Still Life with Tornado (2 page)

BOOK: Still Life with Tornado
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Suit Yourself

I'm stuck on a bus with Sarah who is twenty-three. She has a snazzy haircut and highlights. My hair is still long and stringy like it always has been. It doesn't stop people from staring at us like we're identical twins. She's comedy and I'm tragedy. Even that thought isn't original.

She says, “You're not really going to change your name, are you?”

I say, “You tell me.”

She smiles again and I want to tell her stop smiling so much. We have an ordinary smile and it annoys me.

She says, “I'm still Sarah.”

“I'm still going to City Hall,” I say.

“Fine with me.”

“I don't want you to come with me.”

She smirks. “You can't even change your name yet. You're only sixteen.”

“I'm practicing,” I say.

She rolls her eyes. “I guess.”

When the bus nears the next stop, I repeat myself. “I don't want you to come with me.”

“Suit yourself,” she says.

She gets off at the next stop, and as the bus pulls away, I watch her walk up 12th Street and see she still has our favorite umbrella.

Maybe I'm snapping. Maybe I've already snapped and I'm coming back to real life. Maybe this is some sort of existential crisis. I couldn't tell you right now whether my life has meaning or value. I don't even know if I'm really living. Either way, I'm going to City Hall. Either way, I'm changing my name.

•   •   •

As the bus goes east, we pass through the University of the Arts campus. This is where I say I want to go to college. Except I'm skipping school, so I probably won't get to go to college. Or maybe I will. I'm not sure. Going to college doesn't seem original. Not going to college doesn't seem original unless I plan to do something original instead of just not going to college.

I thought being an artist would be the right thing to do. Since I was little, everybody told me I was good at it. Every year on my birthday Dad gave me something a real artist should have—a wooden artist's model, a set of oil paints, a palette, an easel, a pottery wheel. When I was nine, he woke me up every summer morning saying, “Time to make the art!” And I made art. Sometimes I made great art and I knew it because people's expressions change when they look at great art. When I was ten, after we went to Mexico, he stopped waking me up that way, but I still made the art. Right up until Miss Smith and the pear. It wasn't the pear's fault. It was building for months because sixteen is when people stop saying great things about a kid's drawings and start asking questions like “Where do you want to go to college?”

I just don't think college is where artists go. I think they go to Spain or Macedonia or something.

Umbrella

By the time I get to City Hall, I figure the idea to change my name isn't original anymore. The idea is now two hours old. I don't even go to the sixth floor to get the paperwork so I can practice how I'll do it when I turn eighteen.

I decide my name is Umbrella, but I won't tell anyone else. Not even the Social Security Administration. Changing one's name without actually changing one's name has been done before, but I doubt anyone else on Earth ever opted to call themselves Umbrella.

I take the next bus that comes around. The rain has stopped, which makes my new name ironic. I am useless now in every possible way. I am a sixteen-year-old truant. I am Umbrella on a day with no rain. I am as blank as a piece of white paper in a world with no pencils. While this may sound dramatic and silly, it's comforting to me so I don't care how it sounds. The whole world thinks sixteen-year-old girls are dramatic and silly anyway. But really we're not. Not even when we change our names to Umbrella
.

Everything I see from the bus window is the same. The streets, the sidewalks, the people are all the same. Homeless people sit on corners. Businesspeople walk with purpose. Tourists look at maps, trying to find the Liberty Bell or Betsy Ross's house. Half the people are looking at or talking into their phones. Other people are holding their devices as if they could ring any second—like soldiers in wartime—guns always at the ready. But nothing ever really happens.

It starts to drizzle again and I think back to Miss Smith's art class two weeks ago. I couldn't draw the pear. I couldn't draw my hand one more time. If someone asked me to draw anything right now, I wouldn't be able to do it. My hands do not work. Not in that way. Mom tells stories about patients in the ER who need amputations. Arm/hand/multiple-finger amputations. People who drive with their arms out car windows. Unlucky motorcyclists. Lawn mowers. Snowblowers. At least I still have hands. I have nothing to complain about.

I can't draw a pear, though. Or anything else.

