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Huevos Divorciadosby Wendy Chin
I've decided to leave him today. I'm in front of the
shelves in our bedroom, looking at the third shelf from the bottom.
It's at stomach level and I'm just rummaging through the disarray
of it, one last time. There's so much shit on this shelf and I know
I should just throw most of this junk away, but this is my way of
keeping track of things that have happened in the past year. I don't
keep diaries or journals anymore. Lots of old movie tickets and
tattered concert stubs from the spring and summer. The ink is almost
faded on these things and you can hardly tell which concert or what
movie we were at, but I remember each one if I look hard enough.
Thin plastic guitar picks I find in the street, an unused address
book I got from his mother, a German ATM receipt that says I have
15.000 bucks in checking, some old Band-Aids, crushed sticks of
spearmint gum, hair ties (even though my hair is too short to tie
back). Coins. Just shit you'd find in my pockets. I really don’t
think about putting these things here -- I just throw them
down at the end of the day.
I want to take some of these things with me when I go, 'cos
they mean something to me. Even though he tells me it's useless
junk, and I know it's junk, I'm not ready to throw it away
myself. Let him do it when I'm gone. Right now I'm just gonna take
what I need and get out of here. No fights. No crying. No breakfast.
It's 9am.
We're a couple. We go to work during the week, meet up at
the coffee shop near the apartment afterward, buy groceries on Tuesday,
eat out or order pizza on Fridays. We're the pair you see holding
hands through Battery Park, who lay in the grass during sunset if
the weather's good, who shop for linens n' things. We cuddle. We
don't have many friends, and those friends we do have are either
married or gay. A couple of Christmas cards that don't say anything
more than "Happy Holidays," waxy credit card receipts
from gift shops and restaurants, a dusty watch with a broken strap.
Everyone's got memories and everyday junk in a shelf like this.
Or a drawer. Or a box. Or a basement. This room is too small for
a box. Old magazines with water damaged pages are piled in a corner
of the room. We've been meaning to tie them up and throw them away.
There's a basket of laundry by the bed. Clean, mind you. Full of
underwear and socks. The shelf used to be for this stuff, but it's
more accessible this way. I'm accepting that we can keep every room
clean except this one. He doesn't let the cleaning lady in here.
I'm fine with it; I was getting protective of the shelf.
I'm a pack rat -- it would kill me to throw some of these
things away. There's a leather booklet that says "KITTY"
on it. It's a blank book that Aaron made for me when he was in art
school. I was meaning to use it for special things, but I'm afraid
I'd mess up the drawing I'd make, or maybe my handwriting will come
out crooked. So it's been unused for years, making its way to the
shelf the last time I wanted to write in it.
Coins. Lots of coins. There're some from Germany, Canada,
and Mexico. Mostly, they're American, and I ought to take them to
the CoinStar machine, but I use them every once in a while when
money's tight and I need subway fare. If you look long enough through
this mess (no one ever does), you'll find two coins from Peep Land.
On one side of each coin is a woman's bare chest that reads GOOD
FOR ONE PLAY, and on the other side is her ass, reading NOT REFUNDABLE.
I ought to throw them away, 'cos I got them about 2 months ago when
I took my old room mate to a peep show for his birthday. Aaron would
kill me if he knew; he thought we were at a bar all night. That's
not the bad part. The bad part is, we went to a booth at Peep Land
for a strip show and fooled around. PeepLand is nasty. I had never
been there before, it smelled swampy, and every strip show booth
was cold and cocksucker red. When we inserted our coins for a live
show, the curtain came up at the window this woman was sitting on
a stool, smoking. She walked over and looked us in the eyes and
said, "Y'all want a show?" in the same way someone would
say, "May I take your order?" We nodded, like naughty
schoolkids, and she snapped, "Well where's mah tip!" We
handed her two shaky dollars and she began to touch her breasts
while Whitney Houston sang "I'm Every Woman" through the
speakers behind her. After the curtain closed, I just remember kissing
and wetness, getting hot on my neck, and wanting whatever was happening
to be over. There were dried dribbles of white shit by the window,
and I felt so dirty, and I remember thinking about Aaron, and how
I threw a chunk of stale bread at his head when I found a charge
for internet porn on my credit card.
Couples should not give each other stuffed animals. They
end up thrown away after the break up, or given to someone's little
cousin. My best friend got a stuffed kitten from a guy she dated
about 3 years ago. After the relationship was over, he came to her
apartment asking for the kitten back. What the fuck, right? Anyway,
on the shelf are Cow and Deer -- a small floppy cow named Daisy
and a stuffed deer named Patches. They're actually Beanie Babies.
We called them Cow and Deer, 'cos the name-tags they had were lame.
