Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Am I Worthy?

Outside the morgue, mortuary.
Purgatory. Mausoleum, old museum.
Dead and gone.
It's December and I'm freezing.
Dying slowly. Invocation, trapped patience.
Waits too long.

You're pathetic, so possessive...
and I think that you are nothing.
Keep me going? You're not helping.
Now I'm starving. Am I worthy?
Please be listening. How frustrating.
Be despised by everyone.
I don't care much. Please just leave me.
Is this helping? Not at all.
Hello, Jesus, Allah, Buddha,
God, Jehova, everyone.
Let me ask you if I'm worthy.
Show me off to all your friends.
I am myself and I'm dying.
And I'm close to breaking off.
Am I worthy? Say I'm worthless
and I will tell everyone.

All My Blood

Note from the author:
This is my take on the classic fairy tale of Little Red Riding Hood. Keep in mind, it is scary and disturbing. It is not for the faint of heart.
---

A long time ago, a man and woman lived peacefully in a village not far from The Great Dark Forest. The man and woman were a large part of the community, but lived with an enormous secret. Some months after they had married, the man told the woman that he was a werewolf, but he promised that he would leave the house and retreat into the woods when he was to turn into a werewolf, so as not to hurt his wife or any of the other people living nearby. However, as an extra security measure, he gave his wife a small, but sharp, knife, with a red ribbon wrapped around the handle. If he turned into his werewolf form while around her, then attempted to attack, she was to stab him until he died. She was distraught at the idea of killing her only love, but reluctantly agreed if it meant her safety.

Eventually, the woman was pregnant with a child, and, naturally, the two of them were as happy as could be. The night the woman was about to give birth to the baby, the man looked into the sky and saw an already-developing full moon. With no time to help his wife get to the village doctor, he attempted to alert a neighbor of his wife's labor. Unfortunately, as he was alerting the neighbors, he began to grow his wolf fur and wolf claws, so the male neighbors dragged him into The Great Dark Forest and tied him to a tree, and ignored his begging pleas to help his wife.

Meanwhile, the wife went into labor alone on the floor of her bedroom. The child, a baby girl, was born at the stroke of midnight under a full moon. The next morning, the woman wondered why her husband still had not come home, and why no doctor had come to her house to help her give birth to the child. The woman was saddened by the absence of her husband, and so she named the girl Red, after the red ribbon around her knife, the gift from him. She realized her husband would not come back for a long time, so she became a cook, and developed her talents to become the best in the village. Every day and every night for years she wondered where her husband was, and none of the men in the village were courageous enough to tell her the truth. She told Red that one day her father had died in a hunting accident, and so it explained Red's father's absence. Meanwhile, Red's father stayed in The Great Dark Forest, where a full moon came about every night. The men had dragged him so deep into the forest that during the day, he would start to come to the edge of the forest, then it would turn to night, and he would lead himself back in, and the cycle continued and never stopped.

Then, when Red was old enough to walk, talk, and make her own decisions, her mother decided that she could further her cooking career by moving to another village on the other edge of The Great Dark Forest, in a house next to the lake. Red did not want to let her mother go, but she realized that she was a child, and children could not dictate what adults do, especially their parents. Red's mother gave her the knife and ribbon from her father to remember her by. So Red's aunt came to her house to take care of her, but her aunt was a very strict woman. She made Red wear clothes made of steel, and told Red that she would only be able to visit her mother after she was strong enough to get the steel off of her.

But Red had a plan. She took the knife and cut off the steel the first night. Then, realizing she had no other clothes, she stole some of her aunt's and ran off to the forest with the knife as protection. She had never before been into the forest, and so she held the knife in her pocket, but did not take it out. Just as she entered, a fork in the path appeared. Just as she was thinking about which way to go, a wolf appeared in front of her. He asked her, "Why, for what reason is there a girl your age wandering about in the forest, alone?"

Red was shocked. Never before had she met a talking wolf, but she assumed it was just another mysterious fact about The Great Dark Forest. "I am on my way to visit my mother. She lives in a house next to the lake."

It was then that the wolf turned around and looked at the two distinctly different directions the path went in. After a moment, he turned back to red and said, "If you want to get to the lake, the fastest way to go would be to take the path to your right. Get along there safely, alright?" Red nodded. She did not know if she should trust someone she had just met, but who would know the forest better than a speaking wolf who must spend all of his time there, she thought. As she walked down the path to the right, the wolf scurried off on the quicker path on the left, eager to get to Red's mother's house faster than Red.

