Contractions
Gary Lutz
My husband's piss drippled out day and night, slavering
through his underwear, blurring the crotch of every pair with a
corona of orangey yellow. He had an enlarged prostate, and he
kept a plastic ice-cream tub beside the nightstand.Every five
minutes or so until he fell asleep, I would hear him, sodden
and unfaucetable, bowing and curbing himself along the edge of
the mattress, the tub in one hand, the other jigging his penis
against the inner rim until a driblet or two finally platted
surrenderingly against the plastic. Sometimes, after he had
resettled himself in his zone of the bed, I would reach across
and pat his slobbering penis. My hand would come away clammy,
vinegared.
I had always been struck by how other people spoke so
casually and unembarrassedly about their beds, as if a bed were
merely an unshaming final destination on the day's itinerary.
When I first lived alone, I thought of my own bed as a softer,
more expansive version of a toilet, a fixture on which things
got discharged or unrecoupable selves got squeezed out, then
flushed away in cleansing eddies of the sheets. Later, when I
began making myself available to others, every body that
trespassed on my bed left behind a new, unfillable furrow in my
mattress. Some were more like clefts, gougings. In college, I
had had a roommate whose bed I one day stared at too long. The
roommate had gone home for the weekend without having made her
bed. I stared at the swirls and crests of the waved sheets and
the bedspread. I felt their tidal coaxings. I was determined
not to get up from my own mattress, where I was lying with one
hand wound around one of the cold metal legs, and dive onto
hers. I could hear the siss of showers in the lavatory down
the hallway. I had probably already missed lunch. I contented
myself with the explanation that what was playing across my
roommate's bed was simply the aftersurge of a certain kind of
sleep, a slopping, heavy-going sleep that had excluded me
un,slig.btingly. My roommate had left a sweatshirt lying on the
floor, and that was what I wound up wearing all day. It was
the day I went up to a boy I had never talked to before and
asked where he came from.
I had to buy things--little things--several times a day:
tweezers, permanent markers, newspapers. With every purchase I
should have stood in a fixed, unambiguatable relation to the
person behind the cash register, but the transaction almost
always got complicated by the accompanying thermal exchanges,
the glancing flesh of palms and fingertips as payment was
tendered, change dealt out. Some days when I counted on these
seductions all I would get was a clerk who slammed the coins
onto the counter or trayed them atop bills he then let
parachute into my outstretched palm.
I'd had a friend once. For years, our goosefleshy lives
had abutted in classrooms, on playgrounds, at library tables.
Even when we outgrew the stage when we could Jungle-gym across
each other's legs and trunk and arms, I kept piling my life
beside hers. Once, an overclouded July afternoon when we were
both thirteen, we were lying in a weedy field behind a shopping
center. I managed to land my head on her belly and listen to
the guggle and burble inside her. My ear was pressed against
the bare skin between the hem of her T-shirt and the waistband
of her shorts. She let out a laugh. It was a flat-voiced
laugh, but it made my life seem suddenly solvable, performable.
I started thinking about unpillowing my head and letting my
hands balustrade up her long arms until our faces were close
together, and that was when she Jerked away. The fleshy
suction of my ear against her skin, the vacuum between us,
broke. She hunched up, propped her chin on her knees, began
tugging blades of crabgrass out of the earth. I hunched up,
too, and looked at her. Her shins were hatched and shaded with
darkish hairs that I liked because my blonde ones were
uninsistent, practically invisible. "What are you looking at?"
she said. "Nothing," I said. But the next time I saw her legs
bare, a couple of weeks later, they were razored, girled-up.
Late every night, my husband watched a black-and-white
1950's variety show on a nostalgia channel. Eyes shut,
shoaling in some puddly near-sleep, I would listen to the
splashes of applause and the effortful laughter of the live
audience. Inevitably, a member of the audience, usually a man,
would let out a sudden, petitioning laugh, a laugh out of sync
with the lilt of the Jokes. I found that I had to assign the
man a face and mete him out a life as unfinishable as my own
before I could shark off into sleep.
