The Nix(136)
“Excuse me!” Faye yelped, for it was one of those girls—Alice was her name. Faye’s neighbor. Long-haired, mean-looking Alice, silver-framed sunglasses settled halfway down her nose so at this moment she stared over them directly and curiously and terribly at Faye.
“Excuse you for what?” Alice said.
Faye shut off the water and wrapped herself in her robe.
“Man,” Alice said, smiling, “you are too much.”
She was the craziest of them all, this Alice. Green camo jacket and black boots, wild brunette Buddha girl seen in the cafeteria sitting cross-legged on a table chanting gibberish. Faye had heard stories about Alice—how she hitchhiked to Hyde Park on weekend nights, met boys, scored drugs, entered strange bedrooms and emerged more complicated.
“You’re so quiet all the time,” Alice said. “Always alone in your room. What do you do in there?”
“I don’t know. I read.”
“You read. What do you read?”
“Lots of things.”
“You read your homework?”
“I guess.”
“You read what your teachers tell you. Get good grades.”
Faye saw her up close now, her eyes bloodshot, hair tangled, clothes wrinkled and reeking, that funky cocktail of tobacco, pot, and perspiration. Faye understood now that Alice had not yet slept. Six in the morning and Alice had just returned from whatever free-love odyssey these girls chased at night.
“I read poetry,” Faye said.
“Yeah? What kind?”
“All kinds.”
“Okay. Say me a poem.”
“Huh?”
“Say me a poem. Recite one. Should be easy if you read so much. Come on.”
There was a splotch on Alice’s cheek that Faye had never noticed before—a trace of red and purple gathered just beneath the surface. A bruise.
“Are you okay?” Faye said. “Your face.”
“I’m fine. Great. What’s it to you?”
“Did someone hit you?”
“How about you mind your own business.”
“Fine,” Faye said. “Never mind. I gotta go.”
“You’re not very friendly,” Alice said. “Are you down on us or something?”
Those lyrics again. “Down on Me.” They played that damn song every night. “Everybody in this whole round world!” They sang it four or five off-key times in a row. “They’re down on me!” As if the girls needed them—all these other people in the world—needed them to be down and thus give a reason for singing.
“No, I’m not down on you,” Faye said. “I’m just not going to apologize to you.”
“Apologize for what?”
“For doing my homework. Being good at school. I’m sick of feeling bad about it. Good day.”
Faye left the bathroom, flop-flopped back to her room, put on her clothes, and felt so full of poison and abstract anger that she sat on her bed and held her knees and rocked. She had a headache. She pulled her hair back and put on her big round glasses that looked to her suddenly like some elaborate Venetian disguise. She frowned into the mirror. She was gathering her books into her backpack when Alice knocked on the door.
“I’m sorry,” Alice said. “That wasn’t in the spirit of sisterhood. Please accept my apology.”
“Forget it,” Faye said.
“Let me make it up to you. I’ll take you out tonight. There’s a meeting. I want you to come.”
“I don’t think that’s necessary.”
“It’s sort of a secret. Don’t tell anyone.”
“Really, it’s okay.”
“I’ll be here at eight,” Alice said. “See you then.”
Faye closed the door and sat on her bed. She wondered what Alice had seen her doing, back there in the shower, when Fay had been thinking about Henry: his hands on her. What a treacherous thing a body was, how it so blatantly acted out the mind’s secrets.
Henry’s letter was hidden in her bedside table, in the bottom drawer, way in the back. She had tucked it inside a book. Paradise Lost.
2
THEY ASSEMBLED in the office of the Chicago Free Voice, a small, irregularly printed handbill that called itself “the newspaper of the street.” Into a dark alley, through an unmarked door, up a narrow set of stairs, Alice led Faye to a room with a sign at the entrance that read: TONIGHT! WOMEN’S SEXUALITY AND SELF-DEFENSE.
Alice tapped the sign with her finger and said, “Two sides of the same coin, eh?”
She had not made any effort to hide the bruise on her cheek.
The meeting had already begun when they arrived. The room, crowded with maybe two dozen women, smelled of tar and kerosene, old paper and dust. A warm mist of ink and glue and spirits hung in the air. Odors drifted in and out of perception—shoe polish, linseed oil, turpentine. The sting of solvents and oil reminded Faye of the garages and toolsheds of Iowa, where her uncles spent long afternoons fiddling with cars that hadn’t been driven in decades—hot rods bought cheap at auctions and slowly restored, part by part, year by year, whenever the uncles could find time and motivation. But whereas her uncles decorated their garages with sports logos and pinup girls, this office had a Vietcong flag on the largest wall, the smaller nooks covered with broadsides of past Free Voice editions: CHICAGO IS A CONCENTRATION CAMP said one headline; IT IS THE YEAR OF THE STUDENT said another; FIGHT THE PIGS IN THE STREET and so on. A fine dark soot coated the walls and floor, a sheath of carbon that turned the light in the room to a gray-green smog. Faye’s skin felt clammy and covered with grit. Her sneakers quickly stained.