And he did just that. Once arriving at her mother's house, the wolf killed her. Then, he panicked. He quickly cleaned up the mess and threw on one of Red's mother's night robes. He finished his disguise just as Red knocked on the door of the house. The wolf opened the door and invited Red in while using a womanly voice. Red was breathing heavily from the long walk, and so the wolf told her, "Somehow I knew you would come to visit me. There is food and drink for you on the kitchen table."

As Red bit into the meal on the table, a cat walked by the window and said, "I have seen all that has happened. You are eating your mother's flesh."

Red, obviously frightened, looked at her mother and said, "Mother, a cat tells me I am eating your flesh."

"Lies, she tells you. You can see that all my flesh is here, with me."

So Red finished the meal. She took a drink out of the wine in a glass on the table, when a snake slithered by her on the floor. It said, "It is your mother's blood that you drink."

Red looked again at her mother and said, "Mother, a snake tells me I am drinking your blood."

"Lies, he tells you. You can see that all my blood is here, with me."

And so Red finished drinking the wine on the table and started to go to bed, when she realized that her mother looked much different than before. "Mother, perhaps my memory deceives me, but your ears have grown since I have last seen you."

"Oh, my dear, they have only grown so that I could hear your heart beat as you rushed to find me."

Red took another step closer. "Mother, perhaps my memory deceives me, but your eyes have widened since I have last seen you."

"Oh, dear girl, I have widened them only so I could see you better when you've come to visit me."

Red was frightened now. She knew what had happened but was still too frightened to run. "Your-- your teeth, mother..."

And at this point, the wolf attacked Red and ate her. He finished his meal just as the morning sun rose, and he turned back to a man. As a man, he had barely any memory of what had happened. He looked through Red's clothes and found a small knife with a red ribbon around it, and at this point, he looked around him and screamed of fright at what he had done to his own wife and daughter.

Liar's Ransom

If, on your quest for living,
you should discover Earth,
then may it be perfect.
May it be its own rebirth.
Why don't we see this?
Everyone you know you knew.
It's an excuse for a being,
it's a limelight through and through.
It's a tragedy of sorts,
kinds of things I cannot bear.
It's electrical and important,
so blind and unaware.
It's the noise you hear at midnight.
It's the sirens in the morn.
It's the stories that you heard,
long before your birth was born.
So sing your silly nightmares,
let the light fade from it all.
As we wander through it, we will
surely stand up, surely fall.
All your numerals can't explain
everything that I have seen.
Your lies can't underestimate
the world beyond the screen.
So dance to all your steps.
Kill your makeshift loves.
Because one day, someday soon now,
I'll see what you're made of.

Caleb

Setting: Gina and Lola are both high school students. Lola is sitting alone at a table in the cafeteria when Gina approaches her.

Gina: Hey, do you mind if I sit down?

Lola: Uh... sure.

Gina: *she sits* Look, I-- *sigh*

Lola: What?

Gina: Do you talk to Caleb anymore?

Lola: Sometimes, but not that much.

Gina: Oh.

Lola: Um... Why do you ask?

Gina: *she laughs* I'm sorry. I was just wondering because I'm going through a tough time and I don't think he loves me anymore.

Lola: *is shocked at her honesty* Oh. Well, he doesn't really talk to me that much lately.

Gina: Oh... So you had feelings for him?

Lola: Yeah, I did.

Gina: Sorry I brought that up.

Lola: That's okay. *laughs*

Gina: Still do?

Lola: Kinda. *hesitates, then quickly* ...but I'm not gonna, like, try to steal him from you or anything.

Gina: *laughs* I just don't know. I don't think he loves me like he used to.

Lola: Why do you say that?

Gina: Because... Well, we can't see each other like we used to and I think he's losing interest.

Lola: You two still aren't allowed to see each other?

Gina: We are, kind of. I mean, my mom is letting me slowly see him, and I guess it's not enough for him.

Lola: That's terrible.

Gina: I love him so much and I've been treating him as good as I can when I see him, and I give him my undivided attention and it's still not enough

Lola: Do you want me to talk to him or something?

Gina: Would you please? I don't know what he's ever told you about me.

Lola: Nothing really that bad, but I think the only reason I felt so negatively about you before was that the only time he would talk about you was when something bad happened, you know?

