She had a smile like yours. None of us knew her real name. Then again, none of us were asking.
almost
Lupo’sJenny’s
The Jenny’s
The Jenny’s.
How hard is it to be a single mom? Do you regret taking money out of your retirement fund to be inseminated with your child? You look really tired today.
almost
“Jaime, my girl,” my boss Richie says, slapping my desk. He’s two years younger than me. His shaggy hair makes him look like something the ’90s threw up and slung an ill-fitting tie onto with a bowler hat. His father is a founding partner of our firm so he gets the better title, wears jeans to work, and sadly exists.
“Morning, Richie,” I say.
“Kicked your inbox’s ass yet? Cc’ed you on at least three home-runs.”
“No, no, I haven’t, um, kicked ass yet.”
“Jaime, you gotta get going! You can’t play if you’re not in the game, you feel me?”
“Get in the game, yes. I can game. I game all the time.”
“Yeah, but are you always winning? Or are you running the clock? Are you hogging the puck?”
I am positive that Richie has never played an actual sport in his life. Nor have I.
“I am . . . shooting the hoop?”
“Right, that’s right! You shoot the hoop and girl, you gotta get that goal.” He walks back to his office and slams the door. He doesn’t get angry but he wants to give the impression that he could.
For the next hour, I do my best to catch up on emails, coordinating times to send other emails and copyediting releases that were sent without Richie letting me know, a typical day bicycling backwards up a fucking mountain. Then, I notice an article on a site featuring one of our releases. Not very large, and not not clickbait. Where Are They Now, ’00s Rock Stars? Richie’s door is still closed. The lights are off, which means he must already be at lunch and could take at least two hours to return. I click. The article lists a bunch of has-beens that I’m sure most people read about because they want to know they’re doing better than their idols, but then I see the third name listed: Jenny B.
Jenny B. Age: 29. She’s in her third year of Harvard Law School. Really? I refresh the page twice, but it says that our drummer gave up drumming because of a shoulder injury. Apparently, all of her life, she had held the drumsticks incorrectly. Now, she couldn’t hit a beat on a drum without pain.
*
You’d say, “What is she supposed to do, not age? Not want cash? Can she help it that she was made for skinny-ties?” And that’s fair—except the tie part. It just seems like such a sad thing to happen. “Whatever,” you’d say, but not really mean it. You’d just want me to stop obsessing.
*
In the bathroom, I look at myself for the first time today. My hair’s in a ponytail. The dark circles under my eyes are like little craters I could fall inside. I’m in a blouse with frills on the sleeves. I used to hate frills. You used to hate them too. My lipstick is nude. Not scarlet or black or purple. I am everything that we pointed at as kids and thought of as boring. I wear orthopedic sneakers. I put my hand on my stomach as if I’ve forgotten my own hunger.
*
In the car, I try to plug in my phone for music but it’s dead. I channel surf for a while and come across another Jenny’s song. “They made a lot of songs,” you’d say. “It doesn’t have to mean anything.”
Except, it does. It does to me. And it did to us.
I text my sister who is probably just waking up from yesterday’s closing shift. Laura hasn’t changed too much since you last saw her. Still a bartender. Totals a car every other year, and wracks up credit card debt like it’s her second job, but she’s real good with Sammy. Almost as fun as you’d be.
4:44 pm: I can’t Mommy today.
4:45 pm: Are you ok? What happened?
4:45 pm: Please pick up Sammy from school? Sleepover? Pick her up noon tomorrow?
4:48 pm: Ok . . . only because it’s today. Next time, more notice plz? I bartend 6-2 AM tomorrow.
4:48 pm: Owe you sis, thanks a million
4:50 pm: I’ll settle for lunch. And a bottle of wine. Where you off to?
4:51 pm: Cemetery
And that stops all questions.
*
I’ve found a bench in Harvard yard. The cool October air tastes like steel and cinnamon. Around me, the leaves are turning a burnt gold. Old brick buildings sit in neat rows, encircled by iron gates and archways that made the campus look more like a temple than a school. Any second I expect a woman on a bicycle to drive by with a basket of books and men to argue philosophy over tea.
After a minute, both happen. You’d laugh at how predictable it is.
