Read The Geography of Girlhood Online
Authors: Kirsten Smith
I stand on the far wall
in a free-fall shame spiral.
Elaine and Denise are next to me,
hopped up on Milk Duds.
Denise is wiggling around so hard
that when Eric Chandler asks her to dance,
he can barely keep hold of her.
In his fourteenth year, Eric’s arms are at war
with his legs
and it’s safe to say his legs are losing.
Then Stan Bondurant comes up
and tells a joke about Polish people
before he takes Elaine out to dance.
Stan’s fine, but I have a thing about class clowns—
it seems like they’ll do anything
to hide their heart.
As for me, the song is halfway over
and I am at the edge of the dance floor
like a stone at the edge of the sea,
waiting for my rough edges to be smoothed
into something worth touching,
and I tell myself that one day someone will come for me
and until then
I’ll wait.
After the dance, I get a ride home from school
with my sister and Bobby
and they stop at the beach
to do what they do,
which means I’ve been sent off
to collect shells
like I’m five.
A Navy helicopter flies by
and the birds on the marsh start to panic
and the air fills with a great cloud of wings
and I realize that’s how it goes here:
nothing ever happens
and if it does
all the things with wings
fly away.
Tonight after dinner, my dad shows me his new
computer program. He says it looks for signals in space
while you sleep. Are you talking about
aliens
? I ask.
He nods like it’s totally normal. My father has either
officially lost his mind, or maybe he’s on to something;
maybe if scientists can find life on other planets, then
maybe one day somebody can find my mother.
They say my mother was like a hydrangea,
prone to wilting and then falling apart
at the slightest sign of stress or sun.
They say my mother was a rhododendron,
she always looked better after the rain.
They say my mother did so many bad things
to so many people she loved
she was a snapdragon with nowhere to go.
Me, I say my mother was a night-blooming jasmine,
she was at her best when no one was looking.
I say my mother was a late bloomer
who didn’t get time to grow,
but then again, what do I know.
It was night and the snow on the Ridge
was just starting to melt.
As they made their way up to the top
in his old truck,
my mother noticed the rams
propped against the hillside,
feeding on dirt.
The stars came out fast that night
and my mother imagined
that from somewhere on high,
someone looked down and said,
See that girl’s skin? Protect it
.
I was late for school today because my sister was trying
to instruct me on the ways of feminine hygiene and I
can’t seem to get it right and tampons are officially my
enemy and I will be stuck with maxi pads forever which
means I will be uncool forever and it’s safe to say there
is definitely something wrong with me, which now
makes this the fourth time today I have thought that,
the other times being when Rob Calderon told me to
“grow some tits” during P.E., and when I had sweat
stains during third period for no reason, and when
Danny Helms said that blue eyes are the prettiest and
here I am, stuck with brown.
Today after I got out of play rehearsals, Skyler Reeves
came up to Denise and Elaine and me, all fresh from
cheerleading practice and wearing her shiny skirt
and her shiny hair and her shiny smile.
Can you guys
come over Saturday
? she asked and Elaine said,
Of course we can!
As Skyler walked away, Elaine was talking a mile a
minute about how cool it was going to be, and Denise
looked lost and sad and far away, and I stared at my
two best friends and saw that if we were a continent
unto ourselves, Elaine would be the north pole and
Denise would be the south and I would be somewhere
in the middle, trying to navigate all that space in
between.
We are at Skyler Reeves’s house
watching Maggie Cartwright’s dad’s copy
of
Showgirls
which could be fun if it weren’t so embarrassing.
Denise has spent half the night
hiding in the bathroom,
because sometimes she gets that way
around more than three people.
When I ask Elaine
if she thinks Denise is alright,
Elaine shrugs and says,
Sometimes Denise is such
a freak
and Skyler Reeves laughs.
Elaine acts cool and won’t look at me.
But what she doesn’t say
is that her half brother is in jail
and Skyler Reeves’s mom is on her fifth marriage
and Maggie Cartwright likes being spanked
and I am what I am
so basically
that makes us all freaks,
doesn’t it?
After the movie,
we all lay out our sleeping bags
and Skyler and Maggie start
talking about what happened
at the Senior Prom last night,
telling stories about high school girls
like Lisa Tavorino and Kelly Barnes
and Jenny Arnold and Jenny Able
as if they were movie stars.
Even my sister’s name comes up once or twice
and Dinah says,
She’s so pretty
, as if
I were somehow not aware of this fact.
Skyler and Elaine and Maggie are
so ready to become those girls
and then there’s Denise,
who’s still hiding in the bathroom,
and as for me, all I know
is that even though high school is only
three weeks and an entire summer away
it still feels like it’s a faraway land of
them
and I will forever be living
in the same old hometown of
me
.
The story goes that Jenny, homespun girl,
hopped onstage during the Prom last night
and started singing with the band.
Jacked-up on the fervor of fifteen,
drunk Jenny sang the girl-part of a duet,
didn’t notice her boyfriend’s hand
loitering on another Jenny’s thigh.