Gina: Yeah, I know. It's not like that, though. He's a hard one to be with. He has a really bad temper. Seriously, it's unbelievable how he lashes out for no reason. He's hit me before and I've hit him back. It's unlike me to do something like that, but I defend myself. I'm the type to jump right back with it.

Lola: Well, if you think you guys are going through problems, you should talk to him about it. Maybe it's something else in his life that's making him act strangely.

Gina: I've tried to talk to him, and he keeps everything in. The things that really bother him he keeps inside.

Lola: Yeah, he is like that... I really don't know what to say. I mean, he's a guy. Guys are like that... But, I'll still talk to him if you want me to.

Gina: Alright thanks. Like, I hope you don't have hard feelings towards me. I mean, I'm sure he's told everyone how bad of a person I am but I'm not

Lola: Don't worry about it. No hard feelings.

Gina: *smiles slightly* I don't know... Do you remember how he used to be? Back when he would have a new girlfriend practically every week?

Lola: A while ago, yeah.

Gina: Well, when we first started dating, I had never been in a relationship. I couldn't handle it when we started going out. Because he had a history of cheating, and I was scared and it bothered me he's gone out with so many people because I cared so much about him.

Lola: I understand what you mean. The fact that he's so experienced is kind of intimidating, and it's hard to feel like you're accepted by him. I remember when we used to hang out a lot he would always do this kind of scowl, and I never knew if it was because he thought I did something stupid or if it was just the look he happened to have on.

Gina: Yeah, he does do that. Anyway, I don't know where our relationship is going, He's changed a lot, like he's not how he use to be at all. He use to be so caring and sweet, and right now he's such an angry person. After he fought that guy, he became so aggressive.

Lola: Well, the reason he even fought him was because he had insulted the fact that you two were together, so I'd say he cares about you a lot to have gotten so angry.

Gina: I know, but now he just takes his anger out on me, and I don't even do anything. Like, he doesn't hit me or anything. Mostly I hit him. But he just yells a lot, and it's getting hard to put up with.

Lola: How long's he been angry for, would you say?

Gina: For a while now. Definitely since the end of May.

Lola: Oh... well, maybe it's just a phase. I know I've gone through really angry spots.

Gina: I really hope so, like right now he's hanging out with some girl named Molly Parting or something and I don't know if I should be worried or not. I mean, at first, he told me he was at Frank's place, but then later he told me the truth.

Lola: *laughs* Trust me, there is nothing going on between him and Molly. She's not really his type.

Gina: I hope.

Lola: Well, is there anything you've said or done lately that would upset him? I mean, like, even if it was good-intentioned, try to imagine it through his eyes. Is there anything that may have been one way and seemed another to him?

Gina: Not that I recall, the most I've been is depressed and cry to him. I don't know if he's angry about it.

Lola: Well, I don't know if that's it or not, but Caleb has always been really needy. He's usually the one who wants to complain. That's probably not it at all, but it's all I can think of.

Gina: I know he's really needy...

Lola: Gina, I don't know if you're trying to convince me of something, but I honestly don't know what to say. I know that he's needy, and I don't blame you for anything. Look, is there any reason you're telling me all this?

Gina: I'm not trying to convince you of anything, I'm just trying to find a answer from someone. I cant take this pain anymore.

Lola: Maybe you and Caleb could talk and I could act as a mediator or something, so we can get to the root of whatever the problem is. Other than that, I don't know how to solve this, mostly because I can't pinpoint the problem.

Gina: Me either... I was just wondering why all this is happening. I know that when he tries to convince me I'm being overdramatic but I know I'm not. I have a gut feeling there's something wrong, and I don't know if it's because of me or what. I wanted to talk to you because I know you two are really close.

Lola: Well, you guys have been together since, like, November, right? That's a really long relationship for high school. Couples usually start getting rocky at this point, so its not anything to worry too hard about. Maybe he's trying to put on a hard front because he feels so vulnerable.

Gina: I hope we're just hitting a bump in the road. Like, I notice when he starts hanging with new people he changes.

Lola: *laughs* Yeah, I know what you mean by that. My friend Georgia does that to an extreme.

Gina: Like, he's hanging out with Cam now and Jeff, and like he wants to do drugs. And he never used to.