My hands ran out of art.

I am simply Umbrella. I am the layer between the light rain and a human walking down Spruce Street talking into her phone, maybe finding out her cat just threw up on the new Berber carpet. I am the barrier between the bullshit that falls from the sky and the humans who do not want bullshit on their pantsuits. In eight days of riding around, that's what I've discovered. It's raining bullshit. Probably all the time.

Twenty-three-year-old Sarah gets on the bus again. She sits next to me and smiles, just like last time. But now, there's something condescending in her smile. Unsympathetic. It says I am silly and dramatic. We don't say a thing to each other and when we get off at the stop near home, the rain has started again and she opens her umbrella and walks north. I walk south and let the rain hit me until I'm soaked.

Dropout

“She told me that we should let her drop out for the year,” Mom says. “She could do summer classes and then she'd be able to come back next year and reenroll as a junior.”

“No,” Dad says. “She's sixteen. She's talented. What about her future?”

“That doesn't seem to matter to her,” Mom says.

“You said you'd back me up on this. We made a parental deal. She can't drop out of high school.”

“It's that or expulsion. Expulsion would stay on her record.”

“I should have called. You're a shitty communicator,” Dad says.

I sit soaked and cross-legged on the hall carpet at the top of the stairs and I zone out. This is the most unoriginal conversation I ever heard. Two parents discuss their truant daughter and within five sentences, one of them is blaming the other for something that isn't even relevant.

And yet, this conversation is a novelty. They are rarely awake or at home at the same time. Today, Dad was only home before seven to meet with some guy about inspecting the roof for damage. There was hail last week, and Dad is in insurance. He's a fanatic about maintaining façade and building-envelope integrity. He knows all about
code
and how our kitchen bathroom does not meet
code
because it's too small. I do not meet code because I'm not going to school. Mom doesn't meet code either because they made
a parental deal
and she's not keeping up her side of the bargain
.

As I listen to them bicker about who should have called the principal and who's busy keeping a roof over my head, I notice they call each other by their real names. They never do this in front of me. In front of me they call themselves Mom and Dad, and frankly, it's annoying. But when they argue, they call each other Helen and Chet.

Example: “Why do I have to do all the important stuff, Chet?”

“That's the problem with you, Helen. You never give me credit for all I do around here.”

“Shove your credit, Chet. I save lives every night and I never expect shit for it, but you take out the garbage and you need a gold star.”

We eat dinner together. It's a quiet dinner and I shove food into my face as if I'm starving, because I am starving. I didn't eat lunch today. I don't think I even ate breakfast.

Dad says, “I heard you didn't keep our deal.”

Mom turns to me and says, “The school called.”

Dad says, “Just
one day
, Sarah. For me?”

Mom mumbles something under her breath and I don't hear it. Dad does. He gives her a look I know all too well. It's like someone scraped his face off and replaced it with a guy who hates us all. Her, me, even himself.

I imagine I will go to school tomorrow.

•   •   •

Last week, on the third day of bus riding, I decided to transfer every time I saw the same bus shelter advertisement twice. It seemed like an original game. Eventually, I ended up in a neighborhood I'd never been in, in front of a boarded-up high school. It was an old building with graffiti-covered columns at the front entrance and the name of some dead educator carved in stone over the doors. I decided this would be my new school.

A guy in skinny jeans, curated high-tops, and chunky, hip glasses was standing on the sidewalk across the street staring into a camera on a tripod. He kept pulling his face away from the eyepiece and looking around. I could tell he was nervous. It wasn't the nicest part of town. I decided he had to be an art student. They infest this town like hipster cockroaches. Every one of them thinks they're original.

This guy looked like he was into ruin porn—breaking into abandoned buildings, climbing bare girders, and taking pictures of collapsed ceilings and piles of rubble. This was a thing now.
Ruin porn.
But this guy hadn't even broken into the building; he was just taking pictures of the outside. First, from the tripod and then he walked around and tilted his camera in different directions and did close-ups of the usual things: graffiti, rust, broken windows. I knew if I looked hard enough I could find his page on The Social and look through his online portfolio. Maybe he went to the University of the Arts. Maybe he could sell me heroin. I didn't look him up, though. Totally unoriginal. Plus, I don't actually want to do heroin. I want to go to Spain or Macedonia. And I have more guts than to just see a thing from the outside.

