“I got him to
write a poem. It wasn’t very good, but it was sweet. Poor thing. He must have
scratched out half the paper getting it perfect to impress me. I folded the
page so I can easily find it without flipping.”
Being bored and apparently very intrusive one day, I began
reading passages from Jenny’s notebook she kept. Well, she actually had two but
would only admit to one. The first notebook was her life before her second stay
in California. Though she wasn’t proud of it, she kept it anyway. To her, those
pages and binding were memories of the life she walked away from. In it were
the reflections of deep depression, troubled youth, and someone loudly seeking
solace.
It had been a week since coming back to be with Jenny and
this was my first day we were separated. Jenny had left one afternoon to hang
with her friend Sissy and a few other chicks from the Canyon. I had nothing
better to do and was kicking back. Getting up, making myself presentable, and
driving an automobile seemed too much work that day. It was a Burrito Brother
lazy day.
The rudeness of my act was eased by notions that by reading
her notebook, I’d know a little more about her. Seeing her write in it was not
a common occurrence, nor one I chose to dig about, but she could fill up the
pages quickly. When she did, she spoke of her feelings on life, her love for
me, and many poems.
“My world is a tattered delusion
So my mind is in scattered confusion
Surrounded, yet alone
In bed, but not at home
My body, my cage...where is the escape?”
Her second, and “only,” notebook was a happier approach to
life. Her words were more honest about herself, she wrote of her friends as she
got to know them, and how magical the land was. Even during the months I was
not there with her, she spoke of me as if I had never been away.
“…His heart seems to beat just for me. I have
loved Eric since I saw him walk the halls in 9th grade. He probably
doesn’t remember giving me a hungry glance back then, but he did, and I never
forgot it. Yeah, the edgy hippie girl and the jock boy. What a combination! Who
would have pictured us together? But it worked. His dark brown eyes are open
and he cares for me as I am. I don’t need to pretend to be someone for him. No
lies, no fake bullshit, no one-sided seduction…”
A part of me was worried with things I might read or find,
but my conscience was kept at rest. As happy as writing those words were for
her, they were equally therapeutic for me to read. Some of her poems could slip
into the dark recesses, but nothing for me to pull her into a shrink’s office
over.
“The plot of life gives me headaches
Splitting migraine, tearing splinters
Dull concentration w/ blurred distortions
Mirrored panels inscribed w/ heresy
My head kills me
This orchestra won’t stop
Relieve me.”
I spent the better part of three hours reading from each
notebook, learning more about the girl I loved. Boy, she could talk but she had
even more to say in her writing. When done, I carefully packed them back into a
burlap bag of hers and set it back near the corner of the bedroom. I thought I
had done my best to act inconspicuous, but she noticed a few days later.
“So, what did you think?”
Catching me completely off guard lying in bed one morning, I
replied, “Of what?”
“My writing.”
It didn’t click. My gaze come off the ceiling and bestowed
her instead, “What are you talking about?”
“Come on. My notebooks, you read them. What do you think?”
Propping myself up and looking down at her with a confused
face, and then back to the spot I knew her notebooks were, “Wait. How did you
know I read them?”
“The Holiday People saw you sneak in my bag.”
Considering how sure I was to recreate how she left
everything, I was sort of disturbed by that statement. “No, really Jenny, how
do you know? Did I turn one of the notebooks the wrong way? Did I not close the
bag? What?”
“No, everything looked normal. You even kept the folded
pages neatly tucked in. I never would have questioned anything unless they told
me.”
Man, what the hell? What? “Okay, that’s messed up. Are you
pulling my leg?”
Speaking very innocently, “No I’m not. So, you never
answered my question.”
I don’t think I said anything right away. Getting my
faculties straight, “It was very beautiful. I’m amazed at your talent: your
abilities to write.”
Very dead-pan, “You didn’t read the passage about me and
that guy and the one-night-stand did you?”
The confused face made a second appearance, “What? What
guy?”
“Ha ha, it’s a joke!” Shaking her head, “I’m kidding.”