Lola: I can see how that would happen. I hang out with Cam, too, and he kind of makes it seem like it's "the most fantastic thing in the world." I remember Caleb telling me about his panic attack when he did drugs, though. I think if he had to ultimately make a decision, he wouldn't do it. He's way too scared of having a health problem.

Gina: I don't know where his panicking started. I thought it was for attention for a while, because he does those things and I put up with it, hoping it goes away, but him panicking has been going on for months. Like it happened from smoking pot, and he freaked and he hasn't been the same and I think that him mom flipping out after she found out about it didn't help.

Lola: Yeah, I know his parents do put a lot of pressure on him.

Gina: Like, I love his mom, and I know she was just being a good parent, but I think she's messed up. And I know Caleb knows that, he's complained to me before about it.

Lola: Her mind works weird, I don't know how to describe it. Like, she doesn't really get certain things.

Gina: And she punishes Caleb for such small things. Like if he's home 2 min late without calling. He almost got grounded for letting the dog out today

Lola: that's insanity. *the bell rings* Well, we have to go to class, but I'll talk to Caleb when I can, okay?

Gina: Alright, thank you so much. I'll see you later, then.

Lola: Bye. *they both walk away*

My Nose

I've lied to you all.

To you I said I did something I never could have done.
To you I said I won something I never could have won.
To you I said I made something I never could have made.
To you I said I hate someone I couldn't ever hate.

To you I said, "I'm sorry," but I don't have any shame.
To you I said I never changed, but I was still the same.
To you I said something that I could never repeat here.
To you I said I was confident, but I still live in fear.

To you I said I loved you, but we all know that's untrue.
To you I said I hated you, but that has all changed, too.
To you I said a thousand times you'd never see it my way.
But, to me, I said, "Of course I'm not," and that's the worst thing I could say.

My Soul Burned

I can't believe it's over.
All the things that I did dread,
I no longer have to worry about,
the clouds overhead.
I can't believe it's over
just like that,
with just a little negotatiation,
and a slight tip of the hat.
I can't believe it's over,
and I sure as hell have learned,
that I love the little liars!
They saved me when my soul burned!

Napkins With the Lipstick On

May the victor be you
and all the children that I know.
You are the shining star to me,
and I couldn't be more slow.
You won the world with apathy,
then let your rage run wild.
Oh, what a feat you accomplished,
all with a little guile.

Misery of sanity.
Were you here and will you be
by my side after I've won,
and when the light goes by?
Silly girl, you thought of me,
cigarettes, and willow trees.
Napkins with the lipstick on,
I wonder about tonight.

Althought I have no purpose,
I'd like to think of you,
getting stronger every hour,
each time with something new.
I've called it an excuse,
and a limelight through and through,
a tragedy of sorts,
but I've never heard your view.

Jericque

Whatever I could have heard
mattered not, not anymore.
Does it matter, then, that I
now heard a knock at the door?
A man with his hat in hand,
he asked if I had a bed.
"Yes," I answered, "So use it.
But do not think I thee wed."
I didn't know he'd a dog,
but I welcomed the mutt, too.
As he wrapped his arms 'round me,
he said, "Call me Jericque."
"Damn sight better if you do,"
I said, leading him inside.
Jericque took chair to sit.
The dog found corner to hide.
"His name's old Sal Jenkinson,
and mine is Jericque Maggs.
I left my home this morning
but forgot to pack my bags."
So, pouring him some whiskey,
which I kept around the place,
I asked him where he came from.
He'd a blank look on his face.
"Lady, you don't want to know.
Spectacles can't see that far."
Then he glanced down the hallway;
I had left the door ajar.
And in a chivalrous way,
he stood, polite as could be.
He just went and slammed it shut,
took one step closer to me.
He'd shut out the whole world now,
just him, Sal, and me leaving.
I got scared thoughtless as he
started saying crazy things.
"Don't fret now," he said calmly,
"this is just a business chat."
But if we were both talking,
why was I not talking back?
"An attraction's comin' soon,
and you done got chose, as well.
The papers all in order.
You're allowed to live in Hell."
Jericque?! The devil?! God...
"Grim Reaper, actually."
Now I knew why Sal was there...
"Grim Dog," he said cleverly.
"Most people don't accept it,
but you done pretty damn well.
Most people just can't grasp it,
that they're going straight to Hell."
As Jericque grabbed my hand,
he lead me to my basement.
The steps were very dark now;
not a single one seemed lit.
I asked him what I did wrong,
and then I began to cry.
I dropped to my knees, shouting,
"God, why do I got to die?"
As he yanked me down farther,
he scratched my name off a list.
"When will you people realize
that God will never exist?"