Once, returning home from work, I found my husband
kneeling raptly before a wicker hamper from which my dirty
laundry had overspilled. He was bobbing for my socks,
incisoring into them one at a time, then craning around,
depositing them onto the carpet, tandeming them off. There
were already at least half a dozen heel-soiled pairs, each a
different shade of off-white, laid out intently. His hands,
meanwhile, were making slow, winging dips in the air around his
cock, now and then grazing it as the angle of its levitation
shifted.
The only way in and out of the building where I lived with
my husband was through a dim lobby furnished with a sofa, a
card table, and some folding chairs. Coming and going, I had
to walk past a pair of plaid-dustered old women who early each
morning organized themselves onto the sofa and kept watch.
Each had a cathedral of yellowish-gray hair whose bobby-pinned
buttresses and pinnacles the other would frettily oversee.
Gangling through the lobby, surveilled, I would occasionally
let an unlipped, falsetto "hi" butterfly out of my throat and
into the nets that the women's squeeching hearing aids unreeled
into the dead air. But the women never even nodded. It was
real work to operate my body past them, my life beating down on
me with every step. It was even harder when I was dragging
women in and out, one at a time, never the same one twice,
during roiling, elongated lunch hours. Because by this point I
had to have women, their knee-shine and susceptibilities, even
though every one of them left me staled, depopulated.
Every year for six weeks in gym7--a whole marking period--
we had had what the teacher called "apparatus": monkey bars,
parallel bars, the pommel horse, the high bar, the stationary
rings. The teacher was a loudly married snoop with blunt legs
duckpinning out of the same sort of salmon-colored trunks we
were all required to wear. She knew I couldn't do a forward
roll, which was the prerequisite to all other stunts, so she
confined me to a special mat. Twice a week and for forty
minutes at a time, I was supposed to kneel on that gashy,
eraser-soft mat, tuck my head between my legs, and wait for a
somersaultic force to exert itself on me and overturn the
cinder-blocked gym and loop me forward into the same world
everybody else was living in. But I remained untumbled,
earthbound. Through the triangled space between my thighs I
would watch the spoked bodies of my classmates as they spiraled
down the matted trackway that led to the apparatus, blazing
their legs at one another. Then I would watch them skin the
cat or stick-arm their way along the parallel bars.
I started spending lots of time in my car--a rust-mottled,
incognito beige Chevette. It was suddenly the room I felt most
at home in, and it had enough of a sick-bay look to it to be
thief-proof. The passenger-side leg well was table-solid with
a pile of sallowing unread newspapers, and the crumb-strewn
passenger seat made a companionable, multi-purpose side-
surface. I kept some extra cups and a box of plastic forks,
knives, and spoons hutched on the dashboard. The radio gave
out nothing but static, but it was the deep, bearable variety,
not the kind of organized insect-kingdom roar that always
brought on headaches.
I came home every night. I would hurry through the
underlamped lobby, ride the elevator to the third floor, find
my husband on the living-room sofa. By this stage of the
marriage he had precipitated himself so exhaustively into the
apartment that the air was urinous and unparting. Every room
was snary with his life. His sleep trellised over towel racks
and chair arms and shoe trees. It filamented from the handles
of coffee mugs and the pocket clasps of mechanical pencils.
Sometimes I would wake him and point to the bedroom. As he
slippered past me, I would see his life training behind him,
floor-fouled and unlanguaged, jittery bits of myself magpied
and particled into it. I still slept in the same brinkless bed
with him. I would want to get up and shut off the candescence
of the white shirt he had hangered to the closet door for work
the next day, its collar pennanting in the breeze of the
electric fan he ran as a noise filter.
My life had started to pill. I was fuzzing out little
balls of myself that people would come up and twist off and
flick into the already overpacked air.
