Saturday, July 18, 2015

Rooms For A Night Or A Lifetime : Cathy Nolan Vincevic

Mon Nov 16, 2009

     She looked out the window of the welfare office. The clouds were low, dark, suffering against the landscape. Remains of  what was once clean, white snow--brittle, dirty, too tired to even melt--rubbed up against sign of the motel across the street.
    “Rooms for Rent for a day...or a lifetime”

     So inviting.

     Listening to the murmuring in the rooms around her, she heard the same story over and over again. About to be kicked out of the apartment, lost the job, mom told them they couldn’t move in with her again, and the kids were hungry. Stories of corroded lives with no where to go.



They could all move into the Cadillac Motel across the way.
       She watched the denizens of the endless motel shuffle in and out of their rooms.
     How could everything look so flat?
     She imagined lifting out of the chair and floating across the lot, down across the Merrimack River, the sky staying flat the whole way.

     The blue-black clouds smothered even the bricks to gray.
     One day, she thought, I might have to move into that place, The Cadillac Motel. Rent a room and get an old t.v., sit in there with the mustard yellow stained carpet, the shag gone all misty with use, puke, and old man sweat, turn up the volume to annoy the neighbors and shout obscenities at anyone who passed by. Then dressed only in a muumuu and slippers clomp down the stairs to the grocery store and pick up a six-pack.
     It seemed there was a vortex over this city--somewhere behind that anvil of cloud-- hovering. It sucked up all good intentions. It swallowed memory. Nothing remained.

     It was time to go. She gathered up her belongings and left the room. Walking past the room full of emergency foods, she said good bye to the receptionist and unlocked the door to the waiting room. There were still people waiting to be heard. An old man, a mother of two whose children argued over the stained Fisher Price telephone and a skinny man, who might be the father, stared out the window bored, bored and worn. They glanced at her as she opened the door, taking in her clothes and hair. The obvious assumption was that she wasn’t there to help them, so they fell back in on themselves into the doldrums of waiting for a can of macaroni and cheese and a bed for the night.

     Outside the air was fresher than she expected. Perhaps it was just the sense of having escaped, again, the doom that always hit her when she went into the welfare office, as though a hand was waiting to pull her into that world forever.
     She made it to her truck, started it, and began to drive onto the street when there they were. Two men. Two scraggly, dead-eyed, beat up men screaming at each other. One had a baseball bat behind his back. The man with the bat pulled his weapon out and raised it over his head.

     She drove her truck onto the sidewalk between them and stopped.

     They all just stared at each other and then the men walked away.

     She backed up off the sidewalk and drove home. She felt a sudden rush of happiness.

     She had made them stop--for a moment.








       The truck rolled down the hills away from the city out to more open roads as she tried to drive away the thoughts that threatened to swallow her sense of accomplishment.

     Driving by--driving by--the houses the fields the houses homes and houses barns field more houses and hours and hours and wondering why she was here and then more houses and then she wondered what happened then and why she did it and when would she ever learn she could have
been killed what difference did it make she hated them anyway they were ugly men and she hated ugly men who came at each other with bats she was sick of the petty angry men and their drunken women who fought each other too for no good reason more sex more luggage and she drove and drove and her truck was low on gas but she had to keep moving and drive away from all of this and it was getting dark
it was dark and there was snow on the ground
it all looked dingy and old and full of stains and she wanted to be home but she had driven so far out of the way and that bat was mean and black and when he lifted it she just drove right through them she could have driven right into them but she, at least stopped that.

     She drove home past the other homes with windows lit against the cold gray evening, past stores with lottery ticketed windows and cigarettes on sale, or houses co-opted into little travel agencies and real estate concerns. She felt sorry for those former homes, wondering if they still held comforts in the night, remembering how it was when families argued and played inside them.
     Sick of moaning voices that asked for more in darkened rooms when she waited there looking out the window across a blank landscape and the hotel always said it was a home
    nights and weekends she rode around looking at houses and houses looked back at her with the same blank look of primal expectations as the voices in the room next door begged for a morsel in a can of canned corn that had been cooked so long it was only watery corn now and she was sick of the men who looked like they always drank and beat their women and then the women drank and fucked around and hit the kids but when it came time for rent money or a can of canned corn they always managed to look pitiful enough and she blamed them for their lives
and kicked them all onto the floor of that beat-up hotel where they all meant to only come for a day.
     She took a deep breath and then another. She couldn’t, for the life of her, tell what had gotten into her lately.  Thoughts about the consequences for her actions--as the adrenaline rush faded from her blood--the anxiety returned--crowded in.
   Jeeze what the hell was she doing?
     She had to get to the Doctor’s office.