“I might have to go through your notebooks again.”
“Come
on, I only love you.” Unbuttoning my shirt, “Let me show you.”
We turned up the radio and slipped back into bed. The
opening lines of Led Zeppelin’s “Over the Hills and Far Away” was the perfect
soundtrack.
For a girl who had a lot of time on her hands, sitting alone
up in a room, her only artistic outlet was this notebook. Unlike other chicks,
who’d pick up a phone and rehash the day, Jenny had no one to share that talk
with. Her world was narrow and obscure because of her isolation. However, the
quiet times spent in solitary evolved into the artist she was inside.
And for all the phases she went through for a young person,
for all the faces she put on for people, perhaps it was her writing that was
the only truly honest side of her. Through the pen, she didn’t hold back.
Neither did she through intimacy. It all sort of happened naturally. And as her
writing fought for her opinions, her love making fought for affection. Either
way, I was seeing the rawest side of Jenny. It was bold, beautiful, sensitive,
and submissive.
When we finished, she laid on my chest and twiddled with my
left hand. Like any of her non-sequiturs, “Do you know what a flapper is?”
“No, it sounds like a naked, old lady parachuting out of a
plane. Oh wait, a flapper…it’s that thing in the tank of a toilet.”
Laughing, “No, no. They were the groupies of the 20’s. They
were these cute little chicks who broke moral standards, shook what they had,
and didn’t give a damn.”
“Oh,” I see her opening her mental index of information.
“Would you like to have been one?”
“Yeah, especially Clara Bow, the It Girl.”
“It?”
“Meaning she had it. She was such a big star that
hair salons across the country would do women’s hair like hers. That wanted to
be like Clara Bow.”
Knowing Jenny knew the morbid truth to the people she
brought up to me, “What happened to her?”
“Like so many other silent film stars, they didn’t make it
in the talkies. Either it wasn’t their genre or their voices weren’t right for
film. She had a high-pitched New York accent. I think she died almost 10 years
ago. Kind of became a crazy recluse.”
“That’s pretty depressing, don’t ya’ think?”
Without answering, she got up and grabbed a small purple bag
from the bathroom and brought it back to bed. With it, she had a small, dusty
mirror. For the next fifteen minutes, still completely naked, she shocked me by
putting on makeup. And not just any makeup, but as she told me, how the girls
in silent films used to do theirs. I’d never really seen Jenny with much makeup
before and apparently with it on she looked very attractive, more so than
usual. Her lips were etched in red, her face pasty and cream, hand-drawn
eyebrows, fluffed eye lashes, and dark shading over her eyelids.
“How do I look, dah’ling?”
“Fucking delicious.”
“Silence is not golden,
It’s a prison
Even my written words
Are not justice to
Expression.”
Back home, Jenny would catch the bus to the
theatre downtown, which played silent films once a month. I had really never
watched one until I went with her one afternoon. The film was The Merry
Widow with Mae Murray and John Gilbert. There was a sad irony to the
players’ names and her parents’. Without sound, she told me to focus more on
the actors’ and actresses’ expressions than the dialogue. Being a tragic love
story, there was plenty of emotion to view onscreen. I had never known Jenny to
really be glued to a television set, but she seemed so focused on this picture.
During the most heart wrenching moments, you could almost tell she was feeling
it with them. It was almost as entertaining to observe Jenny’s reaction as it
was the players in the film. And after it
ended, she had to discuss it with me.
“What did you think?”
“I’ve never really watched a silent movie before.”
“I know, but did you like it or not?”
“It was different, but fun to watch. There’s a lot of visual
qualities that we don’t see now.”
“Exactly. Plus, I like the clothing and the makeup.”
“Say, what was the director’s name again?”
“Erich von Stroheim: the man you love to hate.”
“What?”
“Stroheim was very meticulous and drove his crew up the
wall. I think I read in an interview that Jim Morrison said the Doors were the
band you loved to hate.”
“Well, we don’t hate them.”
“Nope, and I love you!”
I didn't quite feel as good about this chapter, seemed rather empty..
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