A few blocks from the memorial park where my mother was
staying put was a convenience store where I one day decided
that the man behind the counter knew what he was doing. He was
a flat-faced man with a peeling decal of a smile, and he kept
an old metal dustpan on the counter. If you wanted to buy
something, he pointed noncommittally to the dustpan, and sooner
or later you figured out that he expected you to put your money
on it, which you then did. He would grasp the dustpan by the
handle and set it atop the cash register. He would ring up the
sale, drawer the bill you gave him, plink your change onto the
grooved ramp of the dustpan, and shovel the change toward the
very edge of the counter, toward you.
When I was an old-enough kid, I prepared an exhibit of
things I wasn't supposed to know--things my parents had done
before they got married to each other. It was almost like a
science fair: posterboard displays, Styrofoam props. I had
been secretly working on the project for months, excavating
most of the facts I needed out of spavined shoe boxes at the
back of my parents' closet, and early one Saturday night when
my parents and sister went shopping, I set everything up in the
basement, mostly on the ping-pong table but overflowing onto
the washing machine and dryer. The centerpiece was a four-paneled entry titled "My Mom Was Married Before, and I Have a
Stepbrother I Have Never Met." Among the evidence arranged
beneath cellophane was a mildewy set of Gregg shorthand
manuals, each opened to a flyleaf on which my mother's
spiderish, inwrought handwriting spelled out her first name and
a rude-sounding, unfamiliar surname and then a month, a day,
and a year before I had been alive. I had also put lots of
work into the diptychs "Anotber-Stepbrother of Sorts: DaLddy's
Secret By-blow" (I provided a dictionaryish sidebar, as well as
photocopies of the legal papers detailing the terms of the
settlement) and "The World of My Sister" (featuring a time line
ticking off the five and a half months between my parents' St.
Patrick's Day potluck wedding and my sister's birth). Breaking
up the Magic-Markered text were Xeroxed family snapshots I had
shaded with colored pencils and spitefully captioned.
I spent the night out with the kid who considered himself
my boyfriend--a gripless Puerto Rican who always had an unlit
cigarette slanted apostrophically into his mouth. At the
kitchen table the next morning, I found my mother looking
unslept, tear-swollen. My father was administering to his bare
forearms the same slow sequence of slaps, brushes, fingertaps,
and hair-tugs that years earlier I had decided added up to his
stab at a formula for making himself disappear. My sister,
however, was the one who was missing.
The upshot was that I eventually turned twenty-eight and
found myself married. I fumed and soured and stenched in bed
beside a husband who himself was a cloud of exhausts and
leakages. Sleep became a contest: by morning, whose smell
would prevail in the room?
I would rock an empty shopping cart back and forth in the
aisles of stationery departments, notebooks and thick packages
of filler paper cliffed on either side of me. Sometimes I
would reach for a coilbound themebook and riffle the pages,
unsticking them, vaguely sickened by the washed-out pink and
blue of the margins and ruled lines. I would think about the
prongy, unparallel outlines onto which teachers were going to
drape unmemorizable facts.
Mostly what I wanted to find was a special piece of chalk
like the one my third-grade teacher had always used to mark our
positions on the linoleum floor of the stage. It was a
sausage-shaped cylinder of soft chalk swaddled in flocky wool.
Back then, I had wanted my own words to stream out as smoothly
and as scrapelessly as the lines and circles and X's that
flowed from that overscaled piece of chalk. Instead,
everything I said or wrote seemed to scratch something else out
of the world. On tablet paper and on blackboards, my letters
were bony and tined. I begged classmates to recopy my homework
for me so that each answer would come out curved, clawless,
quieted down.
I backed my way unnoticed out of the room. In the
kitchen, I settled myself squeaklessly onto an upholstered
chair. I thought about the sad, outcropped, lavatorial world
of men. I had once met a man, a limericky professor, whose
secret, unairable life's work was a definitive atlas of women's
body-hair distributions: an oversized plywood-covered volume,
full of thick, eraser-pinked pages, that he kept clamped shut
under a terraced heap of accordion files in the trunk of his
car.