             There had been a sense in the air that fall that it was going to be a rough winter. Something subtle, caught between the brushing winds that tore away the leaves. He sniffed it as he roamed through the grasses, looking for that last  juicy cricket or grasshopper.
    He was just a small field rat looking for a warm bed for the night. His mate scampered beside him up to a bunch of rocks and something tall and white above them. There was a hole and he could smell warmth, and good things to eat behind it. Eat, they must eat.  He ducked inside and his mate followed.
    They crawled up on rough wood past white cords until they reached an open space that was warm and dark, and then they scampered about rolling and tumbling, happy and warm. A place for the winter--what a find.






     The doctor had her spread her legs after she put her feet in the stirrups on either side of the long bench. She always felt strange doing this, wanton somehow, as though anything could happen.  With one hand deep inside her  the doctored moved about, looking at the wall, like this was nothing  His other  hand manipulated around while pressing on her belly. Then there was a look on his face like he’d found something.
     “You’ve got fibroids.” he said, after a bit more probing. “We need to get you in for more tests. They are big and we can’t be sure what they are.”
     Always something she thought. She wasn’t going to dwell on it. It wasn’t her time, so she drove home.
     Her house seemed like it had always been empty.  The place had been a shell, not lived in for years when she got it. She used to walk by it on the way to the library, pressing her nose against the windows, disregarding the old lady across the street who used to yank aside her decrepit cotton curtains, never  saying nothing, just glaring, with the room dark behind her, so that it was hard to tell where the shadow of the old lady ended and the room began. She watched that place in summer when the crickets sexed up in the tall grasses. No one ever visited that house except her.
     Through the dirty window, where she pressed her hands to shield from the glare, she had seen piles of rubbish and wiring sneaking out of  the unfinished walls as though they had a secret to tell. She had wanted to enter  the house and just sit with it, make it less lonely. The house, it had called to her. She was unfinished too.
     And now it was hers, this place, through fluke of luck and a compassionate former owner who had hated the house. It worked out good for both of them, one got rid of hated memories, one, the fulfillment of a long held dream--a home of her own--but that night when she opened the door  she knew she was no longer alone in the house. There was a something skittering above her head in the rafters of the ceiling.
     She lay on the couch, looking up at the ceiling towards the opening that let heat go upstairs from the heated downstairs.  She had always meant to put in a screen to hide the rawness of that wound.
     Phone in one hand, up to her ear, half listening to the practiced, compassionate voice of the nurse from the hospital, she’s thinking about the scampering of rats above her head and how, with very little effort, they could fall through that hole and land on her head. The idea disturbs her thought process.

     “Do you have any meddle in your body?” the nurse asks.
     Meddle...did she say meddle?
     “I don’t think so.”
     “Have you had any operations?”
     “Just the one.”
     “Which one?”  The slight exasperation in the nurses voice jerked her back from the duality of her thoughts.
     “Gall bladder, that was removed, but I don’t think they put any metal in me then.”
“You’ve got a metal clamp there.”
     She was going in for an MRI.  A milestone was being past in the history of her relationship with her body. Things inside her required imaging--they needed to take a look.

     My womb, this organ has ruled my life with its monthly rising and purging. It has shaped my emotions, it has driven me to despair, it has longed to be filled and pushed me forward. Enthralled by its chemical influences all my life, by its urge for self-determination, and now, perhaps, because it was denied fulfillment of its purpose, it has filled itself with muscular growths--out of control.
     Lay me down, lay me down on the thin railed bed, the wide circle into which I will be slid pounds before me. Swirling patterns of light on the wall to my left, I contemplate the machine. I am half-naked before the machine.  Lie down on the bed.  Enter, I close my eyes and breath, deep long breathes. I’m not going to panic. I’m not going to panic. The walls close around me. I open my eyes anyway. It’s a long narrow tube it’s close so close I can’t move. Close my eyes and listen. What is that music in my earplugs? Hammer dulcimer. Will I hate hammer dulcimer now that it is so intimately associated with my time in the tube. Pounding sounds above the dulcimer pounding machine sounds. Why is it so loud? Breathe close your eyes, breathe go far away breath--think of nothing.
     “It is like you are  thirteen weeks pregnant” the doctor  said gazing at the results of her MRI. Rows and rows of black pictures were strung along the light box, interior shots of a body. “You have several choices to make. You can either have a total hysterectomy, which couldn’t be vaginal because your uterus is too big, you could leave it alone, but with the pain you are experiencing and the blood in your urine, that’s really not an option, or you can have a uterine embolization. Let me tell you how that works...”
     “Can I look at those pictures some more?” she asked only half listening to his words. The doctor took the mouse and pushed through a picture, down past her muscular thighs, her  veins, until it hit the hip bone and came back out again. He shifted to one of her belly, explaining as he went about the procedure as he made the mouse hit her spine. Fascinated by seeing her interior--she was really made of flesh and bone--here was the evidence. She liked the ones of muscles, they splayed out, neatly connected as though sewn with darts and pleats.