*
The odds of finding her are low, but I always take the low odds. Like when I first sat next to you in honor’s chemistry. I got switched into the class because I said I wanted to be a doctor. Really, I just wanted to be tutored by you. Remember when I asked? You hesitated, like you somehow knew if you said yes, it would be saying yes to a lot more, even before I did. Still, you said yes.
“Jaime, don’t you think this is desperate,” you would say to me now.
*
I saw her before I knew it was her. No more bangs. Her hair had outgrown that and was pulled into a messy blonde bun. She had earbuds in and was listening to something that I could only imagine was better music than I knew. Her clothes looked expensive and shabby at the same time. Her smile looked thinner, worn at its seams. Instead of sitting on a bench at a school I do not attend, I move to follow her. I’m careful to walk a couple steps behind, checking my phone so I look like a busy student. We find the dining hall. In pace behind her, I follow her to the lunch line that has gluten-free pizza and take a slice, like her. It takes horrible, like a slice of cardboard sprinkled with pepper. Soon, I’m in earshot of her and her friends. They’re talking about a party. The other friends shrug, debating whether or not it was worth it. They’ll least make an appearance. It is Friday night. So will I.
*
Not sure what I was expecting, but I’m disappointed when I arrive. Loud beats of electronica slash the air. Red solo cups sit piled on a table. Ping pong balls and crushed blue beer cans of Bud Light trash the floor. Laughter rises from the gazelle pack of women huddling in the kitchen. And there in the hall, there’s fucking Richie.
“Richie?” His head swirls around to face me. His smile is too wide, like a watermelon rind.
“Jaime! I didn’t know you knew these people. Happy Fri-yayy!”
“There’s a lot you don’t know about me.”
“What?” Richie asks, craning his ear towards me, trying to hear over the loud music.
“I said, my niece is here, but she doesn’t want me to know she’s here. I’m not like hitting on her or something weird. Just promised my brother that I’d look out for her first semester.” He sways, drunkenly, and much too close.
“I’m sure she’s fine,” I said. “She’s an adult. You’re probably the oldest guy here.”
“What?” Richie asks.
“Don’t you think that’s weird? Can you let her be?”
“I hate that song.”
I sigh. “My wife died today.”
“That’s not how Let It Be goes!”
“Five years ago. Embolism.”
“Antebellum?”
“Do you know where the bathroom is?” I yell.
“Oh, yeah,” he points down the hall.
“Sure,” I say, doing my best to smile and maneuver past him in the narrow hallway without giving him the impression that I want to dance.
From my spot in line, I see the kitchen and a group playing beer pong unsuccessfully. A sheet of white ripped paper hangs behind them and whoever is Tiger Claw is sure as hell losing by a lot. I abandon my bathroom post and walk towards the game. A woman slams the table with her palm, mid-laugh, flipping her hair back and for a moment, my heart stops. It’s Jenny throwing the white little ball, angling her shot up and over and horribly missing each time. Unlike the others in their Red Sox hats and cargo shorts, she laughs when she misses. I inch closer to that sound.
When I look closer, I see the subtle flinch when she throws even this tiny ball. Her shoulder must still be acting up, even after all these years of not drumming. No one else seems to see it.
Behind her, there’s a small table of boxed wine and more shitty beer. I take a red cup and fill it with as much wine as it can hold. “This is only gonna end badly,” you’d say, and I’d only drink faster to that.
For the first time in half an hour, Jenny gets a ball into the cup. She cheers. Her partner, who’s much shorter, has decided to sit on the floor and take a nap. Karen, they call her. Karen is out.
“What’s a girl to do?” Jenny asks. Before I realize it, I’m there, all smiling purple lips. I say something but whatever comes out is a rushed slur of words. Jenny tilts her head. “You sure you’re ok to play?”
“Sure as a parking ticket,” I say, and if you were here you’d of face-palmed. You’d tell me that you can’t just quote someone’s lyrics to them in conversation.
“What did you just say?”
“Um,” I say. “How do you play?”
Jenny flips her hair. “Oh, it’s easy, especially if you don’t win. Just watch me and you’ll get it.”
I put my hand on her arm. “Is your shoulder ok to do this?”
