Read Sister Slam and the Poetic Motormouth Road Trip Online
Authors: Linda Oatman-High
“I'm lucky, too,” I said.
“I don't know what I'd do
without you. Seriously. I'd be
deliriously wacked.
They'd have to lock me
in a padded room.”
“It's true,” Twig said.
“She'd be a lunatic
without you.”
Pops touched my cheek,
and we didn't speak, as
nurses squeaked
by and a baby
began to cry
from somewhere
out there.
“So how was your
poetry tour?”
Pops asked,
and I grinned.
“Cool,” I answered.
“It's too hard to
make a
long story
short. I'll try to
explain it
later. By
the way,
this is Jake.
He saved
my life.”
Pops was a
gentleman,
even in a
dress, and
he shook
Jake's hand.
“Pleased to meet
you, Jake,” he said.
“Thanks for
looking out for my
baby girl.
She's the
only one
I've got.”
“No problem,”
said Jake.
“He's my
best friend,”
I said, but then
Twig glared.
“After Twig,”
I said.
Pops rubbed
his head, a
faraway gaze
in his faded
blue eyes. “When
the pain in my chest
started,” he said,
“I had a vision
of you twoâ
Twig and Lauraâ
and you were
big stars, driving
fancy cars and
signing autographs.
Then I saw Mom,
right before everything
went black
with the heart attack.”
“Wow,” I said,
and took a big
breath. “Pow.”
I sat down
on the edge of
Pops's bed.
“So how's
Mrs. Smith's
been?” I asked.
“Same old
game,” Pops said.
“Cherry pies
churning out
like flies.”
“Pops works
in a pie factory,”
I explained to Jake,
no longer ashamed.
“A pie factory,” Jake said.
“Cool. Free pies.”
Pops's eyes gleamed,
and he seemed to
really be liking Jake.
“What's the meaning of
the Chinese blue tattoo?”
Pops asked.
Jake smiled
and held his
arm to the light.
“Dream, Believe,
Fly,” Jake said,
and then we
all got quiet
and watched
the light of Pops's
beating heart.
I was back
in the House
of Crapper,
and I was
happier than ever,
back in the 'hood.
It felt goodâ
like home,
only better.
Pops never said
one word about me
wrecking the Firebird,
and he laminated and framed
the news photos of me and
Twig, hanging them all
over the walls.
Back in my toad-colored,
gloom-pillowed room,
with my waterbed
and lava lamp bubbling
water-red, I felt content.
Popsâmy 'rentâ
was recovering,
and I was hovering:
fluffing his pillows
and dispensing his pills
lined up on
the windowsill.
I was filled
with gratitude,
and my latitude
and attitude
were cool with Pops.
“It's wonderful
to have your music
blaring from the bedroom,”
he said. “I'm so glad to have
you back home.”
I got a job
at Bibliophile
Bob's Books,
the only bookstore
for miles,
where the floor
had black and purple tiles,
and the ceiling was painted
with strange deranged angels
playing electric guitars
instead of harps.
“Aren't you Laura Crapper?”
asked the customers, and
I got looks of respect
mixed with envy
because they'd
seen the headlines
in the local paper
about my poetry caper.
“A.K.A. Sister Slam,”
I replied.
Twig was working
at Wild Child's
Beef Jerky,
and we called Scarecrow
to tell him that
we were back home.
“You're letting your
apartment go?” he asked.
“Bummer.”
“It was a good summer,”
I said. “But Pops needs me.”
Jake and I talked every
dayâabout everything from
temporary hair dyes
to lemon pies. We
dragged out our good-byes,
and Jake said that I
was his light on moonless
nights, like he was mine.
“You two make me sick,” Twig
complained. “You're like a crack
addict, except that you're
addicted to Jake.”
“You're just jealous,” I responded,
“because your brand-new boyfriend,
Ron
,
drives a rattletrap
Honda
and isn't nearly as hot as Jake.”
On Halloween,
his face painted
lizard-green,
Jake came and we
went trick or treating,
with me teetering in glittery
red
Wizard of Oz
shoes. Twig's costume
was a floozy, and her
doozy of a boyfriend
didn't even need a mask.
Thumbing our noses
at the ridiculous Banesville
rule about not being
over thirteen for trick
or treat, we walked
door-to-door, collecting candy
in pumpkin buckets.
“Let's see how many
treats we can eat before
midnight,” Jake
said, and Twig,
thinner than ever,
was the big winner
of a miniature
candy-bar dinner.
In November,
I drove Pops's
Chevy, alone,
(Pops was too tired to go,
he said) to Jersey
and had Thanksgiving dinner
in an expensive restaurant
with Misty and Vince
and Jake.
“Everybody say
what you're grateful for,”
said Misty,
and we listed gratitudes.
Mine included
Pops, my job, Twig,
and of course Jake.
“I'm grateful for Laura,
my car, and my guitar,” said
Jake. “In that order.”
