Toothbrush

Toothbrush #shortstory | creativeliar.com

Photo credit: Jeremy Brooks

He shook a random current, the buzz biting hard off the granite and sending a pulsing scream through the kitchen.  He was in the wrong place.  He hurt at his neck.  His body was shot.

And it was all the stupid baby’s fault.

That baby was peering at him now.  Toothbrush stood resolute on the kitchen counter because the outlets near the bathroom sink were fried to hell and Margie could no longer keep him plugged into the outlet near the floor.  That’s where the bad thing happened.

It had been warm.  Margie never left the air conditioning on during the day so his hard plastic had begun to swelter. Margie came into the bathroom with that baby on her hip.  She was a larger woman, keeping the thick of the middle in line with the thick of her backside.  But toothbrush liked that about Margie because her hands were soft and nestled him like a sweating loaf of bread.

She had used him like she did every morning.  She put him to his purpose, brushing and stroking the curves of her teeth.  He vibrated, the length of him shaking with hardened focus.  He was serious about his work.

Margie rinsed him, shook him dry.  She stood him on his stand on the bathroom floor where he came eye to eye with the baby.  He thought nothing of Margie’s baby.  She was nothing but a lump of flesh glued to Margie’s hip.  A screaming, snotting goiter.

Margie moved away to the alcove where the toilet squatted and the shower stupidly drooled.  Toothbrush watched her rear poking out from the cabinet where the towels were kept, her head and hands rooting while her legs and ass wiggled in time.  There was no way she could see.

The baby grabbed him by the neck, jerking him off his stand.  She started to run on her wobbly legs.  She knocked his butt into the door frame, jammed him hard into the ground when she fell onto her own backside.  But she gathered her limbs, stuffed Toothbrush back into her sticky hands and took off again.  She ran through Margie’s bedroom and maneuvered through the door Margie had left open a crack.  She hit his button as she wobbled and he felt the current run through him, loose and all willy-nilly like mid-air.  He had no purpose.  That baby had no teeth.

Finally they stopped.  They were in the living room, in the cramped corner where the baby had a mess of toys waiting for her.  For him.  She took his quivering body.  She thrust him in the air.  She smacked him hard against a tiny sized drum.  She laughed.  She laughed at him.

When it was done he knew he was broken.  He vibrated but only a small whimper.  He was spent and it hurt too much to cry.

When Margie came in she was angry.  Her arms flapped like hearty wings.  She smacked the baby on her backside, only delivering a fraction of the pain toothbrush was currently harboring in his parts.

Margie had removed his head and replaced it but this time, backwards.  It was the only way the current ran smooth through his body again.  She set him up on the kitchen counter, his bristles shamefully brushing against the wall.

But he could still see the baby on the floor clapping her sticky hands.

He could hear the toaster snickering.

© 2010-2013 Ericka Clay All Rights Reserved

How to Be a Girl, Part I

Like glittered cats? Who doesn’t! Be sure to follow me on Facebook and Twitter and Instagram so you can sign up for my glittered cat giveaway! I’m just kidding. That’s illegal according to Texas state law. I checked. Twice. But follow me anyways. Because Dave Coulier said so. That’s why.

How to be a Girl #funny | creativeliar.com

Being a girl means wearing shoes that look like a drunk ass garden gnome took a dump on them. So pretty!

If there’s one thing I know how to do in this life, it’s to be fully and completely myself until someone not so politely asks me to stop.  Seeing that I am, in fact, a girl (despite what Brendon Schufflemier yelled out during our sixth grade assembly on proper hygiene) and that I’m pretty freaking good at it, I’ve decided to give you a step-by-step run down on what it’s like to be given the privilege of embarrassing yourself on a monthly basis by buying sticks designed to stick up your hoo-ha.

First, you should know that I’m fully qualified.  I’m so good at being a girl that I actually do research by watching one of the most notably awesomest shows to ever grace my television set: Girls on HBO.  This show is what it would be like if instead of one Alf, there were four and all of them had vaginas and instead of eating cats, they talked about how awesome it is to live in New York and barely wear clothes.  The fact that I’m not doing either of these things at this particular moment is making my heart break into tiny baby hearts that won’t stop crying.  It is so loud inside of my chest right now.