High school seems filled with Jennys,
most of them hiding out as Jennifers,
others as easy-access Jens,
but these two—Jennys to the core.
They’ve spent the year ruling popularity contests
and baffling teachers with their identical penmanship.
They discovered beer and marijuana
and that’s when the trouble started:
one Jenny liked Budweiser,
one liked smoking out on the cliff.
One Jenny has her hair tipped black,
the other wears Mike Shaw’s letterman’s jacket.
Last night, so the story goes, they were at the same
dumb dance,
one Jenny onstage, the other by the lockers.
They took turns kissing the same boy:
a beer jock, more Jenny’s type
than Jenny’s, but it’s not about the kissing anymore.
It’s about the fierceness of the name,
the matching J’s and A’s on
every science quiz for the past eight years,
the feathered hair, the push
to get Paula off the cheerleading squad,
and the countless after-school hours spent
making high school what it is,
making sure no other Jennifer
dares to call herself Jenny again.
I come home from Skyler’s to learn
that last night, after my sister’s curfew
had not only been broken
but smashed into a million little pieces,
my dad went into her room
and tore down all her posters
and threw her sluttiest shoes in the trash
and drilled a lock on her door,
but he was so mad it fell off
and now there’s just a hole there.
Tonight, my dad came into the living room
where I was doing everything I was supposed to do
and he said,
Penny, don’t ever be like your sister
because no good can come of it
.
He told me I only had one life to live
and I’d better not ruin it
the way she was ruining hers.
Then he headed out to the garage
to hit things with other things
and I went upstairs and knelt outside my sister’s door.
I looked through the little “o” my father made
and I could see Tara in there,
lying with her legs up against the wall,
scribbling in her diary
her hand speeding fast over the page,
speeding fast like the car
she drove into the ditch last fall,
scribbling down secrets
I would kill to know.
As for my diary,
it’s just a bunch of stuff about
how I wish certain boys would love me,
how I wish our mom hadn’t left town
before we were old enough to know better,
and on and on, a bunch
of basic stupid wish lists
and lots of little secrets
that absolutely no one
would kill to know.
I wish I was this
I wish I was that
I wish I was thin
I wish I was fat
I wish I was Skyler
I wish I was Jean
I wish I was sexy
I wish I was mean
I wish I was beautiful
I wish I was tall
I wish Bobby loved me
but it’s a pipe dream, that’s all.
The next morning, I see what the fuss was about.
My sister’s neck is covered with
a trail of dime-sized bruises,
a scrapbook of the night spent in Bobby’s car
on a road so remote it’s not even named
and the seats were rolled back
and the windows were fogged up
and the music was cranked
and the secrets were spilling
and it was magic,
just like how it will be
when it happens to me.
That’s what Mrs. Hillstrom says to me in front of
everyone in the middle of English. Two days ago, she
stopped me after class to tell me that even though my
grades are good, and even though she appreciates
my after-school participation in
The Diary of Anne
Frank
, I need to stop daydreaming about whatever I’m
daydreaming about. Don’t I know that this is my life?
she asks me. Don’t I know that I need to live in the
here and now and not in a fantasy?
After Mrs. Hillstrom turns back to the board, Elaine,
who’s trying not to laugh, throws me a note, which hits
me square in the eye.
Penny—
Wanna hang out with me and Skyler after school today?
Xoxoxo
Elaine
P.S. Don’t invite Denise.
P.P.S. Stan and I totally made out yesterday!
P.P.P.S. I heard Randall Faber might like you. Isn’t that
awesome?
Elaine—
I can’t hang out today cuz I have rehearsal for the play.
P.S. Why can’t I invite Denise?
P.P.S. I barely even know Randall Faber.
Why do you have to go to rehearsal if you’re only
doing lighting?
P.S. Denise has gotten totally weird.
P.P.S. Stan is an awesome kisser!!!
P.P.P.S. Should I tell Randall you like him?
NO, do NOT tell Randall I like him!!!
P.S. I have to go to practice because I’m understudy for
the lead, so Mrs. H says I have to be committed.
P.P.S. I don’t think Denise is that weird.
Just as I throw my note to Elaine, I hear Mrs. Hillstrom
say,
Penny—detention
. I look up to see she’s staring
right at me and Stan Bondurant goes,
Ooh, busted
in
this really stupid voice. He might be an Awesome Kisser
but that doesn’t stop him from being a Total Ass.
Now I feel sick to my stomach because I have never
gotten detention before, but then again, to look on
the bright side, after today I will no longer be a virgin.
Of detention, that is.
Detention is nothing like a teen movie
where all the guys have Mohawks
and the girls carve hearts into their desks
and everyone is secretly smoking weed.
In my teeny tiny town
detention is a beige classroom
and a vague smell of depression
and a clock that clonks along so everyone can hear
and a bunch of people staring out the window
waiting for something to happen—
but here’s the weird part—
something actually does.
A bunch of high school guys just walked by the window
where I sit in detention, their lettermen’s jackets glowing