16B - The Michigan Daily - Literary Magazine - Thursday, March 11, 1999 ALOE Continued from Page 7B small. From the roof, no stars seemed bright, no car horns seemed loud. There was just the mumble and whisper of the dispersing crowd, all around us, below us, in the street. I was numbed after what I had seen. Vaguely, I felt some sort of loss at the passing of the fire- works, the event. She was silent beside me, the lull, slow motion for her. "Like clouds a'streaming," she said finally. And we left. Her house was dark and silent. Her unlit driveway was so dark that there were no shadows at all, even though the stars were bright. Her forehead was pressed against the left side of my col- larbone, her hands knotted in the small of my back. I smelled her shampoo, her characteristic smell that made my stom- ach twist. Somehow, I could never recall the exact smell when she was gone. She rocked her forehead back and forth, over and over, and then stopped. Then she'd start up again, God knows why. She said nothing. What I wanted to do was to reach down and hoist her into me. I'd press my lips into hers, warping her mouth open. I'd move my hands and try to press into me, all of her that I could. But we were moving too slow. Not enough was happening. I couldn't do that sort of thing, not then, and escape being cut painfully short, in mid-sweeping-her-off-her-feet. She wouldn't mind doing that. Aloe would say something, too, to make it worse. So, I said nothing. And I did nothing. I pressed my cheek against her temple, and said goodnight. "Is your yearbook around?", I yelled on the threshold. "What?" she yelled back. "Your yearbook." "On my desk," she yelled. The water rasped loudly, beating down her sylla- bles, mixing them together. The wet tiles made her voice tinny and faint. My heart sounded in my throat and my hearing was dim. She had left the door to the bathroom open. "What do you want my yearbook for?", she yelled. "Why do you think? I want to look through it." I took a couple of steps into the fog- ging room. "On my desk somewhere. On the left-hand side, I think. I'm almost sure. Just my yearbook?" "Yeah. What's wrong?" "Nothing, unless you can think of something better to do." I was almost sure that I hadn't heard that. I wanted to believe that I hadn't heard that. I kept walking into the bath- room. The lights from the make-up mir- ror were blinding. The heat in the room was unbearable, pressing and pushing, making me want to climb out of my skin. How long did I stand there, not looking at my reflection in the mirror? My own wet hair soaked the neck of my shirt through, pressing, pressing. Just the shower running, only the water hiss- ing. "Aloe, what does that mean?" I asked, moving closer. "Unless you can think of something better to do, just what I said," and her voice danced. I asked her over and over as I moved closer. The heat smothered me. "Where are you?" she laughed. "I'm right here," I said leaning against the wall of the shower stall. "I'm not turning around," she laughed again. I wanted her to say it, say the whole thing all at once. I wanted her breath heaving in an effort to get the words out fast enough, one to push the other, needing to escape. I want you to come in this shower because I want to kiss you and oh god in the highest heaven press myself against you feel the naked arc of your wet shoulder touch where your limbs join in invisible divinity remember what my skin feels like joined with someone else in uniform saturation forget what the tile feels like mash- ing the soles of my feet see what you look like nude humble and I CALL FOR FREE STOP GAMBLING AND START INVESTING M WIUHWWIN IO1DOFPA 888-(686-8257) i I beautiful press yes press you into me all at once in a single motion and forget lose myself with you for- ever until it never ended all at once again and you and me and all the things that I might loosely ever find the merest inclination to say might disappear from beginning to end from nozzle to drain till towels make us dry forever and ever amen. But she said none of that, no sexual prayer. Nor would she ever, because she liked the way her words sound- ed ambiguous and unfulfilling. I understood and realized until I couldn't stand it any longer. "Can I come in?" "If you want." The rush of the shower was drowned out by the blood in my ears. The sight of her bare form rubbed indistinct, by heat and motion was numbingly beautiful. I wanted to push my hand against the glass, to the image of her pink shape. But I was afraid, that she might turn around and see