Tornado

I was Jean Martha Mooney.

They say you're only safe in the eye of a tornado, when chaos surrounds you from every angle. I was right there in the eye.

As a freshman in high school, I joined theater to make friends and gain self-confidence, both of which I did. Onstage, I went from a nobody to a high school starlet, and everyone respected me as an actress. But offstage, I was still sort of a wallflower. I never danced very much at parties, and I did not have boyfriends. Many people were my friends, but by junior year, I still had not completely broken out of my shell.

I envied others socially. People like Therese Hannan, who drank and was loud, who always had someone to laugh with, and who always knew her lines. People like Frieda Scolpey. Especially Frieda Scolpey, who was always cast in the best roles (like the slinky mistress of the man whose murder was being investigated), and who always looked her best, and who had every guy in cast practically drooling over her while she still maintained a hard-to-get attitude.

Even by junior year, I paled in comparison to my own classmates and castmates.

But don't get the idea that I was completely shut out socially. I mean, I was included in all of the activities that everyone in theater had, I just wasn't exactly... cherished. I can see why, though; I was awkward. At 16, and in junior year, I was still awkward.

It was the last rehearsal before the fall play in junior year (We were doing The Phantom of the Opera, where I was stuck playing the dull role of Madame Giry.) when Therese Hannan came into the dressing room where I was changing out of costume. (She, of course, had received the much-desired role of Carlotta, whom we portrayed very sexily in our production.)

"Jean, is that you?" she asked, because my back was to her.

"Yes," I said, turning around. "Who else would wear this hideous frock but the great Madame?"

Therese laughed. "It's not all that bad. It actually makes you look younger in comparison and... less ugly."

I smirked, pulling on my jeans. "Are you calling me ugly, Resey?"

"N-n-n-no! I totally did not mean it that way! I-- Well, you get it," she responded quickly. It was all right, though. I knew I was ugly. "But, uh... the reason I came in here's that everyone's meeting up in the costume room. I think we're gonna just chill, maybe play a game or something."

"All right," I said. "I will be there."

"Awesome. See ya." And just like that, Therese was gone.

I was just finishing pulling my shirt on over my had when I heard a toilet flush and then the sink run. In a few seconds, Gia Bateman (who was a sophomore playing my daughter, Meg Giry) appeared in front of me, asking, "Was that Therese who went forth so quickly?"

Gia was a strange one. She often quoted Shakespeare and had once told me, in confidence, that she loved the way the backs of boys' knees looked when they walked. For some environmental reason that I can't remember, she wouldn't eat any chicken-based products and always, always, went commando. (For everyone else's sake, though, she changed in a bathroom stall and would wear underwear when in costume, since, you know, the costumes were used by everyone.)

"Yes," I told her. "Did you hear what she said?"

"Mmhmm," Gia vocalized. She waved goodbye to me and left the dressing room quickly. She wasn't exactly a fan of small talk.

After checking in the mirror to make sure my hair didn't look terrible (which it didn't, thank God), I, myself, stepped briskly out of the dressing room and into the costume room, followed by Dan Thele. (Playing our Raoul, Dan was a pretty-boy who looked like he shouldn't be here, but in a British prep school, wearing a sweater vest and playing cricket with friends whom he referred affectionately to as 'the old boys.' Aileen from crew thought he was an absolute doll; you should have seen her, but I honestly could not for the life of me see how.)

Everyone from cast and a few crew members (including Jeff and Aileen) had formed in a circle on the floor of the costume room. I started to sit down next to Aileen, but just as I did so, Frieda called out from the other side of the circle, "Ap-ap! Alternate genders." So I sat between Chris and Anthony. Chris was decent looking, but he always smelled like what cauliflower would do if you soaked it in warm water. And, between you and me, I thought Anthony was gay. There was something just a little bit too perfect about his hair.

I noticed that Frieda herself was sitting between Lou Manory on one side and Travis Raseta on the other. Lou was known mostly for being an onstage ham, but the hilarious life of every cast party. He was always the first to dance whenever music came on, and for good reason, too. He was a terrific dancer. Not even in a joking way, either; he was spectacular.

