Read Love and Leftovers Online
Authors: Sarah Tregay
so she doesn’t need
another one for propane.
So I pull on my great-grandfather’s
World War II bomber jacket,
and go out in the cold
to fetch firewood.
So that Gigi
won’t be reminded
that her great-granddaughter
is living in her summerhouse
in October.
It takes Aunt Greta
to talk
my mother
into renting an apartment.
Greta said
that the pipes freeze
by Veterans Day
and then you have to
haul a bucket of water
up from the bay
to flush
the toilet.
MarsBars: | i’ve got sorta good news |
EmoK8: | ur coming home? |
MarsBars: | no. we’re gonna move out of the summerhouse into an apt. |
EmoK8: | marcie, that’s not good news. |
| it means ur staying in NH. |
MarsBars: | can u at least try & b happy 4 me? |
EmoK8: | i’m sorry. i’ll try. |
MarsBars: | thnx. lets talk abt you, instead. |
EmoK8: | does PMS get worse when ur totally attracted to a hot guy? |
MarsBars: | i don’t think so. |
EmoK8: | cause i’m all grumpy, |
| yet i want to throw myself @ angelo. |
MarsBars: | so do it! |
EmoK8: | can’t. got my period. |
MarsBars: | sucks to be you. |
EmoK8: | sucks to be all of us. |
| wait, does linus know? |
MarsBars: | nope. told u 1st. |
EmoK8: | he’s gonna be bummed. |
MarsBars: | yeah, i guess. |
EmoK8: | he will b. |
MarsBars: | do u think he’s gay? |
EmoK8: | gay??? |
MarsBars: | he never, like, touches me and stuff. |
EmoK8: | kinda hard to touch u |
| when u live 3,000,000,000 miles away. |
MarsBars: | no, i mean before. |
EmoK8: | he kisses u. |
MarsBars: | but maybe that’s not enuf. |
EmoK8: | don’t worry about it. |
MarsBars: | u sure? |
EmoK8: | yeah, he likes you. |
MarsBars: | even long-distance? |
EmoK8: | even 3,000,000,000 miles away. g’nite. |
MarsBars: | nite |
So Mom and I
move into the two-bedroom apartment
over the used-books store
next to campus.
We borrow Gigi’s furniture
from the summerhouse.
We take the skillet to make pancakes,
the cereal bowls, and the tarnished silverware.
I say a secret good-bye
to the potbellied stove
because I will miss
toasting marshmallows.
After our suitcases have been lugged up the stairs,
after I find soap, shampoo, and a towel,
and after I scrub the bathtub with dish soap,
I fill the tub,
step out of my clothes
and into the water.
Sleepy warmth envelops me
like a cup of chamomile tea.
I relax
floating up with each breath
and sinking when I exhale,
my nipples bobbing
like buoys
on Great Bay.
After we moved in,
Aunt Greta brought over
two bags of winter clothes.
It felt as if she hated to think
of Mom and me
having only one suitcase each
of clothes to wear.
One bag had things she didn’t wear much—
turtlenecks, jeans, and sweaters.
The other bag had new things—
socks, tights, and old-lady underwear.
“Aunt Greta,” I told her,
“No one under the age of thirty
wears briefs,
unless, of course,
they’re a guy.”
I hate to admit it
but
I like my big panties
because
they don’t give me
automatic
wedgies.
On the last weekend in October,
it is a family tradition
to prepare the summerhouse
for the winter ahead.
Gigi commands operations
from her post on the porch.
My great-uncle Arthur
maneuvers the boat onto the trailer
while I sit in the cab
and pretend to drive
which I prefer to mopping and dusting,
and picking creepy-crawlies off the patio furniture
before dragging it inside.
The summerhouse was tucked in
among the trees
sung the lullaby of the tide
splashing on the rocks below.
The only thing
not in place
was the spare key,
dry in my pocket
instead of damp
under the potted fern.
The Leftover Lovers YouTube Performance #2
(LINUS THOMAS ON GUITAR/VOCALS,
KATIE RASKOLNIKOV ON BASS,
AND IAN WONG ON DRUMS)
Marcie, don’t believe what they sold you
Don’t listen to what they told you
Just let me knock on your door
Wrap my arms around you
Even the score
Marcie, don’t be a pawn
In the games parents play
In the hours before dawn
Marcie, don’t believe what they sold you
Don’t listen to what they told you
Just let me knock on your door
Wrap my arms around you
Even the score
Marcie, it’s your father’s fault
Don’t be a captive
To your mother’s doubt
Marcie, don’t believe what they sold you
Don’t listen to what they told you
Just let me knock on your door
Wrap my arms around you
Even the score
Marcie, I wanna open your door
Wrap my arms around you
Even the score
There were tears in my eyes
when I called Linus.
I told him I wished
he was here to hold me.
That I wished I could
wrap myself around him,
tuck myself under his chin, and
bury myself in his arms.
Linus said
he wanted the same things.
I didn’t say
that I wanted to do all of this
curled under the covers,
skin against skin
with nothing but a condom
between us.
And I wondered if
Linus wanted the same things.
Wrapped in pink Saran wrap
And topped with a yellow Post-it
That read
I know
Fruits Basket
is so yesterday
but I had to get us these.
Luv, Katie
Inside was a
plaid | pleated |
Catholic | Japanese |
Saint Mary’s | schoolgirl |
uniform | skirt. |
MarsBars: | katie! i luv the skirt. |
| thank you! |
EmoK8: | does it fit? |
MarsBars: | yep. |
EmoK8: | good. |
| i thought it might be too tight. |
MarsBars: | no. i’ve lost abt 12 pounds. |
EmoK8: | OMG! congrats. |
MarsBars: | thnx. i didn’t lose it on purpose. |
EmoK8: | who cares? i bet you look good |
| i dunno tho, linus likes us chubby girls. |
MarsBars: | ur not chubby. |
| & i’m still not sure linus likes girls. |
EmoK8: | argh. linus likes u. |
| why don’t u believe me? |
MarsBars: | i dunno. he says it, but— |
EmoK8: | he doesn’t touch u . . . |
yeah. u said. | |
but he can’t. ur in NH. | |
MarsBars: | does angelo touch you? |
EmoK8: | yes. |
MarsBars: | i mean under ur clothes? |
EmoK8: | yeah. |
MarsBars: | and u didn’t tell me? |
EmoK8: | how was i supposed to bring that up? |
| angelo gave me a back rub, just not on my back? |
MarsBars: | OMG! on your front? |
| did it feel good? |
EmoK8: | oh yeah. |
MarsBars: | i am so jealous. |
| i want linus to like me like that. |
| if he’s not gay, i mean. |
EmoK8: | he does. he will. |
| & im not gonna say it again HE IS NOT GAY!!! |
MarsBars: | ok ok |
| anyway, i got a “history of new england ports” paper to write. |
EmoK8: | i guess i can let you go. nite. |
MarsBars: | thnx for playing the marcie song. Nite. |
Now that we live in town
I take myself out for dinner
when Mom doesn’t feel like eating.
Pizza at Wildcat’s,
pitas at the deli,
salads at the sit-down place.
You don’t know what lonely is
until you’ve asked
for a table for one.
The waitress comes over
to fill your glass and
ask you how your salad tastes
a few times too many.
And you wish
she’d just sit down
and talk.
“Okay, okay,
all you do is go on and on
about Linus being gay.
So what if he is?
Goody for him.
Really, Marcie,
why should you care?
You like gay people—
you love your dad,
and Danny’s a sweet guy.”
“But what if I love Linus?” I ask her.
“You love him?”
“I don’t know,” I tell her. “I might . . . I want to.