She shakes me off. “What are you talking about? I’m fine. A little drunk.”
“I, uh,” I lean closer, “I saw you wince.”
“Ok, mom,” she says and someone behind us laughs. “Someone needs a shot.” And just like when she was on stage drumming, the crowd gives her what she wants. A shot finds its way into my hands, then mouth. Fiery hot whiskey warms my insides on its way down to the pit of me. Jenny giggles at my sudden unsteadiness and puts her arms around me. “That’s what you need, girl.”
Her touch isn’t like yours, but it’s something.
At the other end of our game-table, two men in Red Sox caps with shaggy hair watch us. They’re whispering something and gesturing large with their hands. I undo my ponytail, shaking out my hair too like Jenny. “Girls, you in or you just gonna talk?” The one that didn’t speak high-fives the one that did. “Think you can make a comeback, Alex?” The other asks, revealing a toothy grin again.
Alex? That was her big secret name? I feel let down, but I try not to show it.
She hands me the white ball and winks at me.
I feel possible. I feel feathery. I throw the ball and it ricochets off the table and hits one of the men in the eye. The toothy one. He cries out. All the while, Jenny laughs. She even pulls me into a hug.
She lifts my chin, “Couldn’t have done it better myself. See that, Derrickkkk?” She tosses her hair. “You didn’t even made me feel this good bed.” The crowd “ohhhhs” and erupts into laughter. Feeling the room spin beneath me and my heart jack-hammer, I reply, “Thanks, Jenny. I really needed this.”
That’s when the dream ends. Her nostrils flare. She pushes my face away and raises her voice so the buzzing kitchen and what feels like the entire city of Boston stops, looking at me, in anticipation. She is all glare. And I’m an ant under a magnifying glass. “What. The. Fuck.”
“I’m sorry?” I add.
Jenny looks around the room. “Who put her up to it? Was it you, Derick?” She walks over to the man still cradling his eye and shouts into his ear. “It’s not funny, you asshole.”
“Jenny, I, I didn’t mean to . . . I always wanted to see you.”
She spins on a dime, facing me. “I don’t care what the fuck you want to say to me. I’ve heard it all. You’re dying. Your mother has a rare disease. All of this shit from people who just want me to sign some rare photo, to just unload all their problems onto me like I’m your fucking therapist and guess what? I’m not. I can’t handle your shit. I can’t even handle my shit. And most of the time you’re just trying to sell my autograph. I can’t play shit, that was like a decade ago! Get a life. Get the fuck out of here.”
“I, um,” I try to speak but my speech abandons me too.
“See how pathetic you are,” she says, creeping closer. “You don’t even have a reason, do you?”
“Please. Today is a really hard day for me.”
Alex takes a deep breath and whatever fire she was about to unleash on me halts. Of all people, Richie enters the room. “Alex,” he says. “Don’t be a jerk to my girlfriend. I told her to call you Jenny. She just doesn’t remember.” Alex looks to Richie then me, and shakes her head.
“Whatever, Richie. You’re such an ass.”
“You know me,” he says, lifting up his beer. He takes me by the arm and says, “Come on, honey. Let’s get some air. Some people can’t take a joke, huh?”
“No,” I say. “No one gets it.”
*
Out on the balcony, Richie sits beside me on the floor next to a mug of cigarette butts. No one else is outside but us. I weave my fingers between the iron bars, leaning my forehead against the cool metal.
“Was it that bad?” I ask.
“Well, what do you consider bad?”
“Do you remember that scene in She’s All That when the girl gets all made-over, even though she was already pretty and the hot girl comes in and is all you’re the worst!!! Like that?”
“Wow. I don’t think I’ve ever seen you drunk.”
“You’ve never asked.”
Richie laughs. “Ok, well, I haven’t seen that. But it was close.”
“Ughhhh.”
“It’s ok. Still can’t believe you brought up Jenny B. Do you know how far Alex went to take Jenny B. websites down? Sued so many people over a name.”
“I thought she was cool.”
“Did you ever even talk to her? She’s not, trust me.”
I shrug. The air around me starts to register as too cold. “Can I lean on you? I’m not straight, so HR won’t get mad at you for it. It’s just cold and I don’t want to go inside and you’re alive.”