So seeing that I’m a certifiable CEO of girldom, let’s get busy.

HOW TO BE A GIRL

1.  You’ll need some boobs.  I know, I want to be all like “No, no you don’t need boobs.  Boys like the fact that you have a working limbic system and a penchant for not randomly pooping in public,” but let’s face it, boobs are the world’s currency plus pooping isn’t the worst thing that could happen to you in public.  Trust me.  Also, if I told you that you didn’t need boobs to be a girl, I’d be channeling my mother circa 1995 who wouldn’t let me shave my legs like the rest of my friends because a razor is, and I quote, “the devil’s match stick.”  Okay, she didn’t actually verbalize it but she did say it in the way she’d accidentally (and frequently) called me by my poodle’s name.  Fifi.  Seriously.  They let this woman have children.  So boobs and you.  How can you amplify what God/Buddha/nothing/thatmagicaldragoninthesky gave you?  Here are a few tips:

Become friends with flat chested people.  But not real friends.  Their love of sports bras and book learning may rub off on you and you may start saying things like “I don’t know about you but I could really go for a venti latte and a shit ton of poetry right about now.”

* Speaking of bras, get one.  Fill it with boob-like substances like pudding or nacho cheese and put it on.  Then put another bra on top of it.  Then wonder why your parents decided to have children.

Constantly cross your arms in front of your chest.  This says things like, “Under these arms are boobs bigger than my Uncle Victor’s head and he once drank an entire six pack of beer while yodeling the national anthem” and “I don’t like it when people hug me.  Also, people in general.”

 2. Care about things that don’t make sense.  Things like men who never call you back, men who think you need to lose weight, men who think you need to gain weight, men who have no clue how much you weigh even after you sent them a copy of your medical records because you were just being polite and thought the reason he was wearing that brown sweater when you first saw him at the library was a sign that he was deeply invested in your triglyceride count.  Basically, men. 

3. Don’t learn too good.  The great thing about being a girl is being able to do silly things like accidentally glittering the wrong cat (Trick alert: there is no such thing as “the wrong cat”) or filling your bra with too much nacho cheese and then rectifying the situation by screaming “I AM ON MY PERIOD MINIONS!!  BRING ME MY HOO-HA STICKS!!!!”  So it’s absolutely just fine and dandy if learning ain’t your thing.  I SAID SUPER ABSORBENT!!!!  Ahem.

Well, that’s all the time we have for today.  I have to go on a cat finding mission (don’t worry, it’s not too difficult.  After all, they live in other people’s houses!), but stay tune for the next installment when I break Brendon Schufflemier’s spirit once and for all and let you know what else makes you a girl.  Psst…it involves badly written novels…and not even the ones I write!

Hands

Won fourth place for this story out of 7,000 entries for a Writer’s Digest contest.  High fived myself pretty hard in the face that day.  This story is also the basis for my novel, Unkept, that my agent is currently shopping to publishers.  Your thoughts will be majorly appreciated.  And drowned in glitter.

***

Hands. #shortstory | creativeliar.com

Photo credit: Martin Gommel

People think of hands. They say words like “fingers,” “palms,” phrases like “time etched in skin.” They never say “phalanges” though. Just once I’d like to hear “phalanges” in a eulogy. But I never give my opinion. I’m purely the keeper of the gates, a crypt keeper of sorts, whose main task is to curtail the pressure that pumps out the floor vents and from every pore of the inconsolable. It often mirrors the swollen ball of gas throbbing in my stomach even as Great Aunt Lydia tickles my arm with rubber fingers, as Uncle Marty pats my back with a restrained hand. Fingers. Hands. They act as the sticks to which all of this is measured.

Many times I’m found in the break room beneath the politely terse sign that reads “Please Keep All Drinks In This Area.” Rosa calls it the mourning room because this is the real place people acknowledge their grievances. They talk, real talk, not whispered and often the subject recklessly travels from the sadness at hand to others that plague real time. For example, Benny’s soccer game: a real letdown, heartbreaking for all the kids, a travesty to sit in the sun all afternoon for nothing. It’s inappropriate talk, inappropriate outside of the confines of the break room where skin forms at the top of the coffee pot and mends the shredded tissue of unguarded hearts.

