I placed my palm over Ben’s heart and felt it beating there, strong and quick, rising up to meet my hand. A boy’s heart, I thought. The dark blue light of dusk filled the room. I kissed his collarbone, running my fingers over his chest until he leaned down and took my face between his hands. He looked at me hard, not like he thought I was pretty, but as if he were memorizing me. I let him look at me like that until I started to feel ugly. “Hey,” I said, squirming.
He blinked, smiled, then kissed my forehead, my nose, my cheeks, my lips. “I like you, Dani,” he whispered.
“I know,” I said.
After the football game, Inggy and I walked the few blocks to my house, where we napped in my twin bed, sleeping head to feet. Later as we woke, untwisting ourselves from the sheets, we were crabby and raccoon-eyed with heads of tangled hair. I poked at mine with a comb, and Inggy tied hers back with a sock while Daffodil whined at my door to please let her in. She was extra-in-love with the two of us ever since the senior class had chosen Inggy and me as two of five nominees for the Miss Merry Christmas Contest. “Don’t be too impressed, Daff, we’re still the same cruddy girls,” Inggy said through the door.
“It’s hardly the big time,” I added.
Inggy kept a stash of clothes in one of my drawers, since she could never go home high or drunk and would sleep over at my place instead. We both changed into jeans, debating our evening options. Outside, it was dark and chilly, and my mom and Franz were out on the town.
In the kitchen, Dorrie and Daffodil burned popcorn while they waited for George, their dad, to pick them up. He showed up pretty regularly and took them bowling, or to the batting cage or an arcade on the Jersey shore. He often asked if I wanted to come along. But I didn’t like him. “You’re a pretty thing,” he’d once said, letting his eyes wander all over me. Number one, I didn’t need him telling me I was pretty; number two, he was about forty years old; and numbers three, four and five, Dorrie and Daffodil were my sisters, he was their father, and he’d lived with us when I was a little kid.
My own father had pulled a Houdini a long time ago. I only knew him by the check that was supposed to come at the beginning of each month but didn’t always. He had just erased me, I guessed, pretended I hadn’t happened. But still, did he ever wonder how I was turning out? It was clear to me how he’d turned out.
Inggy and I grabbed handfuls of burnt popcorn for the road, said goodbye to my sisters, and set out for a keg party.
As the beer ran out and the party broke up, most everyone headed for the front lawn. A few bodies were strewn throughout the hallway and draped across assorted chairs. Our host—this kid John—whose parents, I’d heard, were in Atlantic City for the weekend, was asleep on the recliner. I sat at the kitchen table and peered into the living room at Inggy and Kevin McSweeney, who sat on a big lumpy couch, quietly holding hands.
Moments later, Inggy joined me, flush-faced and nervously fingering the buttons of her sweater. “I’m sure Kevin’s an INFJ.”
“How do you know so much? Telepathy?”
“We talked, nosey.”
I sucked up beer through a straw, watching as Pamela Zlotkin stood on the curb and loudly offered rides home in her Nissan. “Aren’t you starving?” I asked.
“Completely and absolutely.” In this John kid’s refrigerator, his parents had left him—we counted—twenty hamburger patties. We didn’t think he’d mind, so I fried us up a couple of his hamburgers while Inggy explained to me how two similar personality types are naturally drawn to each other while the idea of opposites, who supposedly attract, is highly questionable and overrated. “Jung got it wrong,” she says. “Don’t you think?”
I nodded. My opposite would be a quiet, territorial, practical, logical, facts-first decision-maker. I didn’t know boys like that and hoped I never would. But the way I thought about the boys I liked best was different; I thought about their contradictions—how they were soft yet fierce, happy but all chewed up on the inside.
“Do you think Kevin’s cute, Dani?” Inggy asked, biting into her burger.
“Kind of.” She gazed at me mildly. Kevin had a long hangdog face and wide eyes that drooped in their sockets, and while he played a mean game of basketball, he had a bad slouch off the court.
“I do,” she said.
I reached across the table and rubbed her hand, feeling the delicate bones and the small swell of blue veins and wondered what it meant to be Inggy inside that long stretch of white skin. As pretty as she was she’d only been kissed once in her seventeen years. “He’s got a certain something,” I said. From the window, I watched Ben climb into the front seat of Pamela Zlotkin’s Nissan.
When my sisters and I ran out of clean underwear, Dorrie had to resume laundry duty despite the stink. She’d hold her nose, run down the cellar stairs, get a load going and run back up, looking like she might blow chunks. No one but Dorrie had set foot down there. Mom fought with us daily, yelling, yanking on our skinny arms, but no one was budging.
Mom, who was now all dressed up, wearing her mink and Chanel No. 5, gathered us in the den one night while Franz waited for her in the living room. A full moon shone through the window behind her. “Cook up a steak and potatoes for supper, ladies,” she told us, and then lowering her voice added, “And when I come home, I want the stink gone. I want it out of our lives.”
“We’re beautiful girls!” Daffodil said, linking arms with me. “You can’t expect us to go down there!”
This kind of talk really ticked Mom off, and she tilted her head to the side and gave Daffodil a cockeyed smile. “God is punishing us with the stink because you’re conceited and stuck-up.”
“I am stuck-up,” Daffodil agreed, and a tiny sigh escaped through her lips.
“It’s very rude,” Mom snapped.
“She is rude,” I agreed.
“You’re stuck-up, too,” Mom said.
“I’m really not,” I said.
“I guess I am, too,” Dorrie said.
“You are not stuck-up,” Mom said, but she regarded Dorrie with the same disappointment.
“Ask Franz to find the stink,” Daffodil said finally. “That’s what boyfriends are for.”
Mom lifted her hand. “I’m leaving. Do what I asked.” And she turned on her three-inch heels and left us for the evening.
“I’m starvin’ Marvin,” Daffodil said. I popped the steak in the broiler while the girls set the table. Then Dorrie and I took turns standing on the stepstool and mashing the potatoes while Daffodil roused us with a Pop Warner cheer, ending with a crash to the linoleum in a split. The meat was rare the way we liked it, and I cut thick slabs. My sisters sat in their seats, forks poised in the air, ketchup globs dainty and jewel-like on their plates.
I got thrown out of Anthropology because I’d accidentally dropped my bracelet onto the second-story ledge outside the window. In the girls’ room, I climbed out on the ledge and walked past Humanities and U.S. History and made my way back to Pickett’s class where my bracelet lay. Pickett, who must have been eighty, opened the window and when I tried to tell her I was fine, she reached for me with her age-spotted hands and hauled me in. As I sat in the principal’s office, I checked my biology homework and read a chapter of Daisy Miller.
I got to Advanced Biology late but I still had my pick of a frog or a clam. I wasn’t in the mood for an invertebrate so I took the frog, went back to my station and sliced it open, correctly labeling the digestive and reproductive systems. I saw a fly in the stomach, small and perfect, not yet digested, its wings close to its body as if at rest.