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Standing
Up to the Superpowers
Beatrice
told Shipley she would sleep with him, and then she passed out. When she
awoke the next morning, he said he'd gone ahead without her. He got dressed
and asked her to drive him to the police station so he could turn himself
in for rape, but she said not to worry about it. She wasn't happy, she
said, but it was her own fault for drinking with a freshman. Shipley walked
to the police station and turned himself in anyway. A Lieutenant Verbena
called to see if Beatrice wanted to press charges and she said no. "Put
him on," Beatrice said, and when Shipley said hello she hung up.
He
called her the next day to say his mother, a pediatrician, had suggested
she take a morning-after pill. "You told your mother?" Beatrice asked.
"She's
a doctor," Shipley said.
"I
got that."
"I'm
going into counseling for my drinking," he added.
"How
old are you?"
"Eighteen."
"I'm
twenty-two," she said. "Now leave me alone."
Beatrice
was a junior. She had taken a year off from college to work in a cheap
clothing store for older women, then returned to school when she realized
she made more money living off student loans. Her father, a divorce lawyer
who had successfully represented himself against Beatrice's mother, had
promised to help with tuition as long as Beatrice did well in high school.
When she turned out to be not quite as smart as early test scores had
indicated, however, he reneged. His advice to her was to stay away from
the humanities, where there were no jobs.
She
signed up for a Russian literature course with a professor named Fetko,
who gave her good marks for implying that she'd be willing to sleep with
him. Sometimes in his office he'd let her sip from his vending machine
coffee, or take bites from the sandwiches his wife had prepared for him.
Other times he gave her quarters for her own snacks. Mostly they just
sat around shooting the shit, talking about Chekhov and his famous hemorrhoids.
Shipley,
the freshman, was also in Russian literature. Fetko hated him and so did
Beatrice. He was always asking stupid questions and interrupting Fetko's
flow, something that was very important to Fetko. "Get him drunk and fuck
with his head," Fetko had instructed Beatrice. "That would be worth a
letter grade to me." Now, as she sat before her professor after Monday's
class, Beatrice was unsure of what to say. "I fucked with him," she began,
but when she described exactly how, Fetko turned white. "Jesus, Beatrice,"
he said, letting his pipe hang limp from his mouth.
She
shrugged. She had been asleep when it happened.
Shipley
called that afternoon to ask about the morning-after pill. Beatrice was
sitting in her attic bedroom in a house filled with students. She had
slept with two film majors on the second floor, one of whom had gone to
great lengths to explain his uncircumcised penis to her. This had made
her laugh — something she rarely did ——and lose all interest in him, though
she let him screw her anyway. "You're so hot," he'd whispered in her ear.
"All the guys in the house want you."
"Thanks,"
she'd said, waiting for him to finish. Compliments had stopped doing it
for her a long time ago.
Today
she was trying to read a book about China for a history class. The professor
was old and deaf, and whenever she tried to make a pass at him, he'd bellow,
"What?" It was a grade she would actually have to work for, and it was
killing her. Sometimes she went to his office to tell him this and he
just nodded, pretending he could hear. She was no dummy. Her brain had
just stopped accepting academic text along with the compliments.
What
kind of name was Shipley anyway? Beatrice had half a mind to ask him now
that he was on the phone, but didn't like to encourage friendship. Anyway,
she was irritated, sick of his mother and this morning-after crap. "Don't
worry about it," she told him. "I'm on birth control."
"What
kind?" he asked, panting a little. "What do you mean what kind?"
"What
brand?"
"I
don't know."
"Generic
is cheaper."
"Fuck
off."
He
laughed. "You have a nice personality. I liked you even before we got
drunk."
"Thanks."
"You
wanna keep talking?"
"Let
me think. No."
"I
tried to talk to you after class today but you left so fast I couldn't
find you."
"Try
to breathe slower," Beatrice instructed him.
"Can
I talk to you after class on Wednesday?"
"No."
"Before
class?"
She
hung up on him. He was in love with her, that much was clear. It happened
all the time; men loved her personality, thought it was nice. Not nice-nice
obviously, but nice-honest. Back home, people said she was like her mother,
who was often described as acidic, and who had become a lesbian after
Beatrice left for college. "Sex is sex," she had once advised her daughter.
"No need to be picky." What bothered Beatrice was her mother's refusal
to come out in the liberal, northwestern city where she lived, instead
preferring to divulge the intimate details of her love life solely to
Beatrice, over the telephone.
"I
don't want to hear it, Mom," Beatrice would say, at which point her mother
would accuse her of being homophobic. Beatrice protested, saying she had
never felt comfortable with her mother's bedroom stories about her father
either. "So I guess I'll kill myself," was her mother's response, "if
my own daughter won't even talk to me." It was Beatrice's freshman year
and she didn't need the responsibility, so she listened. She allowed herself
to be lost track of as a sophomore, however, moving off-campus and delisting
her number. There was some comfort in knowing that neither of her parents
had ever been of a mind to chase after her.
Increasingly,
Beatrice loved no one. She had a fair amount of sex but in general preferred
her own company, and on occasion that of Fetko. He had information about
dead writers that fascinated her, health problems and such. She told him
that after he died, people would say he had liked for his girl students
to talk dirty to him, but he said no one would care since he wasn't a
real writer. She pointed out his books of criticism and he told her she
was sweet to be so naïve, to have such big tits. In the end, though, she
was glad he never tried to touch them, that it never went beyond talk.
This would have weakened their rapport, which was something she felt they
definitely enjoyed. Everybody traded on what they had, after all, and
if what you had wasn't pretty, well, there was still a friend for you.
In
class on Wednesday, Fetko seemed distracted. When Shipley raised his hand
and asked him to expand upon the socioeconomic conditions of the lady
with the pet dog, he did so without protest. Later, when Beatrice went
to meet him in his office, he wasn't there. A note on his door said he
was ill and that office hours had been canceled. Beatrice hoped Fetko's
guilt over what had happened between her and Shipley would not jeopardize
their arrangement. She had enough on her plate worrying about China without
the added anxiety of having to complete his assignments as well.
At
a vending machine she purchased lunch -- a chocolate bar and pretzels,
neither of which would taste like anything, she already knew. She found
a bench on a wide walkway in front of the tall Humanities Building, and
looked down into the valley at the poor town she had sold ugly clothes
to the previous year. It's better up here, she thought, though she knew
she would tumble down the hill soon enough.
Moments
later she was joined by Shipley, a fat, sweaty guy with a dumb haircut.
People's appearances were of little concern to Beatrice. She bedded the
handsome and the homely alike. Along with her taste buds had gone her
sense of smell, and she didn't miss it. Sex, she believed, should be more
of a democratic process, distributed only when a situation -- and not
a person -- merited it.
He
presented her with a card depicting Monet's Water Lilies and containing
a message that read, Sorry I raped you -- Shipley.
Excerpted
from The Brutal Language of Love by Alicia Erian. Excerpted by
permission of Villard, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission
in writing from the publisher.
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