Skin. I guess I think of skin in general more often than fingers or hands. It’s because Rosa is incessantly harping on the proper way to care for dead skin. Of course she uses terms like “deceased,” “passed on,” and “not long for this world” (although I often have to point out that this phrase is in reference to those who are about to die, not those who have already taken the final plunge so to speak). Rosa hates reality even more than I hate avoiding it. So I let her win and offer a constant ear to her musings on her morbidly wrought beauty routines.

“Preparation is key. You must always clean the face first. I mean after you turn them over to dress them sometimes they well, they leak out of their mouths and noses,” Rosa whispers through pursed lips. She’s not saying it for shock value because for Rosa the dead aren’t shocking. But she whispers it because Rosa is nothing if she isn’t respectful.

We’re sitting in the break room, the mourning room during a perfectly quiet Wednesday afternoon. There are no takers (under or otherwise) willing to sully my few minutes of peace and quiet so I have this portion of the day to myself. Rosa’s decided to join me so the only nuisance in this relatively nuisance free afternoon is the subtle scent of formaldehyde that resiliently clings to Rosa’s skin no matter how hard she scrubs.

“It’s the things that you wouldn’t think matter that really make the difference. A little tissue builder in the chin and cheeks goes a long way and sometimes I even look for stray hairs. Nobody wants to view a porcupine,” Rosa says, murmuring the “porcupine” part and stealing glances at the empty room. I’ve heard this little schpiel for years now whether she begins with the porcupine comment or abruptly ends with it. Sometimes I think the fumes have finally taken their toll on my poor friend whose skin remains youthfully preserved while her brain seems to sizzle and drain out of her ears.

I look at the clock above Rosa’s raven hair and count the hours until the curtains draw back and our little show is open for business. I know my father is currently in the basement, working mad scientist style on his pretty little row of corpses leaving me to contend with the breathing clients. I don’t fault him for this because as much as my father acts like a mad scientist he looks like one, too, with hair bursting in surges around his head and his hands pickled from working with too many chemicals.

I excuse myself from coffee hour even though I have plenty of time to get ready and utter my lines of condolences into the mirror. But I long for my routine of plucking and pulling, cleansing and tucking, dressing my warm body much in the same way Rosa dresses the cold ones.

My room sits high above the funeral home. It’s the room I’ve had for ages and it’s the only part of Golden Oaks Funeral Services that seems to thrive. It pulses like a pink, pliant orb because I’ve decorated in shades of rose and everything in it can be moved around at a moment’s notice. I don’t like when things get dusty and stale, when the carpet’s fibers permanently bow to the weight of monotony.

I shower and I shave so I am smooth in all the right places for a spicy date, all the wrong places for an impending viewing. I don’t like the rules so I wear make-up that makes me look pretty and I wear colors that sizzle hot in fluorescent lighting. It’s not a lack of respect or disregard for the sorrowful. It’s the thought that I, like anyone else, could very easily become my job and I’m not being the least bit sardonic when I say I’m deathly afraid of the notion.

When time does its duty I go downstairs to make sure the candles are lit, the memorial programs are set out. I receive the family, the closest of kin and make them feel welcome.  They are the Pattersons, Ron and Linda, and they stand side by side with their three-year-old daughter, Montgomery, trailing at their knees. In any other circumstance I’d snicker at a name so blatantly contrived that it probably spent as much time in the oven as the flaxen haired girl herself. But I’m the “welcomer,” the pair of arms open to the weeping little lambs. I don’t make fun because the Pattersons are here to celebrate the life, the death of their five-year-old son, Parker.

