Read Sister Slam and the Poetic Motormouth Road Trip Online
Authors: Linda Oatman-High
slams all over
this city.”
“Don't be silly,”
said Misty as she
wiped her lips
on a linen napkin.
“All we ask
is their
parents' permission.”
As I wished to
sink deep into a hole
in the floor, Twig heaped
more hors d'oeuvres
onto a plate, and I began
to hate her once more.
“Twig! Don't be
such a pig!”
I hissed.
“I'm starving
to death,”
Twig mumbled,
her mouth
stuffed full
of crumbled cracker.
“Look,” said Jake.
“They're hungry.
They're alone
in a strange
city, with no clothes
to wear.
They don't even
have clean underwear!
Don't you care?”
“Dude,” said Twig,
“you rock.”
A clock
chimed five times.
“That reminds me!”
said Misty.
“Tavern on the Green!
We have reservations
for six o'clock dinner!”
“Please join us,”
said Vince. “Our treat.”
I stammered,
then blabbered
and jibber-jabbered
something lame
about wishing
we could pay.
“No problem,” said Vince.
“If you'd like to freshen up,
there's an extra
restroom in the next
room, through that door.”
Twig finished her
pig-out feast,
and I was glad
that at least
she'd stopped eating.
We clomped
into the next
room, which
was spooky,
dark as a
tomb, with
the drapes drawn.
I yawned.
It had been
a long day.
“Hey!” said Twig.
“I bet that this
is Jake's bed.”
I turned red.
Twig jumped up,
her boots on the covers.
I shuddered.
“You need
better manners,” I said.
Twig jumped
up and down,
and I found
the light switch
to a rich-people
bathroom.
“Cool!” said Twig,
running in. “Look at this:
they have a little
pink sink,
to wash your face,
I think.”
“Twig,” I said.
“That's not a sink,
and it's not to wash
your face.
It's a bidet.”
“What the hey
is a bidet?”
asked Twig.
“It's to wash places,
not faces, that are,
you know . . .
down below.
”
Twig groaned.
“Gross,” she said.
“You mean like butts
and stuff?”
“Yeah,” I said.
“I saw one on TV.”
I could have died,
because Twig tried it
that minute.
“This is way strange,”
she said. “Rich people
have some weird
ways:
bidets
and
bon appetits
and
hors d'oeuvres
and
caviar.
What's up with all the
French stuff?”
The bathroom door
wasn't closed,
and all of a sudden
Jake poked his nose
into the room.
“Whoa!” he said.
“You're supposed to knock,”
Twig said, pulling up her stockings.
Jake did a dance of embarrassment,
the harassment from Twig
not helping matters.
“I'm really sorry,”
he said, blushing
as the bidet went on flushing.
“It's just that we're
rushing to get to
dinner on time.”
We hadn't realized how many
minutes had raced by.
I could have died
a million times
of mortification.
I shoved a handful
of candy hearts
into my mouth.
Twig had been
so totally uncouth.
And it was then
that I lost a tooth.
Looking at the spit-out
red blitz of cinnamon heart
bits that I spouted
into my hand,
I was having fits.
This was the pits.
The gap in my yap
zapped me into
a state of shock,
and I grabbed
a plastic shower cap,
hiding my trap,
so that the empty
eyetooth space
wasn't in full
reddish-blue
view of anybody
who looked at me.
“Let's go!” called Vince.
I winced.
I needed
assistance,
an emergency
dentist, but I had
no insurance.
“Come on,
Miss Toothless,”
teased Twig.
She could be
way crude,
too rude,
for the sake
of a laugh
from a dude.
But Jake didn't
even crack a smile.
He bent down
and gently
pulled back
the plastic shower
cap, peering
at my mouth.
“Bummer,” he said.
I was on the
verge of blubber.
I flicked
the goop,
including my tooth,
into the
toilet bowl, playing
the role of Okay-ness.
“No way in this universe
can I stay
this way,” I said.
“I can't go out to dinner
like this.”
“Get a grip,” said Twig.
“We can't miss
a meal like this.
I mean,
Tavern on the Green!
That's a
famous, groovy
movie-star place!
It'd be a disgrace
to blow off
a fancy chance
like this.”
I was pissed.
Twig couldn't have
cared less
about how
embarrassed
I felt.
“Actually,”
said Jake,
tilting his head,
“you look kind
of quirky-perky
cute like that.
There are
high-throttle models
with gaps
in their teeth,
you know. I'd just
let it go. The essence
of Sister Slam
is eccentricity.
That's why I like you:
you're unique.”
“You mean, like,
a geek?” I asked,
and Jake laughed.
“No way!” he said.
“You're smart and
artistic. You're no
bimbo chick, flouncing
around primping and simpering.
You're interesting.”
“Me?” I asked.
“
Interesting
?”