When we first got them, we'd play with them. I would be Cow and
Aaron would be Deer and we'd be cute and do embarrassing things
only kids and cheeky couples do with them, like sing and dance with
them. We'd have them kiss and then we'd kiss. Sometimes I would
see him sleeping in the afternoon with Cow, and I'd bring over Deer
and take a nap with him. About six months ago, we had a nasty fight
over something I don't remember, and I threw Cow at him. He didn't
speak to me for hours until I took Cow and Deer and placed them
side by side on the edge of the shelf and cried. I told him we should
be together like that. So we sat by the bed and held hands quietly
for a couple of minutes. Cow and Deer have been together ever since.
I've thought of breaking up before. Sometimes I feel really
suffocated in this apartment. Not that it's small, I just don't
want to see his face sometimes. He'll ask me what's wrong and I'll
just go take a walk for a while. I usually come back feeling a little
better, and I'll bring him back some Reese's Peanut Butter Cups.
His eyes widen when he eats these; he looks so happy when he eats
candy. Every time, I just reason it out. We've lived here for a
while, and made so many purchases together. We've amassed a pretty
decent record collection together, as well as the complete Love
& Rockets comics, the good Batman novels, and Gabriel
Garcia Marquez's books in English and Spanish. I'll walk around
and think about how we'd divide this stuff up and there's no
practical way of doing that without one of us missing something,
wanting a certain chair, or all of the Belle & Sebastian singles
from Tigermilk or whatever. Besides, I don't think there's
anyone else out there who'd appreciate any of this shit.
You're probably thinking, "What's wrong with you? He's
a good man, he doesn't do drugs, he doesn't have another woman,
and you're not getting any younger, honey." Actually, that
would be my mother. But I've thought of it myself. Why the hell
do I want to get out so bad? I think of all the shit that annoys
me about him, like asking me what "pontificate" means,
or what was "Reaganomics" and why was it so bad. There's
also that tendency for him to wear a brand new shirt and find a
way to spill something on it. Last week I got him a white
shirt at Barney's, and he spilled dry-erase marker ink on it. I
mean, how stain-prone can one person be? He insists on using chopsticks
when we go to my Chinese grandmother's, which would be OK if he
didn't fumble with his meal and stab the meat with them. He gets
food everywhere when we eat out. But you know, everyone's got quirks,
and I'm sure I piss him off with my neuroses. That's not the point.
It's that he's so callous. I sat with him one evening a year ago,
reading out of my journals just before I moved in. I told him everything,
about the drugs, how I lost my baby, my nervous breakdown, the shit
I took from my step-dad, and you know what? He said my writing was
weird and that the stories freaked him out. We had just moved in
together, and all that shit I wrote over five years meant nothing
to him. I guess that's a good thing, but I wish he had said something
other than "Weird…you write like that? Shit…"
It just plain hurt. I think it's great that he doesn't judge me
or anything…but for him to be so insensitive about that nearly
killed me. And he's never apologized about it, or asked me anything
about that stuff. I got rid the diaries before I moved all my stuff
over, and never mentioned it again. But it still fucking hurts.
That's it. I'm going to take a shower, put on some clothes,
get a few things together, and leave before he wakes up. He sleeps
in on Saturday. I'm thinking of things to write in the note he will
read when he wakes up. I will use my pink stationery paper, the
kind I used when I'd send him letters. I will write something like,
"Dear Aaron, I just don't think it's working out between us."
I will take it from there. I'll be good about it. I know he'll understand
when he realizes how I feel. I will take Cow with me. I'm going to shower. I take off
my shirt, and I hear the sheets rustle through the strained mumbling
coming from his mouth. He's still asleep. I walk to the bed, watching
him stir a little bit. I stand over him. He looks like
an 8-year old kid, legs curled onto the pillow where my body was.
He moves like a little boy. He is a little boy. He turns
his head to reveal a spot of drool on the pillow where his mouth
was. He opens his eyes wide; they're glassy from sleep. "Hey
pretty," he says, looking up. He squints at me with his crusted
eyes and he raises his chest, stretching his thin arms over the
blue checkered sheets. There's a spot of sunshine coming through
the window and shining onto his big toe. It looks warm, made of
gold. He closes his eyes and with his head facing my pillow he says,
"Come back to bed, Kitty, it's Saburday…we'll go to Cafe
Havana later and get some breakfast…wayvoz rancheros and…cafay
con lachay…" I don't bother to put my shirt
back on and I get into bed. I touch that warm spot of sunshine on
his toe and kiss it. He looks at me and says, "Why you always
stand over by the shelves on Saturday, I'll never know. You look
like a kid going through a treasure chest. I love it." He kisses
me on my hand two or three times. When I lay down he will move close
to me, hug me by the stomach and I will kiss him on the arm. I will
fall asleep for another hour. We'll get Mexican for breakfast. This
is our Saturday morning routine.
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