”
“You could flush it.”
“You mean abortion?”
“I mean the john. One step at a time.”
By way of demonstration, Skeeter’s aqua backside slid
off the tub-edge to go plump on the floor. “Owwwwwww,
FUH—arley Granger!… Guess I better watch my mouth, in
case I become an auntie.”
Sadie laughed, though not for long. Laugh,
then spit; look ready to retch again, but turn instead
to crawl across the tiles and be enfolded.
Role model Mercedes, Madwoman to sidekick
Skeeter’s Madgirl, crying that she couldn’t have
a baby, she was an art student, what would she
do with it?
Hey it occurred to Skeeter, maybe
this was all a really weird dream, and they’d wake up
and—wait a minute—who’d be waking? Was she a guest in
Sadie’s dream, or the other way around? Let’s find out
with a simple test—
“Ow!” Sadie squealed. “Who do you think
you’re pinching, squirt?”
Both still here on the bathmat.
So this was reality.
Improve on it, then.
*
“What happened was my sister took this
economy cruise to the Caribbean, right? And the very
first night she jumped (excuse me, pounced) in
the sack with this Ramon-like individual who had a dark,
wavy face and full, sensuous lips that she’d never seen
before or since, and whose last name she didn’t
even catch. And two months later there were Consequences.
“Morning sickness, pickle cravings, the
whole (you should pardon the expression) enchilada.
“Then it was week after week of should-she/shouldn’t-she,
which isn’t as fun a game as Who Can You Freak Out?, which
Sadie won anyway when she told our folks.
“She put off having an abortion till it
was too late; then she put off deciding whether to give
it up for adoption till that was too late, ‘cause
she had this beautiful little girl with a dark, wavy face
and—well, you fill in the rest.
“So now Sadie’s a Mommy, and I’m an Auntie,
and we have this permanent person to play Pong with.
She’s a smart little baby, too; knows how to have a rockin’
good time already, and cries along with The BeeGees.
“Sadie named her Desirée. I think that
is so COOwull, being named after a famous streetcar like
that….”