As for Travis... he could have easily been the best looking guy at our entire school, let alone the theater group. Pretty much every girl on cast thought he was hot, myself included. If given the chance, I am sure none of the girls would have turned him down, although not all of them would admit it because of pride (he was said to be a terrible boyfriend, but a great hookup). Not only that, but he was funny, too, and nice to everyone, even me. He knew how attractive he was, and yet he was still really nice to everybody. And not even that phony kind of nice that laughs at you when you walk away, either. He was genuine.

The funny thing, though, was that Travis was talking to Frieda and Frieda was just sort of staring off into space, listening to him. That was what I envied most about her; the cutest guy in the whole school could be talking to her, trying to impress her, and she would just be staring off into space like he was lecturing her on something boring.

When she realized everyone was there, Frieda called the group to attention. "Alright, can everyone just quiet down? We're gonna actually do something fun for a change." She said this to mildly poke fun at Georgia Penthrow, who usually arranged last-rehearsal activities like sharing our favorite memories or writing thank-you notes to everybody. Georgia sort of looked down at her feet when Frieda said this, but everyone tried not to look at her.

Travis pulled out an empty Mountain Dew bottle from his bag. "As the Spanish would say, 'Girar la Taza.'"

"Turn the cup?" I asked. It was evident that Travis was just starting Spanish I, whereas I had just finished Spanish III the previous year.

"Is that what I said?" he asked me. When I nodded, he said, "Well, how do you say Spin the Bottle in Spanish?"

"Well, that would be 'Hacer Girar la Botella,' which actually means rotate the bottle, but it's the closest equivalent the Spanish language has," I informed him.

"Oh, well, gracias, Jean." He pronounced my name like "Hay-ahn" in mockery of Spanish pronunciation. I laughed.

(Frieda was becoming visibly annoyed at the fact that Travis was having a conversation with anyone other than her, but I couldn't see why. It wasn't as though she had cherished her chance to speak with him.)

"But not the lame peck-on-the-cheek kind of Spin the Bottle. We are talking minimum of ten second make-out session, folks," Frieda added quickly, changing the conversation somewhat back to herself again.

Then, this real nerd of a freshman named Emmie Sinclair piped in. She was really greasy-haired and ugly, and I almost sort of felt bad for her, but everyone else made fun of her all the time, so I did, too. Most of the time I at least tried to tone down whenever she would embarrass herself. She asked, "What if we don't want to kiss anybody?"

See, this was why I almost was sorry for Emmie. She had probably never in her life kissed a boy, and she was afraid of being humiliated, and afraid of having her first kiss be in the basement of the school with someone she barely knew. And, I don't mean to sound cruel or anything, but I doubt any boy would want to kiss her, really, with her looking the way she did. It wasn't like she was hideous or anything; it was nothing a little makeup couldn't fix. She just didn't put in any effort. (I mean, even I had made out before, and I wasn't exactly a social butterfly.)

"Perfect timing, Em," Frieda said. "Therese, if you could please bring out our consolation prize for those that do not want to participate in the mouth-fest."

On command, Therese took out a large bottle from her purse. "Anyone who doesn't kiss on their spin has to take one gulp of tequila. It's your choice, man: kiss someone, or run the risk of having a hangover opening night."

Emmie tried to ask, "What's a hangover?" but only got to, "What's a--" because I stopped her.

"Em, please don't," I said quietly, so she'd know what I meant. I knew that poor girl like a book. She once asked us what an orgasm was, and we all just laughed, but I knew it really wasn't her fault. She just didn't know. Travis looked at me respectfully; he liked the fact that I'd rescued her from embarrassment. Like I said, he was genuinely nice.

So Frieda tied to ignore Emmie and asked the group, "Any inquiries?" When no one said anything, she continued, "Good. Gia, why don't you go first? Show 'em all how it's done."

Gia may have been weird, but she was weird in a cool way, so Frieda liked her, and so did everyone else. Gladly, Gia gave the bottle its first spin of the night, and it landed on Jeff from crew. Jeff was a regular guy, not too special in any respect, really. The two kissed for the allotted ten seconds (the rest of us counted down from ten) and then it was Jeff's turn to spin.

He landed on Emmie.

So Therese handed the bottle to her, but Emmie just said, "Isn't it against the rules to have alcohol? I can't. I'm a minor."