“You’re really charming when you’re drunk,” he says.
“You sound almost intelligible,” I say, resting my head on his shoulder.
Richie smirks. “Just the whiskey. Gives me more nerve.”
I breathe in his clothes that smell like bonfire and after-shave. “Richie, why’d you help me?”
He shrugs. “I thought you were straight.”
I laugh. “Really?”
“No. I just don’t know how to talk to you. We work together. And I know not everyone has to be bros. I’m not an idiot, but I’d like it if you didn’t hate me. Did it work?”
I look up at his blue eyes and tug his stupid bowler hat over them. “It’s a start.”
He smiles. “I’ll take it. So what, were you a teenage groupie?”
“Not really. It was the first rock show I saw with my wife.”
“Too bad she couldn’t see tonight’s shitshow.”
“My wife is dead,” I try to snap my fingers but fumble. “Embolism.”
“Oh, oh. That sucks.”
“It does suck! She didn’t even like The Jenny’s. I can’t even remember what songs she only pretended to like anymore. Just thought if Jenny could meet me, then it’d be like she met Pia too.”
“I think I do know.”
I pull away from him and try to take his hat off his head. “What do you know?”
“Don’t…don’t you have a daughter?”
“Richie.”
“Just saying,” he says. “You still have someone.”
“Pia could speak sign language and Spanish and tie a knot in a cherry stem with her tongue and she could hold you in a way that squished you but also made you feel like you shouldn’t be anywhere else.”
“Say, why don’t I call you a cab?”
“No,” I say. “I need air.”
*
On the walk home I stop into CVS. I find the hair coloring aisle. I choose Cyber-purple. This was the one Pia liked. I clench it to my chest as I walk, as the sun bleeds above me, filling the sky with light.
*
In our kitchen, I wait for her. Our little hurricane will soon rush in and grab me by the waist and tell me about her Friday night sleepover with Auntie Laura and their chocolate chip pancakes for dinner.
When she arrives, I’m sitting on the counter. Something that I always yell at her for doing, so she tilts her head at me as if she’s not sure if I’m me or an alien. The box of hair dye sits beside me.
“What would you say to playing rock-star?” I ask. “Mommy wants to play today.”
Sammy’s eyes widen. “Like Taylor Swift?”
“Not exactly,” I say. “Like Pia.” I jump off the counter and take our photo out of my wallet.
*
Confession: I haven’t shown a picture of you to Sammy. Sure, she knows who you are. She knows we were married like her dolls. Little by little, I will give her pieces of you. Not all at once. I can’t keep them all inside me. Can’t keep spilling over into two lives.
*
In the photo, your hair was a jagged black with purple chunks. Your eyes were narrowed with black winged eyeliner. I was smiling so wide I thought my face would crack in half. We met at Lupo’s because you worked as a waitress there on the weekend. You played bass. You made me mix-tape after mix-tape of music that I would never find on my own; in the music, I can still find you.
“Is this you, Mommy?” Sammy asks, pointing to my freckled face.
I nod. “Yes. And that was your mom, Pia.”
“She’s so pretty,” she says. “Do you think she’d think I was pretty too?”
“The prettiest. Say, you want hair like hers? I think she’d love that.”
Sammy nods. I put on The Jenny’s. As I prepare the water in the sink to be warm but not too warm, Sammy is playing the air-guitar. She’s laughing so hard that she’s crying. For three minutes and twenty-three seconds, we cry in laughter together. Our girl’s a spinning top of rock. We splash each other’s faces with our wet hair. We dance in circles around the kitchen table. There is no point to it. No word to sum us up, to put you, us, back in a shoebox kept hidden under my bed. There is just opening the blinds, letting some light in too. Now. We’re the only promise I believe could last longer than you. Longer than Jenny B. That’s what a love like ours gets in the end: a little piece of heaven told in power chords.
Cassandra has been previously published in Electric Literature, Pithead Chapel, Bitch Flicks, & other homes that celebrate the personal, geeky, & weird. By day, she works within project management for restaurants, & in her free time she volunteers at her dojang, prepping the next generation of lil’ Taekwon-do warriors to save the world. She has an MFA from Emerson College & you can follow her misadventures @cass__clarke.