At five-thirty the home is abuzz, alive with hushed words and open mouth wailing and at a certain point I escape to the coffee room for another shot of caffeine I don’t necessarily need. It’s in this room that things are real because this is what I experience:

“The lighting, I think it’s the lighting but that poor boy looks like a puppet. I’d never say a word to Linda…”

“They had so much hope for that boy. Such a smart little thing, even at five. Montgomery seems decent enough, but I don’t know if she’ll ever be that sharp…”

“No, no in Pemberton. I get my nails done in Pemberton. Her name’s Janine, here let me see if I still have her card…”

In this room reality washes me clean and I feel wounds heal, wounds that I wasn’t even aware were sunk solid in my flesh. I walk out of the break room after chucking my Styrofoam cup and losing what little resolve bonded my feet firmly to the floor. I’m met with the “funeral smell,” the over indulgence of expensive cologne as if every person in this place is olfactorily compensating for the loss of life. I meet, I greet. I explain that I am nothing to this place or to these people other than a brightly clad Angel of Darkness.

It’s not what I do before or during the service that even matters. I mean, yes, it matters because who else would do the mundane things? Who else would vacuum tissue fibers out of the carpet or scour the dirt brown ring in the toilet bowl? All of these things matter, I know this wholeheartedly. But what happens afterward is the secret thing that matters most.

Before Rosa can sneak upstairs to admire her work once again or before my father can make sure everything is on the up and up, I go and find Parker and give what little respect I can offer him. This is what it amounts to:

“Parker, my name is Vienna Oaks and I am thirty-two years old. I work for my father who owns this place and no matter what I do I can’t stop smelling preservation. It’s chemically sweet and it hurts when I breathe, and I, and I’m sorry but Jesus Christ I’m jealous, Parker. I am so jealous you’re gone and I’m still fucking here.” I say it but I’m not saying it because I’m gasping, pawing the smooth wood of his casket and breathing in the heavy scent of misspent youth. I feel unhinged and unloved. I feel everything “un” and would do anything to trade places with this little boy, but it has nothing to do with him personally. I’d trade places with any of them.

I’m touching Parker’s cool wooden coffin, soaking in the smooth, unadulterated feel of death. I feel the stillness in this room. I feel the stillness of his hands.

One and Done

Like glittered cats? Who doesn’t! Be sure to follow me on Facebook and Twitter and Instagram so you can sign up for my glittered cat giveaway! I’m just kidding. That’s illegal according to Texas state law. I checked. Twice. But follow me anyways. Because Dave Coulier said so. That’s why.

Here’s a post from an old blog explaining my whole “I’m just gonna have one child so I have plenty of time to glitter these two cats who I’ve named Sybil and Harmonica for Dave Coulier’s birthday” theory.  It’s also been published in the New England Journal of Medicine.  I mean the DSM IV.

***

One and Done | creativeliar.com

Ava, taking a break from tying me to this chair. Can one of you bring me a glass of water? Thanks.

my husband and i want only one child. you may not know this (especially if you’ve been able to survive the baby epidemic up until now) but having or wanting only one child makes you a bit of an anomaly. in fact, sometimes i feel as if people treat me like i’m contagious, as if my willingness to allow my uterus to shrivel up will most certainly send theirs into early menopause. i assure you i’m not that powerful (sorta).

so why be so selfish and have only one bundle of joy? easy: there’s more i want to do with my life than be a mother. i’ll take a second for you to catch your breath after choking down your mild (or not so mild) disgust. i know what you’re thinking. you’re wondering why the state would allow someone like me, someone who wants to do something more than just stare at her baby and crochet all day, to raise an actual human being. i promise you i’m not as evil as i seem (in fact i’m usually too gracious for my own good no matter how much of a badass i pretend to be. ask my husband. he does this killer impression of me answering the phone where my voice goes up ten octaves higher so i sound like a little school girl. i can’t stop doing it).

i’m not evil, i’m just ambitious. when i was younger i never thought about marriage or weddings or babies. i thought about this: graduating college with my creative writing degree, getting my MFA, publishing a couple of novels, becoming a professor at a small new england college, living in a bungalow with my dog who i never got around naming but for our purposes here let’s call her midge. i’ve accomplished one of those things – i have my undergrad in english/creative writing from the university of arkansas. check and check. so imagine my surprise when a husband, two dogs and a baby fell into my lap (and i swear to you it happened exactly that way. one day i was minding my own business trying to be all free and single and what not and then this jackass had the audicity to introduce himself to me and change my life for the better. douche. bag.). so some might say i’m clinging to the future i thought i’d have, the one where midge and i play ball for hours on end before heading into the bungalow to grade a crap load of papers. but i’m not. i just know what i want and i’m tailoring my life to achieve it.