"So am I," Therese said, shoving the bottle into Emmie's arms. "If you rat on us, you better believe you won't get cast next year. Now take a swig, damn it." That was the only thing I didn't like about Therese; she was sort of harsh. As expected, Emmie did take a swig, though, and made a face before trying to hand the bottle back to Therese. But Therese just said, "You better hold onto that, hun," so Emmie did.

Then Emmie spun and it landed on Travis, who refused to let Emmie take another swig for not kissing him. He quickly spun, and it landed on (who else?) Frieda.

Frieda tried to act like she was rolling her eyes, but I saw right through it. She was excited and she knew it.

Travis almost immediately began kissing her. He got pretty into it, too, and so did apathetic Frieda, for that matter. Dan shouted, "Go for it, Trav!" because they had been going well over the required ten seconds.

That's what got me. How could Travis be so nice, but like such a bitch?

Anyway, when they were finally done, Travis said to Frieda, "That was good," and then to us, "She's good at that."

Frieda just smiled and pretended like she was shyly amused by him, but she was lying with that smile. She knew she was a bitch, and everyone else did, too. She wasn't hiding anything. I wanted to choke her and I wanted to be her at the same time.

The next few spins were nothing memorable, not by far. Thankfully, the bottle never landed on me, so I could just sit there and witness it all take place. However, it landed an awful lot on Emmie (almost like the boys were timing it to), and she ended up having to drink almost half the whole bottle of tequila. Everybody tried to ignore her, except Frieda, who just kept laughing and laughing at how drunk Emmie was getting.

I couldn't stand to watch it anymore. Finally, I stood up and walked over to Emmie, helping her stand and saying, "Come on, Em, I'm going to drive you home now."

Frieda sighed. "Aw, Jeannie, you ruined all our fun!"

"This isn't funny, Scolpey," I told her. Nobody ever called her by her last name unless they were serious; she hated her last name.

Much to my surprise (and likely the surprise of everyone else, too), Travis jumped up from his seat and said, "I'm going with."

"You are?" both Frieda and I asked at once. I cocked an eyebrow at her.

"Yes," Travis said, walking over to me. "I am."

"No, you're not," Frieda said quickly. She was really pissed off, and I'd be lying if I said I didn't like it. As Travis helped me walk Emmie out of the room, Frieda shouted out childishly, "Someone's got a little crush on little Miss Sinclair, eh? I bet you have Mrs. Emmie Raseta written all over your little notebooks, eh, Trav?"

Travis turned around. For a second, it looked like he was going to walk back, so Frieda looked happy, but he just said, "Frieda. Shut the fuck up for once." Then he turned back around and continued helping me bring Emmie out to the parking lot.

There was only one actual obstacle we faced in getting out of the building. You see, usually I parked in the area of the school behind the stage, and the only way to get out this way was through a storage garage next to the auditorium. But that day, I guess they'd locked the garage door, so we couldn't get out right away.

Luckily, one of the custodian's sons, Pedro, was walking down the hall next to the storage room. Had Pedro been a legal American citizen and spoken English, he probably would have been a student at the school, but instead he helped his mother mop floors after hours. My fractured knowledge of the Spanish language allowed me to have interesting (but comical) conversations with him. I helped him learn some English a while back, too, but he wasn't that great at it. When he was trying to say, "How are you today?" he would say, "You are this day?"

Thanking God that I'd seen him, I shouted, "Oye, Jorge!" (I called him Jorge jokingly.)

He backed up so he was in the doorway of the storage room again and shouted, "Marta, mi nombre no es Jorge!" excitedly. (He called me Marta because my middle name was Martha, and it was easier for him to pronounce than Jean.)

"Mi nombre no es Marta, Jorge!"

He walked over to us and asked, "Que pasa?" When he saw Travis and Emmie, he said politely, "Hello."

"Necesito un favor, Pedro."

"Is you need me do?" (Which, in his broken English, meant, "What is it that you need me to do for you?")

"Um... la puerta." I said. "Abra por favor la puerta para nosotros."

Pedro sighed and took out his keys, looking for the one that would open the door we were standing next to. He joked, "I should give you my keys. You ask me use them so much."

When he finally opened the door, I breathed a sigh of release and must have said, "Gracias!" about twenty times, before we finally got out of the garage.

"De nada, de nada, de nada, Marta! Adios!"

When we finally got to the parking lot, Travis insisted we take his car. "I'd rather Em get sick in my piece of crap car than yours."

"Oh, thanks!" I said sarcastically.