Men wanted my toes in their mouths or my torso roped
against a chair or my own mouth lipsticked and wordless or my
brain ligatured to whatever unknottable neural twist that in
their own brains winched their rawing, blunted dicks into
place. It was always just one thing they wanted, or could
handle, at a time. I had myself convinced that I had so many
lives recessed inside me that I could afford to portion my body
out part by part and not miss anything, that everything would
grow back.
But I had a hard time finding anything even marginally
fetishizable about a man's life. I would grub through my
husband's nightstand and bureau-drawer dross--the siltage of
receipts, business cards, watch straps, and crease-blurred
newspaper clippings that shadowed him securely into the
apartment. I would poke my finger through the front slit of a
pair of his Jockey shorts before I tossed his wash into the
machine. I would stand in the bathroom and stare at the
pepperish encrustation of his whisker-hairs in the unscoured
sink.
Eventually he stopped haranguing me with sex altogether.
On my mat, singled out, watched over, I bowed obediently
into my groin and developed an overacquaintance with the
inletted, divulgent body I presided over.
After work and on weekends, I drove, rivering through the
city and the suburbs. For a while I ate nothing but tiny
meteorites of fried chicken that came casketed in clumsily
slotted and tabbed cardboard. The arm that slanted out of the
drive-through window to hand me my box was almost always the
same one: fuzzy, overbraceleted. It was an arm I wanted to
have something to do with. Instead, the window would shut.
Back on the service road, I would molar down the crumplets of
chicken and let the grease terror and reverb through my system.
The women I was seeing were becoming less disappearable,
and some started having names. There was Karen, a pharmacist
with straw-blonde hair and an asterism of nipply pimples that,
during the days or hours I spent away from her, seemed to belt
across her face zodiacally, never coming to a rest on one cheek
or the other. The one with the chopped hair and paper cuts was
Marcia: she drove a UPS truck. Dianne worked at an
electrolysis studio. The waiting room would always be full of
sleeveless young men hovering behind fashion magazines, and she
would lead me upstairs to her uncurtained efficiency apartment,
where she talked about her incumbent boyfriend and about the
two other men who were after her and about how she was getting
drummed out of her life. Gretchen was the one who kept saying
she lacked the courage of her contradictions. She was afraid
of losing her job at the community college because she didn't
flatter the students enough. Each of these women was an
exclamation of salty, spoiling flesh.
At stoplights, I began to slope my neck sidewise so I
could glint into whatever car was laned beside my own. The
bloodshot, circumstantial desolation of the windowed faces--the
splather of fingers against a cheek--was how I wanted things:
wrung out.
I started wearing shopgirlish shirtwaists so that when I
drove to the malls after work, I could be certain that if I
lingered long enough at a display, restocking saucepans or
arranging a strew of shoe boxes into a neat row, one old woman
or another would eventually ask, "Miss, where would I find
. " sealing off her question by salivaing the name of some
unfamiliar-sounding kitchen utensil or sewing-box instrument.
Her gaspy mouth would be a burrow of caries and glazed tongue.
I would do my best to crease my face into blank lines and busy
my hands menially with the merchandise before me. "You don't
work here?" the woman, unanswered, would continue. I would
wait until I no longer felt her stalre singeing my cheek, then
watch her flutter off toward a real sallesclerk.
People in malls had it coming to them--even the girls
wristing one another along from store to store or wallowing
around in a subjunctive sulk. The girls all had their lives
marqueed brightly on their faces. My eyes would dart straight
to their skirted legs, the flesh that glowed above the cuffs of
their socks. Their skin was a threat.
This made sense.
It was a Saturday afternoon, early. What I bought was a
stapler, a cheap blue plastic one. for my car.
copyright 1996 by Gary Lutz; appeared originally in Conjunctions