me, catch me doing something not irrever- ent, but too reverent, for the moment. I undressed as she rinsed he hair, trying to match the ballet of her washing, but then feeling like I was doing so. The color of her, pink, dark shades in differ- ent places, I wanted to touch them all, feel them all in their different shapes and textures. And then I was naked, feeling strange, desiring in the daylight. The steam came down on me over the top, the shower boiling over. It didn't wash me, just poured on me, indiffer- ent. I wanted to stay there, but I knew somehow I'd ruin it, over-thinking, and I opened the door. I can't think, can't recall the exact chain of events. Distinct memories come to me like shards of dream. She wouldn't turn around. I stood behind her, naked, wet enough to be cold, for a bewildering span of time. For a paralyz- ing moment, even in the presence of the unmistakable Aloe Vera, I felt like I had gotten in the wrong shower, as if there was row upon row of shower stalls, each with a naked, blond, adolescent girl in them. I stood there, and the spray rebounded off her body, wetting me slowly. She wouldn't turn around. She rinsed her hair in the same mechanical way, bent over, flip rinse flip rinse. She straightened. The spray sprinted over her head, making her hair whole. It became one, large, blond strand, and the water ran out of it in huge, gelatinous rivulets. She turned, her eyes shut tight, against, the water. They fluttered open and she was against me. They fluttered shut again. It was all heat and water and still is, in my mind. I can't remember, whether she pressed herself into me, or whether I finally moved. I remember that I kissed her for all the times I had- n't. I remember her sweet weight in my arms, that her mouth was milky and smooth, and that I thought of clock- towers, swans, and things toppling to the ground. I remember that I don't remember, and I feel despair, like I've lost something for the last time, even with reprieve, after reprieve. One particular image comes with ease and clarity. I pulled her back in when she went to get out, and wrapped my arms around her waist. She was a perfect fit. I pressed my cheek to the back of her neck. Her hands covered my arms for a moment. One squeeze and they were gone. And she was out. We moved to her room and crashed into her bed, soaking wet. It's hard to tell when we are finished. It sort of leaves us, fading, like mist burning off. My skin was so hot. The sheets were wet and cool. Her face was so earnest through her wet hair. "I don't think -" "I know," I said. The screen was down again. They have a thing in the theater, a scrim, it's called, that's solid or see-through, depending on which side it's lit. It's always there, though, always. I got out of bed then, hearing the next words before they came. I pulled on my reluc- tant clothes. They stuck the whole way, clinging to my damp skin. I went to the door and leaned on the door-jam, wait- ing for a parting. There was never a kiss. She sat up. The sheets were well off the bed and she was completely nude, unashamed, beautiful. Her naked, artless immodesty wanted me to paint it, write it, photograph it. She just looked at me, chin up, eyes vaguely squinting, blinking seldom. I left, with nothing to say. The time with Aloe was just what it was, in a boy's dream. I want to hold the times in my hands. You hope, you wish, you dream, and as soon as it fades into "never again", I am with her again, with my body. I saw her, the next week-end. We went out and came back. We sat in the living room on her couches, close. The lights were out and she asked me to rub her back. She talked about her last boyfriend, the one that lasted two years, "the only person outside my family, that I've ever loved". Aloe was the agony of incongruity; not the kind that puzzles, but the kind that hurts. It wouldn't happen again, not this soon. But it had started again. My mind said "maybe," already. She had told me once, every time, that she didn't feel good about being with me, with her body. "What if it never stops?" she said. "Then it won't," I said. Frustrated and disappointed with the University? Need help making sense of your U of M experience? Check out http://universitysecrets.com 1 Do you have a BACHELOR'S DEGREE? We need you! Measurement Incorporated is an educational testing company that hires hundreds of people each yearto handscore tests. Bachelor's degree in any field required. Paid training provided. Scorers are hired per project. 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