Travis laughed and so did I while we tried to get Emmie to sit still in the back seat of the car and then get a seat belt on her. She kept moving around. She wouldn't stop singing, "The phaaaaaantom of the opera is heeeeeere..."

Travis got into the driver's seat and I the passenger's, and as he pulled out of the school parking lot, Travis asked me why I didn't talk much offstage.

"I guess I just don't have all that much to say." I asked him, "Why do you like Frieda one minute and then not the next?"

He breathed in deeply. "That's a loaded question." He paused. "I don't know. I mean, you know what they say about her."

"No. What?"

"Great hookup. Terrible girlfriend."

I just laughed. "That's surprising."

"Why's that?"

"That's exactly what they say about you, Travis."

"What? That I'm a terrible girlfriend?" He laughed. "I hate to tell you, but I've never been anyone's girlfriend before."

"You know what I mean!" I said through laughs. "But, I mean, you should know about Frieda's past anyway. Did you ever hear about that guy that was with her the summer after freshman year?"

"A bit too much, Jean. How many times have you heard her tell that story? Honestly, how many times?"

"Only once, back when we were going prop-shopping for the musical last year."

"Oh," he said. "Well, then, you wouldn't really know."

"Know what?" I asked.

"I've heard Frieda talk about her entire history with that guy dozens of times to dozens of different people. Every time she tells it, something changes. It's never the same story twice. The whole event never even took place. It's about as true as Paul Bunyan."

"Oh."

Finally, we got to Emmie's house, which it took a while to find, considering we couldn't exactly ask Emmie for directions in her state. Travis walked her to the door and told her parents that the reason she was acting that way was probably because of food poisoning from the catering we got; he said a few other people had it, too.

When he got back to the car, he checked his watch.

"Say, Jeannie, it's only about 8:00," he said, smiling. "Would you like to go out somewhere, maybe to eat or see a movie?"

I smiled. "Why, Travis, I would absolutely love to."

So Travis started driving again.

I am Jean Martha Mooney.

They say it's only peaceful in the eye of a tornado.

I rolled down the window and let my hair fly free in the wind.

The Fool

I think about where I am right now,
and where I used to be.
The people I once thought I loved,
the things I couldn't see.
I'm so embarrassed of myself,
all that I said and did.
Looking back on my behavior,
I seem just like a kid.
As Summer ends and school begins,
I don't want to be me.
I'll be a ghost of my past self,
the dying mystery.
I don't think you realize
that I'm talking to you.
If you did, you'd probably think I'm strange,
so I don't blame you if you do.

Lydia

He learned to drive a train of thought
that crashed into the rubber house
they made out of their love that
made itself after their first date.
He's jogging his memory,
hoping to give himself a reversal
of fortune that he couldn't find
in a haystack next to a needle.
He's got a prominent Adam's apple, which
he gave to his schoolteachers, hoping
he could pass his classes just like
he did with opportunity when it knocked.
She kept telling him to open up,
but she never really knew,
no, she was uninformed,
on what happens
behind
closed
doors.

Something

I looked straight at that wooden chair, hoping I would appear there,
yet every time I'd time to stare, it seemed to mock the restless night.
The music that was blasting loud, the sky that was devoid of clouds,
and right into the crowd, I shouted, "Something doesn't feel quite right."
No, something doesn't feel quite right.

I believe it was October, the night everyone stayed sober,
yet I never quite got over, over that forgotten fright.
Costumes and an orange glow, that strange scent that I'll never know,
and an early snow fell on us. I said, "Something doesn't feel quite right."
No, something doesn't feel quite right.

He spoke to me in foreign words, though English, could have sworn I'd heard,
his voice was slurred as he told me all about his drunken fight.
Every time I tried to think, a noise came from the bathroom sink,
and then his drink was on me. I thought, "Something doesn't feel quite right."
No, something doesn't feel quite right.

It was never my intention to anger anyone mentioned,
even though the aforementioned never showed they were contrite.
Now and then I start to wonder about ideas torn asunder,
and in the thunder, I swore to God, "Something doesn't feel quite right!"
This just doesn't feel quite right.

The Perpetual Liar

The perpetual liar,
she stands
on a monument she made for herself
out of untruths
and creativity
and the ability to pretend
that she's in great distress.
She lists everyone she knows
and realizes
none of them have been told the whole truth.
And so
the world sees a monument,
and she sees a pebble.