“Yeah,” Jake said.
“Different. A mix
of bizarre and
beautiful in
a psychedelic
fairy-tale-
mermaid kind
of way. Like
you're not meant
to stay
on the dirt
of Earth.
Like you
belong in
blue air, or
the water.”
“Like Flubber?” I asked.
“No,” he said.
“I never meant
that. Don't
you know
how to take
a compliment?”
Jake's face
was sincere,
clear as a star,
and I gasped,
falling hard and
fast, stumbling into
something like
a crush, gushing love
for Jake.
Part of me
couldn't believe
this stroke
of pixie-dust luck,
and I felt as if
I'd been
struck by a
Pizza Hut
delivery truck
or a hockey puck.
I was a sitting duck.
Without thinking, I said,
“You're the nicest guy
I've ever met
in my entire life.”
Jake grinned,
and dimples
creased his cheeks.
I made up my mind
that I'd try to become
the person Jake saw.
“Let's go,” I said.
When we stepped
out of the hotel,
someone had cast
a magic spell,
and I let out a yell,
because there was a limousine
with a driver
named Miguel.
I felt like a
southern belle,
or a pearl
pried from
an oyster shell.
I felt like
the Queen
of Caffeine
or the Cocoa
Bean, like I owned
an automatic
teller machine.
Dressed in
my Halloween-tangerine
1970s dress, this
felt like a dream.
I was not serene:
I was a Mexican
jumping bean.
“Yippee!” I shrieked.
The limousine
was a sleek bright white,
and it stretched elegantly,
luxuriously long.
Nothing more could go wrong.
I climbed into
the limousine,
and it was the
coolest car I've
ever seen:
tinted windows,
shimmery bottles
of expensive wines
for the kinds
of people who dress
fine, and champagne.
It was raining,
but we were
in a moon-white cocoon
of luxury.
“Wish I had
the bucks
for wheels
like this,”
I whispered
to Jake.
He smiled, and his eyes
were like Easter-lily vines:
aquamarine seas just for me
to dive into.
“It belongs to the 'rents,”
he said, as if they weren't
even there. “They let
me drive it once in a while.”
You could have knocked
me over with a feather
and named me Heather,
I was so blown away.
This was so
way
my day.
“Where in the heck
do your 'rents
get all this money?”
Twig whispered.
“Are they drug dealers
or something illegal?”
I stared at a beagle
on a leash in the street.
Twig was such a geek.
Jake just snickered.
“The only drug they
do is liquor,” he said.
Misty and Vince
ignored us, pouring
blood-red wine
into long-stemmed glasses.
“My 'rents are like
big shots in their jobs
at MTV,”
Jake explained.
“They also buy lots of stocks
on Wall Street.
Investment
can't be beat
for getting ahead,
they always say.”
“Cool,” Twig said.
“Way cool,” I said.
But in my head,
I was thinking,
My pops works at a stinking
Mrs. Smith's pie factory
in Banesville, Pennsylvania.
What's Jake going to say
about that?
Then, feeling fat
but happy, I flashed
a gaping grin at Jake, thinking
that I'd savor every minute
of this party favor
lifesaver wild ride:
my once-in-a-
lifetime slide into
euphoria, starting
at the Waldorf-Astoria.
Tavern on the Green
was the most enchanted restaurant
I'd ever seen:
twinkling white lights
and sculptures of ice.
This was no freaking
Mickey D's, KFC,
Dairy Queen,
or Park-N-Eat.
We were seated
in the Crystal Room,
and it shimmered
with chandeliers.
It was magic,
and so tragic
that Twig didn't
know how to act.
She was wacked,
giddy and not
as witty
as she thought.
When they brought
the dish of butter,
it had a cookie-cutter
green insignia
pressed in the
shape of a
leaping deer.
Twig peered
at the logo
and said something
so loco:
“Oh, look here!
A John Deere
tractor picture,
smack-dab
in the middle
of the butter pat!”
Misty batted
her mascara-
brash lashes.
“Twiggy, darling,” she said,
“that's the Tavern
on the Green's
trademark:
a leaping deer.”
“Don't forget
that these chicks
live in the sticks,”
Jake said with
a wink.
I could have fainted.
Only someone
from Banesville
could have been
so clueless.
Twig could make
a career
out of being weird.
Our waiterâ
named Westonâ
addressed
our table.
“Ladies,” he said
to Twig and me,
“it's refreshing:
a breath of fresh air
to have girls
from the country.”
“They're poets,”
said Jake,
as if that
explained us.
“Sister Slam
and Twig.”
“Splendid!”
said Weston.
“Impressive.”
“Let's have
a recitation
right here,
right now,
in the restaurant,
for the rest of
the customers,”
said Misty.
“I've been here
when they've had
musicians and other
entertainers. Now
it's time for poets.”
“Come on,” said Vince.