Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls(39)



We are curled up in Harley’s bed like cats when I get the call.

She’s leaving, I say. My dad says she’s going to New York.

How long?

Who ever knows, I shrug.

What should we do with your crib to ourselves? Harley wants to know.

We could throw a party, I say.

A themed party? Nelle asks. Please, I love themes! I slay at themes!

It takes us three hours to drive to the Aventura Mall and find the perfect sets of coordinating lingerie. In Hollywood, we pick up handcuffs, whips, paddles, and various colors and sizes of dildos. We drive to my house and get dressed. Harley is playing the role of Jenna Jameson tonight, a cloud of blonde wig, a white-and-blue garter belt, silver glitter, like an angel. Nelle is playing Briana Banks, with a black lace-up corset and smolder eyes. I’m playing the only Asian porn star we know, Kobe Tai. I wear fishnets, a lavender bustier, and several sets of handcuffs attached to my garter belt. Because Harley and Nelle have tits and I do not, the girls help me triple up bras beneath my bustier, pulling my skin up and over it. We paste on thick rows of eyelashes, and press on several inches of acrylic nails. We decorate my house with the dildos. We suction them onto the pool table, the mantelpiece; we leave the small ones on the bar to be used as drink stirrers.

By nine P.M., almost a hundred people arrive at our Porn Star Party. Public and private school kids, a couple dealers we know, the older boyfriends of girls in my grade. Clarissa shows up in a white-and-pink number, and Nelle calls her a troll, tells her to leave me alone. Beth shows up fully clothed, What are you, a pilgrim? before Harley convinces her to change in my room. Several Ron Jeremys appear shirtless, with plungers—Got a leak?—and other girls arrive in thongs, nipple tassels, capes, and extra-padded pushups.

Harley, Nelle, and I take every shot we’re given. Red Bull and J?germeister, Lemon Drops, Cocksucking Cowboys with cream. We lie down on my pool table and begin to kiss one another while the boys and men cheer us on.

Cousin Cindy once asked me, What do you think love really is?

I think it’s being able to kiss someone whenever you want, I said.

I can kiss Nelle whenever I want. And I do.

The other girls at the party roll their eyes, move to the corners of the room—Sluts, they say. A few of the boys kick off their Air Force 1s and stand on top of the pool table. They begin Crip Walking around our bodies, a dance some of them like to do when the hip-hop hits come on. Tonight, Nelle is wearing her door-knocker tongue ring—my favorite—a heavy hoop of metal that I lift with my tongue. The music gets louder before it turns off.

Somebody’s ringing. Somebody’s here.

Go get it, Kinky Chinky.

When I open the door, two cops seesaw their flashlights in my eyes.

Party? they ask.

What’s it to you? My vision bloats their bodies. I try to snap into focus.

You look pretty young, young lady, says one of the cop-heads. Interested, I think.

If you think you’re going to arrest me, I say, I’m going to have to arrest you first. I take the handcuffs off my garter belt and move toward them, trying to clink the metal rings around one of their wrists. The cops back up. I fall on the pavement and my knee begins to bleed through my fishnets. Look what you did to my outfit, I say.

Rather than evict anyone from the party, the cops declare a lockdown. This means they check all the exits, move us to the center of the room, and take a head count. They write down names and schools. They want us all to call our parents and explain what we’ve done, but we’re all slurring, laughing, calling Pizza Hut delivery instead. They call my parents—We’ve got about a hundred kids here in their underwear—before shaking their heads, Well you better fly back from New York because we need a guardian.

I’ve got a guardian, I say, twisting a strand of bubble gum around my nail. I call my Aunt Trista, Uncle Kai’s wife, who’s new to the family, in the neighborhood.

I’m in a jam, Auntie Trista.

Fifteen minutes later, Aunt Trista comes dressed for the theme. A black glittering corset. A leather miniskirt with two slits up the thighs.

I’m the guardian angel, she says, shooing the cops out the door. When she locks it behind them, she turns to the rest of us, sitting in a circle like we’re playing Duck Duck Goose.

Now, she says, who wants to get your guardian a goddamn drink?



They left.

Harley moved to New York that spring to make it in acting, to find the right light for her face. She gave herself a show name, and we spoke on the phone a couple of times a year until we didn’t. I wish I could say our good-bye was difficult, but something inside me, that gnarled knot of ass-wiping girl-love, was relieved. These days, I watch her on a television drama in which she plays the lifesaving teacher inspiring inner-city students to read books and dream big. She’s a stranger now, a married woman—older, slighter, that upward gaze.

Nelle was picked up in the middle of the night by a Catholic couple in matching blue polo shirts. Her mother waited in a neighbor’s apartment while they took her daughter, kicking and squalling. The couple handcuffed Nelle in her pajamas and carried her into a PT Cruiser, drove her to live in a reform school for girls in rural North Carolina. Nelle would find a job in a ski lodge up there in the mountains and meet a gang of cowboys to buy her cigarettes, send and receive her letters.

This is what she tells me now, anyway. We never wrote to each other.

T Kira Madden's Books