     White spine, white hip bones, this is what I stand on, this is what makes me straight. Here I am, this is me...I’m really like that, that’s really me?
     “We are going to enter through your femoral artery and pass on through to the veins that feed your fibroids. There we will inject the substance that will keep the blood from feeding them.”
     She suddenly felt sorry for her fibroids. After all they were hers and here she was plotting to starve them to death. A belly full of fibroids.
     She leaned forward on the toilet. She could only squeeze the urine out now. It ached. Not to mention the three day pain event taking a crap. She could feel the turds moving through each curve of her intestines. In an odd way, she had never been so in tune with her bodily sensations and what they were telling her, while at the same time she felt herself slip into a bi-folded sense of self, one, shocked that anything could ever have gone wrong with her strong body, the body she had always depended on--the other--crawlingly pleased to be part of the experiment.
     She looked at her protuberant belly. That’s why it would never go down. This is how I would look permanently pregnant.



     She hated the rats. They kept her up at night, gnawing and gnawing at the inside of her  house. They filled her with panic. Invaders leaving marks in her home. They made her feel guilty.
dirtiness and grime.

     She went around the house filling all the holes where the molding should be. She stuffed the cracks with plastic bags and steel wool and still they scratched and rolled around up there.
     She tried talking to them but they didn’t listen.
     “Get out! You Rats!” she yelled one time. “Get out or I’ll KILL YOU!”
     It was her last threat. She knew she had to do something before the operation. She wouldn’t be able to go upstairs after that for a while. Sleeping on the couch was her only choice. She kept having visions of rats falling through the hole in the ceiling landing on her, biting her when she was weak and vulnerable.
Finally she bought the poison. Rat poison. It was after a long night of scratching and chewing that had left her exhausted and angry. She bought a huge bag of it.
She looked at the blue pellets. What animal would eat that?
Blue pellets smothered in peanut butter. That was the thing. She got out a bowl and mixed it up, put it in the conveniently provided trays and slid it into the hole in the ceiling.
     next night she could hear them chittering to each other over their new feast. They spent a long time over their dinner. She almost wanted to warn them. She felt such a strange combination of vindication and horror at what she had done.
     Those animals were going to die. Nothing could stop it now.
     She was glad she had mixed up the rat poison with the peanut butter and slid it up there.
She had listened with  horror as they had found it, jumping all round and eating and eating all on night. She knew what would come next for them. The rats in her house. The scuttling in the ceiling had slowed down in the last few days before the operation. She thought they must be dead up there.



     The rats ran and played.  They heard the wind outside and rolled around again on the floor of their new home. At night they chewed into the warmer place. What luck! Food was everywhere, more food then they ever imagined. They thought about the young they could rear in this protected place as they gathered more food in the warm area of their cave.
     He watched his mate dig into the brown chunky goo, eating and eating and then dancing around. She rolled over him and nipped him until he ate, and it was good, so he ate some more.
     They ate and ate until they couldn’t eat any more.