Late that night, I hated
to leave Jake waving
in the rearview mirror.
“Peace out!”
he shouted. “Ciao!
Keep your eyes
on the road.”
I blew him
an invisible kiss,
then drove
home thinking
about how
Jake's eyes
caught the star glow.
He called
as soon as I
got back home.
“Just wanted
to say that I
really meant
what I said,”
he said.
“What: Peace out?”
I asked. “Ciao?
Keep my eyes on
the road?”
“No, crazy,” Jake said.
“About being
grateful for you,
the car, and the guitar,
in that order.
No girl's ever had
that honor before.”
“Well, this is one
flattered fat chick,” I said.
“Laura,” said Jake,
“please don't say stuff
like that. Don't call
yourself fat. You are
the coolest girl I know.”
But then,
in the beginning
of the freezing
winter season,
for no reason
that I knew,
from out of
the cold blue on December
twenty-two,
Jake's calls stopped,
and my pillows
were sopped
from sobbing.
“I'm wrecked,
a mess, in distress,
feeling less
alive than
dead,” I said
to Twig.
“It's not even been a week,”
she said. “Maybe he has
laryngitis and can't speak.”
I tried to
be cool,
but I felt
like such
a fool.
“There are
lots more sharks
in the aquarium,”
Twig said.
“We'll go to
the Guy-arium
and buy one
on sale.
Dudes are
a dime
a dozen.”
“Maybe he
found some
hussy,” I fussed.
“So bust him. Call.
E-mail. Drive to Jersey.”
I shook my head.
“I don't want to
seem desperate,
even though I am,” I said.
“Forget him,” said
Twig. “He's only
one of a trillion
male species beasts.”
“But Twig,
Jake is my friggin'
soul mate.
I'm wiggin' out without
him, not diggin'
it big time.”
“Get a grip,”
said Twig.
“It's been only
three freakin'
days, Laura.”
“But I hate
days without
Jake,” I said. “It's
like German
chocolate cake
without the icing.
Like blades
slicing my
heart, or
Cupid shooting
poison-ass darts,
or somebody
stealing my
Pop Tarts.
Life farts without
Jake in it.”
“Ohmygod. It's been only
three days,” Twig repeated.
“But three days
without Jake is like
a year without anybody
else,” I muttered,
and Twig shuddered.
“It's not like he's water
or air,” she said.
“You don't need him to survive.
You can stay alive
without a drink of Jake.”
Twig grinned.
“Hey, I just had a brainstorm!
How about I fix you up
with that divorced guy Norm,
from my work?”
“He's a jerk,” I said.
“I don't want some
beef jerky
dude.
Not to be rude,
Twig, but no thanks.”
“Listen, Sister,” Twig said.
“You're a girl who doesn't
need pearls or curls or
a romance with a man. You can
stand on your own two
combat-boot feet.”
I was bummed,
and my cup
was empty. I
was a Humpty
Dumpty fallen
off the wall.
I tried to call
again and again
but just kept getting
the beeps of the machine.
There was a
blue hole in my soul.
I coped with a poem:
I've paid the debt
of deep regret.
Lamented, repented,
yet stuck in cement.
I can smoke another cigarette,
get myself a red Corvette,
eat another crepe suzette,
drink lots of anisette.
But there's one thing
I can't forget:
the shadow of his silhouette.
“Get a grip,” Twig said.
“You don't smoke
or drink.”
“I think that I might
start,” I said.
Then I went
to bed, feeling dead
in my head,
and in my legs,
and most definitely
in the red of my heart.
It was Christmas Eve,
and our holiday doorbell
chimed to the tune of
“Silent Night.”
“We have too much
annoying joyful noise
in this house,” I groused to Pops.
Pops is into all this animated
Christmas stuff: Santa snoring,
Mrs. Claus pouring milk,
motion-activated elves putting
toys on shelves.
Pops and I had
cookies galore
from the
Wal-Mart store,
but still, I felt
bored, out of
sorts, numb to
the core.
“It's Christmas, Sister!”
Pops said, trying to
cheer me by using my slam name.
“Big deal,” I said.
“It's just another day.”
So anyway,
the doorbell
was blaring away,
and I didn't care
who was there,
because it wasn't
Jake, and Santa
Claus is a fake. I
was a Scrooge, a
grouch with an ouch
in the part of me
that used to believe.
I flung open
the door, and it
was Twig, all
decked out in
this retro
fur coat from
a vintage shop,
with jingle bell
earrings swinging.
She was bringing
my gift, which
was wrapped in
an old road map.
“Hey, Sister,”
she said, and
slapped me a
high five.
“Look alive!
Happy holidays!”
“Yeah,” I said.
I was trying to
get into the spirit
of things, wearing
my Rudolph fuzz slippers
and Santa Claus PJs
of red velour.
Twig handed
me the road-
map-wrapped
box. I'd already
given her toe socks
and Pop Rocks
and a clock
that glows pink
in the dark.