i see nothing wrong with this. i see nothing wrong with having one child because i know i’ll be able to concentrate on my writing and raising my kid (emphasis on the singular). i see nothing wrong with knowing you’re not equipped to take on more than you can handle. in fact, i sometimes wish other people would adopt the same mentality.

now don’t get me wrong. i’m not hating (oh hell, let’s go with hatin.’ it just feels right) on people with more than one kid or those who want more. as long as i don’t end up paying for them knock yourself out! if you respect my decision i will most certainly respect yours (unless you decide to kick puppies. then you shall fear my wrath).

i must go and pay attention to my child now and the incredibly tall pile of laundry i must conquer. oh and by the way, i totally know i’ve just jinxed myself by posting this. i should probably add “study up on baby names” to my to-do list.

Hopeless

Hopeless #shortstory | creativeliar.com

Photo credit: Hamed Masoumi

What a silly name for a baby, Richard thinks stroking the picture of the sticky faced infant with his left thumb. Hayden Monroe Clark, six pounds, six ounces, twenty inches long. A regular wrinkled worm that one, Richard muses as he shakes the ice like dice in his glass.

Gladys had brought it by, this little announcement. He wishes the woman would let it go, leave him to wallow and wane in peace but she makes it a habit to remind him that she pays half the mortgage on their two bedroom two bath condo by the bay. It isn’t a free ride. Nothing is ever free for Richard.

His scotch is thinning. The melted ice runs rivers through his drink so when he goes to sip he isn’t met with the same kick he started with. It reminds him of sleepless nights, remote in hand, clumsily jerking through channels like shifting gears. Those were the nights Gladys deemed a bed too good for him so he took refuge on the leather loveseat. His feet stuck out from under the blanket, and if Gladys had decided to skip laundry that day, his feet went chill in the cool of evening. It wasn’t so bad, Richard thinks, sucking at the last sips of bliss. At least I didn’t have to hear her breathing.

The phone is ringing and because his luck is parched dry he knows who’s on the other end. He doesn’t want to answer but he must because it’s his genetic duty.

“Hello, son,” he says after he dreamily glances at the caller ID. Gladys’s idea so she’d know which calls from the Red Hat Society she’d answer and which ones she wouldn’t. Richard thought it useless to spend money on a telepathic piece of crap but here lately it was starting to prove its usefulness.

“Dad, I’m glad you answered.” ‘I’m glad you answered’ bounces against the hollow grooves in Richard’s skull leaving its permanent echo.

“Why wouldn’t I answer?” he replies but he knows why he wouldn’t. Mainly because he knows why he would: if he were somewhere between three sheets to the wind and totally blitzed he’d find it beyond amusing to answer the phone. Unfortunately for Richard, he currently found himself at this specific juncture.

“Talked to mom. It seems like she’s doing okay,” his son says, ignoring the answer. Caleb is thirty-six, married and just welcomed his first child into the world. Caleb is old enough to know better.

“Yeah your mother, she keeps busy, usually bugging the piss out of me.”

“You know she’s just watching out for you, Dad. Thirty-five years and then nothing…I think she’s well aware of the difficulties.” Caleb’s voice stings through the earpiece, adding to the echo in Richard’s head. Dead, that’s how Richard really feels so he adds to his empty glass while he wrestles with the phone between his ear and shoulder.

“That’s a big assessment for someone who hasn’t been married for more than, oh I don’t know, three hours.” Richard feels like he’s gargling his words. They tickle his throat, swish and slosh off his teeth, collapse impotent on his tongue. He didn’t mean to say it and he hates bringing it up. But the boy wasted his life and got married to some hippie liberal from Seattle. He’s loathsome to the thought of it and it has nothing to do with not being invited to the wedding.

“How many?” Caleb asks.

“How many, how many what?” Richard says, taking a gulp from his glass as if it was the first.