•   •   •

When I wake up to my alarm, I smooth out my clothing and I don't even change my underwear. I hear Mom getting in from her night's work and I hear her collapse into her bed and turn on the sound machine that she needs to sleep all day. White noise. It sounds like someone left the TV on static.

I get my favorite umbrella and put it in my backpack even though there is no rain predicted for the day. Dad is in the kitchen making me breakfast, but I walk straight out the door and up to the vendor who makes the best egg, cheese, and ham breakfast sandwiches, and when he asks “Salt, pepper, oregano?” I say yes to all three even though I don't like oregano. Then I sit on the curb and slowly eat every bite.

•   •   •

I'm late to my new school, because I don't exactly remember the buses I took to get here before. There are no ruin porn photographers this time.

The minute I step into the building, I pretend this is my old school on any normal day. I open my umbrella. Superstition abounds. Students act as if I've brought a curse upon the building, but that's only because they don't know that there is already a curse upon the building. The curse is: Nobody focuses on the now.

In first-period English, the teacher asks me to close my umbrella and I comply. She says, “It's nice to see you again, Sarah.” I smile. It feels like I have a disease.

By lunch, I'm ready to leave and take the bus to anywhere, but I decide to stay. I sit in the cafeteria at a table of the other sophomore art club geeks. Carmen is here and she's talking about tornadoes. Henry is sketching his milk carton à la Warhol. Vivian eats Tastykake Butterscotch Krimpets one after the other and washes them down with bottomless black coffee. None of them know that my name is now Umbrella. The senior and junior art club geeks sit at a different table now.

Three weeks ago, our art club suffered a fissure.

The art club seniors would say the fissure was my fault, but it wasn't.

I should have bought two sandwiches for breakfast. I'm hungry, but the ceiling seems to have collapsed on the empty vending machines.

I skip gym class the next period and stand in the locker room shower stall. I imagine curtains where there should be curtains, but there are no curtains because my new school isn't a school anymore. There is graffiti on the inside of the shower stall.
The absence of violence is not love.
I think about it for a minute but I don't understand.

I close my eyes and listen.

“I hear [popular girl] is getting a nose job.”

“She should.”

“And I hear she's thinking of getting a boob job while she's at it.”

“What I wouldn't give for rich parents.”

“I think I'm going to fail my English test.”

“I can help you study.”

“I'm so bad at tests.”

“Did you hear that Jen broke up with [popular boy]?”

“It means you can go after him now, you know.”

“Shit, we're late.”

“Can I borrow a pair of socks?”

“Here.”

“Thanks.”

Here is proof that nothing ever really happens. The proof is everywhere. I just have to stand in one place and listen.

“Brrrrring!”
I yell into a room full of empty toilet stalls.
“Brrring!”
My voice echoes down the row of spray-painted half-size lockers with random pried-off doors. In one of the torn-apart lockers is a diorama—a prison cell made of sturdy twigs with a papier-mâché sphere inside of it. The sphere is painted red. The twigs are painted silver. On the floor of the diorama are the words
WE WERE HERE
in black Sharpie marker.

Next period is art. I imagine the art club sophomores walking toward the art room and I join them but nobody says hello or anything.

Halfway down the hall, someone hands Vivian a note. It's from her wannabe boyfriend. She reads it to us: “I was disappointed to find your name in the boys' locker room bathroom stall. It was on a list titled
GIRLS WHO DO ANAL
. I always thought you were better than that.”

I say, “How original.”

Carmen says, “Henry, go scratch that out.”

Henry says, “I don't go to the locker room. They all call me a fag.”

Vivian asks, “How do you change for gym?”

Henry says, “I skip gym.”

Carmen says, “I'll go with you. We'll get a lav pass and do it next period.”

Vivian says, “It's probably not even there. This guy is such an asshole.”

“So why do you want to go out with him?” I ask.

