It happens at the mall. I am bored, exhausted by a long,
hard day of boredom, which so far has involved trips to every store I know how
to drive to without GPS. At the mall I am accosted, as usual, by many men in
booths who want to sell something. As usual, my inability to say no inevitably
leads me to a poorly cushioned stool in a dimly lit hallway. The man—Kelly, for
now—wishes to sell me a hair straightener. I own two hair straighteners
already, one exactly like the one in his hand, except that it was accompanied,
the night before my junior prom, by a much better sales spiel. Besides, I like
my hair curly.
Two days after the last time we speak, I will dye it all
pink.
Kelly tells me many times how pretty I am. He tells me many
more times how much prettier I am with straight hair. Having failed, at the end
of a long and awkward hour, to take any of my money, he settles for taking my
phone number instead.
It is, halfway through my twenty-second year of life, the
third time I have been asked out. The first two times were by the same boy,
agreed to due to the aforementioned inability to say no. Both were immediately
followed by a full year with no communication at all, despite the fact that we
saw each other on a weekly basis. I am not sure they count.
The third time I give him my number, take a selfie with the straightened
hair, and proceed to the next stop on my road trip of boredom. I get lost.
Kelly calls me the next morning, with vague directions to an
overpriced organic restaurant on the opposite side of the Cities. I get lost
three times, but still manage to sit on the hood of my car in the parking lot,
staring down at the faded pavement, for half an hour, before I am summoned to
collect him from his house, presumably due to car problems.
Following three more rounds of lostness, we return to the
overpriced organic restaurant together, ordering two different breakfast
dishes, both of which we share.
I do not know how much food Kelly wants to eat, as well as
being put off by the extreme organic-ness, and pick at it slowly. He talks of
his desires to kayak, his sister who is a writer, and the prettiness of my
still-straightened hair. He tells me that his real name is Alon, and makes
insightful comments on the contrast between my confidence in my ideas and lack
of confidence in my voice. I am confused when he tries to take my hand beneath
the table, and fidget until he explains, smiling, charmed and patronizing. When
he suggests a movie, I agree, composing a list in my head of everything in
theaters, and contemplating which would be bearable with a guy I barely know.
The one with the superheroes, maybe, though I’ve already seen it.
He directs me back to his house, and inability to say no
prevailing, I sit quietly on the floor while he fetches sheets from the dryer
and remakes the bed. We use my Netflix account to begin a rather stupid movie,
and I react with a clinical indifference when he begins to kiss me. The sheets
are black, still slightly damp, and the movie still runs in the background. He
tastes like Middle Eastern food, even though he just finished a plate of
organic whole wheat five grain gluten free sugar free pancakes. With syrup.
I allow the dampness of his mouth, slightly unpleasant, on
my mouth and various other areas, noting that its placement on my neck produces
a tingling sensation. When I do not react properly, he coaches me, slowly and
gently, through the monumental task of opening my mouth when his tongue
approaches, then pushing my own against it. This leads to more dampness, and the
tingling is gone.
Having confirmed for the third time that I am not cold, he
finally coaxes me into removing my jean jacket. I am concerned for a moment
about the pocket knife I can no longer reach, stolen from my little brother,
dropped in my deepest pocket at the insistence of my roommate. But I will not
need it. When I become visibly uncomfortable he stops. We spend a confused few
minutes actually watching the movie, until my parents call wondering where I
am. I take the opportunity to escape. He does not call again.
Six weeks later I will see him at the mall again, his
ponytail gone, smiling seductively at a girl who looks troublingly young, clutching
a new hair straightener to her chest, blushing and giggling. He asks if I want
to buy a hair straightener. Shaking my head, I walk around the corner. I wait
until I’m out of sight to sit down on a bench, laughing hysterically.
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