“How many drinks did you have tonight?” Caleb sighs. When he breathes noisily through his nose it reminds Richard of when his son was younger and would sigh away his father’s indifference. Richard wasn’t a bad father but whenever his precocious son caught him driving well beyond the speed limit or hitting on the president of the PTA, he was greeted with Caleb’s administered wheezing. The sound reminded him of all his shortcomings and was oddly reminiscent of Gladys and her propensity for voicing her disappointment nasally.

“I don’t know, two maybe three. I had a bad day. Your mother came by earlier.” He hadn’t meant to mention Gladys’ visit as a non sequitur yet it seemed to appropriately flow behind “bad day.”

“She told me. She said you were going out of town but you wouldn’t tell her where. So when are you leaving?” Richard wasn’t leaving, at least he wouldn’t be venturing far. He made reservations for one of the nicest hotels at the bay and would be staying for as long as necessary the following weekend. He drifted into the living room and found his bag that he had already packed, stoically nestled in the couch. In it resided the glint of glass bottles, the cold, metal handle of providence and the picture of the sticky baby he tucked in the side pocket for God knows what reason. Maybe he’d take it out before he left.

“I got the picture,” Richard says, avoiding Caleb’s question.

“You did? So…”

So what? Richard thinks but he won’t say it despite the mounting urge to. It’s that genetic thing again, keeping his mouth shut against his will because he’s a father and only because he’s a father.

“She’s, she’s a baby.” Richard says it blindly, the alcohol reaching its most dangerous place inside of him. Everything goes double and when he reaches out to balance on the back of Galdys’s writing table he misses and stumbles over onto trick knees and elbows. The phone escapes his reach and Caleb’s voice arcs through the air, insulting the quiet.

“…and I can’t understand how my own father can’t even be happy for me. I know I didn’t do what you wanted me to do. I know I’m nothing like you but for once could you possibly get your head out of your ass and just love me, no conditions, no expectations. Just love me,” Richard hears through the receiver. He hates this kind of talk, “Gladys talk” as he calls it. It was the type of conversation that left him stranded, unguarded and shit out of luck when it came to knowing how to respond. It wasn’t the way men spoke and for that he hated his son.

“Okay, okay, knock it off with the hippie crap. I love you, you know that. And the baby, cute, cute kid.” It’s all Richard can manage but it takes a rather large chunk right out of him. He bellies across the floor, smacking his now empty cup onto the coffee table and crawling from the scotch-soaked carpet onto the sofa. He exhales, his lungs shriveling, unwillingly experiencing what all of this has done to him

“Great, well I will let your granddaughter know what a cute kid she is, courtesy of Grandpa. Should I mention anything else, like everything she can’t be because it will disappoint you? I don’t know dad, she seems to gravitate towards the color blue, wouldn’t want her to end up unladylike if you know what I mean.” Caleb is making fun of him and Richard wishes it were like the old days. This teasing has turned bitter and isn’t at all like the times Caleb would find Richard passed out on the bed still in his work clothes after hitting the bottle a bit too hard and poking fun at his having one shoe on, one shoe off. Richard remembers gazing at his son at those times through a squint eye, praying to God his beautiful blond haired boy wouldn’t grow up to be like him. Beautfiul, Richard thinks. That’s what I should have said about Hayden.

“She has a name, Dad. She is a person whether you want to realize it or not and I’m tired of what you’re doing to us. You can hate me, in fact I’ve gotten quite used to the notion, but leave my wife and daughter out of it. I’m going to let you go now. Mom’s right, you are hopeless.”

“Okay…” is all that Richard can manage before the phone offers its decisive click. Okay, he thinks as he reaches for his glass and takes a sip only to be met with nothing.

He looks at the German cuckoo clock over the fireplace and is held captive by its powerful lungs, its silly screaming. It is eight o’clock on the dot, the time of night that creeps quietly until dark is the only thing that encompasses Richard and it does so with untrained arms. He starts, sits upright and goes to his bag packed in the corner of the couch. He reaches in the pocket, fishes till he finds it. He strokes the sticky baby face with a clumsy thumb and concentrates everything on this small square of paper. He smiles, he whispers beautiful, and wishes none of this was as hopeless at it seems.

© 2010-2013 Ericka Clay All Rights Reserved