     The day of the operation came and she checked into the hospital. They had her undress and lie on a gurney in a drafty hall of curtains, bedpans and other patients in various degrees of pre or post-op distress. She lay there a long time contemplating the smallness of her life. She was a patient now, something to be worked on. The notes for her medication were left lying on her belly. Atavan, morphine and some other thing she didn’t recognize. The nurse came and started the I.V. (it was always a drama finding her  veins--they hid from view) and then injected the cocktail of drugs into hose.
     She waited for the release, the slow fade from the world but it didn’t come. She didn’t feel woozy. She felt very alert. She continued to feel alert when they wheeled her into the operating room. There were many people in blue gowns swirling around the room. She heard the sound of silverware clanking and looked up to see a man opening a blue cloth holding shiny metal tools.
     They are going to use those on me and I’m letting them.
     There was a glass wall with a three or four people watching her and the television.
     This was going to be a televised event.
     They put a small tent of white cloth between her and her groin area so she wouldn’t see but she would be awake throughout the procedure.
     A man came in and stood beside her lower groin. He held up an electric razor and examined the blade. She suddenly realized  he was going to shave her down there. She started laughing. She thought she said something but wasn’t sure but then everyone started to laugh so she must have.
     Having my pussy shaved in front of a bunch of guys...it’s almost like a fantasy fulfilled, but then, reality is always stranger, isn’t it?
     A woman’s voice floated up from behind her.
     “You okay, honey?” she asked.
     “Yes.”
     She felt the nurse stroking her hair. If felt good.
     “Don ‘t you worry, I have lots of lovely drugs for you.”
     She found herself straining to watch the screen of her operation over the top of the draped sheets. She asked questions. She compared notes.
     “This screen  doesn’t look like an MRI at all.” she said, proud of her medical knowledge all of sudden.
     “No, this is only to show the veins so we can put in the material.”

     Back in the recovery room she’s lying on the bed feeling like a butterfly pinned to a board. There’s a catheter, hard and cold, running up her urethra to empty her bladder. She can’t help but touch it and see if the urine is running out. She’s not supposed to be moving--she might bleed out. All she can do is consider how she got here and wait for her attendants to come check on her in this darkened hospital recovery room that was usually reserved for happy exhausted mothers welcoming their newborn children.
     Yes, like a butterfly, or some sex cult figure, her legs open to the world of her tormentors--the ones she had allowed to push things inside--a kind of queen of her domain. They checked on her, they prodded her, they approved of her abasement.
     It must be the drugs making me think weird thoughts.



     It had been a few days since the pain in his belly had begun with a low gnawing it had grown. Along with the pain was the thirst, endless thirst.
     He stumbled around in the dark where the food had been  His mate had rolled in agony and then she fell down into the passage way where they had entered. He lay on his side.  He found it hard to breathe. Must find water. The pain.



     She lay pinned to the bed all night. Her attendants came in every hour to check on her.
She fell in an out of nauseous drowsy sleep. Sometimes she woke and checked the catheter. When she pulled it up she could feel the hard plastic deep inside her body. There was always a yellow liquid in the tube. For once she didn’t have to strain to pee.
   She looked at the room. It was like a hotel room. All dolled up. She liked the long low couch across the room in the alcove. It was like  a divan in a harem, low with pillows and a colorful spread.
     In the morning two teenage boys brought her breakfast and congratulated her on her  new baby. She could only smile.
     A few drowsy hours later the catheter came out and she was getting ready to go home. Her friend came to pick her up after the nurses gave her directions on what to expect and a prescription for the pain medication. She hobbled into the car and they drove to her house.
     She would be glad to be home again lying on the couch watching television sounded just right.
     She opened the door and walked through to the kitchen when a sudden loud scream came from behind her.
     “A RAT! OH MY GOD IT’S A RAT”  her friend screamed and slammed the kitchen door shut.
     She looked down and saw it. Some how she had stepped right over it when she entered the kitchen, it had been there, right between her legs.  It was sitting up on its hind quarters looking like it was begging for something. She stared and stared at it, hardly able to believe her eyes. It wasn’t the biggest rat in the world, but it seemed huge at the moment. It seemed unsteady, like it couldn’t keep its head up. She kept staring and staring at it. She could hear her friend in the other room asking her what she was going to do about it. She knelt down beside the rat. It lunged forward shakily as though it could still attack.
     “Your dying, rat.” she said.
     She looked around for something to put it in and saw a pot with a cover. She wondered if the rat would run away if she tried to cover it--but it didn’t. This rat was almost like it was in a dream. She could see its belly shudder and roil in pain. She put the pan over the rat and slid a cover under it. The rat was in the pan.
     She opened the kitchen door and said, “I’ve got it.” Then she took the ratted pan outside and walked towards the woods. As she walked she felt the last of the  hospital medication beginning to wear off and something sharp in her belly.
     At the base of the woods, near the bottom of her favorite elm tree she released the rat.
It managed to stand but then it just stood there swaying, eyes glazed.
     “I told you to get out of my house, rat, I told you!”
     She stared at the brown fur and little eyes. The eyes looked at her in misery. It held its paws up as though it were praying. It swayed slightly. It couldn’t move.
     This was a creature and she had killed it in a most painful way.
     She knelt on the dry leaves, exposed in the last melt of winter, and cried.