She doesn't answer. I decide she would say: “I'm attracted to assholes, I guess.”

I don't expect to get nervous walking into the art room. I know I can do whatever I want. I can leave when I want. I can say what I want. But when I kick over the pyramid of Pabst Blue Ribbon tallboys (not original) arranged in front of the art room door, I'm nervous. The seniors trickle in and take their places at the back table and pull out their new projects. I haven't been in school for nearly two weeks, so I have no project. I just want to get my stuff and get out. This is very easy to do when everyone in the room is ignoring me because none of us is here. Or I'm here, but they aren't. Or they're there, and I'm not. I have so much to learn at my new school. I sit on a three-legged desk and close my eyes again.

Miss Smith, who should be taking attendance, is at the back of the room with the seniors and the rat shit chattering about art college and what her four years at Tyler were like. All I hear is “And the parties!” Miss Smith is an asshole. I wish one of Carmen's tornadoes would suck her up. It would make things convenient for me, considering what I know about Miss Smith.

Vivian and Henry get their projects and supplies and go to work, and the seniors make an effort to say hello to them. One of them tells Vivian that she likes her T-shirt. Another one walks over to Henry and gives him a random hug.

Carmen is friends with everyone. It's just her nature. She says, “What up?” and the seniors all wave. I'm standing right here. For the first time in weeks. Not one person says “Nice to see you back!” or “Hey, look! It's Sarah!” or anything like that. Everyone gets to work sifting through the broken glass by the windows, looking for the perfect piece. The glass never seems to cut their skin even though they're picking it up by the fistful. I turn and leave the room.

Not even Carmen says good-bye.

I stop a few feet from the door and stand in the hallway and listen.

First, silence.

Miss Smith says, “Well that was awkward, wasn't it?”

Answers follow:

“I don't know why she even came back.”

“She's so weird!”

“Drama!”

“Can't make it as an artist if you don't have thick skin.”

Laughter.

That's when I start walking. I go to my locker to empty what's left inside.
Thick skin? I have thick skin. They have no idea.

Someone is sleeping in front of the locker I decide is mine. I see his pink rain boots first. His head is resting on a balled-up coat and his face is covered by a filthy cap. He has one arm slung through a backpack strap. The other arm cuddles a can of spray paint.

I decide he's welcome to whatever's in the locker.

Anyway, it's not about thick skin. It's about one of them being a liar. Or all of them being liars—even Miss Smith.

It's a long story.

When I get out of the building, I open my umbrella and walk home rather than taking the bus. It's not raining. No one seems to care that my umbrella is open. Philadelphia is full of all kinds of crazy people. Maybe I'm one of them now. Yesterday I had a conversation with myself in seven years. This might make me crazy. Yesterday I changed my name to Umbrella.

•   •   •

When I get home, there's a message blinking on the house phone's answering machine and I listen to it. It's the daily Sarah-isn't-in-school-today message
.
I delete it and walk up the steps toward my room. I don't have any homework because homework isn't original and I'm not going back to real school tomorrow. Or ever.

At the top of the stairs there is a decorative mirror on the wall and a trio of pictures of my parents and me. I am not an only child. My brother is nine years older and lives out west and he doesn't contact us anymore. He wrote me a private message on The Social about a month ago with just his phone number. Then I deleted my profile because what's the point of having a profile if nobody wants to talk to you?

The last I heard about Bruce was that his church people are his family now. Mom and Dad never baptized us, so Bruce got himself baptized. Apparently he got naked in a river or a lake or something. Dad said that that's why he doesn't contact us. Dad said Bruce thinks he's better than we are because he found God.

This was a while ago, so I don't really know if any of it is true.

This was Dad, so I don't know if he's the right person to believe when it comes to Bruce.

I think that's why Bruce sent me his phone number. Maybe he wants to set the record straight. Maybe he wants to convert me. Maybe he has cancer and will die soon. Maybe he got married and had a baby. If I don't call him, then nothing will happen.

•   •   •

Mom gets home from the grocery store and after unloading bags in the kitchen, she walks up the stairs and sees me standing here and asks me if I'm okay.

“I'm fine.”

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