
HOLLY GO DARKLY
by Karl Koweski
When I cup my palm against my mouth I can smell her on me. A not unpleasant
odor that instills a desire for more. I stand in the bathroom of an almost
expensive hotel. There�s enough light bulbs above the mirror to illuminate a
Hollywood movie. I can feel my self esteem puddling at my toes, seeing the
bathroom spotlights emblazon my scalp through the sparsity of mousy brown hair.
The water continues to gush and swirl down the drain. The toiletries loosely
gathered around the sink belong solely to Holly. A bottle of eyeliner
represents her make-up. There�s a lone white tooth brush, bristles like an
unmown lawn. I scrub my face with her bar of pink soap, it�s brand name worn
away with use.
I have to go home soon. Never have I been more aware of time than during the
last month. The warm taffy expansion of days leading to last night. The quick
rubber band snap of our night together.
I have to go soon. And I can�t kiss my wife smelling like Holly. Returning
home freshly showered won�t alleviate suspicion, either. Sera likely all ready
suspects. I probably gave myself away the moment I took the collection of
Leonard Cohen poetry off my book shelf.
Holly enters, except that�s not quite the right way to describe what she does
or how she does it. Holly doesn�t enter a room; she expands into it, fills the
room from wall to wall like a burst of light irradiating the corners and making
one uncomfortably aware of one�s flaws.
I could have written this paragraph before I met her in the flesh, though, so
badly did I want to believe she was more than just a woman, no less clueless
than I. Don�t make me out to be more than I am, she warned early on, when the
extent of our affair was the exchange of instant messages. I can never be what
you want.
She trails her finger across my sweat damp back as she passes; her unpainted
fingernails softly carves along the curvature of my spine. I watch her through
the mirror. Her nudity such a novelty to me. I want it always to be this way.
I want to memorize every inch of her pale skin. I want to map her every
anatomical angle, every landmark blemish. I want to still know surprise every
time I unwrap her.
I want the ability to express these thoughts without coming across like an
utter fool.
Holly sits down and begins pissing.
�You don�t mind, do you?�
�Of course not.� Eight years of marriage, I�ve always managed to avoid seeing
Sera on the toilet.
�In Japan the women are very self conscious about pissing within earshot of
anyone else. A lot of restrooms have speaker boxes where you push the button an
dit makes a flushing sound so you can piss, covertly.�
�I never used it. I think it�s kinda erotic, the sound of urine hitting water.
Especially if it makes someone else uncomfortable.�
�It doesn�t make me uncomfortable.�
She wipes and flushes. �I was talking people in general, Vic.� She kisses me
on the corner of my mouth as she leaves. Her exit contracts the room. Her
absence threatens an implosion.
�You still smell like me,� she calls from the bed.
Though Tennessee born of German/Irish ancestry, six years of living in Fukoka,
Japan has given her English an odd, slightly slurred accent that makes me want
to embrace her every time she speaks.
I dry off my face with the anonymous white towel. I lift the toilet seat,
flush, and begin pissing.
Holly lies on the bed, arms stretched out, breasts lolling, legs slightly open,
left leg bent at the knee. She said she�s gained weight since she arrived State
side, but I don�t see it. If I had a canvas and oils and even a modicum of
talent and training I could paint a masterpiece of her. As it is, the last
thing I painted, a wolf in water colors, garnered a C+ from my eighth grade art
teacher.
My clothes are draped over the unassuming chair. She catches my glance.
�You have to go all ready?� Her voice is alarmingly devoid of emotion.
I don�t look at the clock. �No. I have time.�
�Lay down with me.�
I slide into bed beside her. The sheets, moist from our recent love-making
clings to my skin as we reposition ourselves. I lay on my back, Holly�s head
resting on my shoulder, my hand dipping right into her black, shoulder-length
hair, brushing the thick strands back from her temple. I�m aware of her pubic
hair stubble sandpapering my hip, her erect nipples brushing my skin with every
slight movement.
Her heart beats against my rib cage. When was the last time I felt Sera�s
heart beat? When was the last time I did anything other than monitor the
regularity of her breathing, ensuring her sleep was deep enough for me to escape
our bed into the false life provided by my computer?
Holly, my melancholy angel, her life underscored with disillusionment and
advanced disappointment. In my eyes, she wears this sadness, beautifully. I�ve
always believed a tight smile and downcast eyes held more radiance than the
bleached teeth and sparkling eyes of run-of-the-mill glamor queens.
The guttering candle light provided by the Home Interior candles Holly brought
casts miniature St. Elmo fires across the ceiling and walls. Maybe she�s
wondering what I�m thinking. And if she asks I�ll say I�m not thinking of
anything at all, just basking in the moment. But she�s never shown an interest
in my thoughts.
�How much longer can you stay?� She asks.
�Until the hour and minute hand meet.�
Her lips draw into a smile against my chest. It�s an inside joke involving
Edgar Allen Poe�s story �A Predicament�. We discovered early on in our
get-to-know-you phase a mutual love of literature and a mutual admiration for
Poe�s canon. We�d occasionally read each other passages on voice chat.
Holly�s favorite paragraph involved the female protagonist from the Poe story,
her head caught between the hour and minute hand of a clock tower. The
vise-like pressure increases minutely until, first, on eyeball pops out of its
socket. It�s ocular brother in the body politic watches the dislodged orb roll
into the gutter before swiftly joining it.
First hearing Poe�s words from Holly�s lips, I entertained the possibility I
could become more emotionally invested in her than we agreed at the outset to
allow ourselves. We even scoffed at the notion of an internet love affair.
There�s no computers, no distances of DSL cable, separating us, now. Why
should the old rules apply?
I kiss the top of her head and play with the ends of her hair. From those dark
follicles, my fingers trace along her collarbone up the hollow of her throat. I
draw her chin up until our lips brush. My eyes adjust to the darkness in her
eyes.
And I know that I�m a liar. I don�t want her to remain emotionally aloof. I
want her to love me. I want the victory such emotional attachment entails. I
want to wear her love like a shiny medal on the lapel of my bad ass leather
jacket. I want the entire world (excluding my wife and everyone associated with
my wife) to know Holly belongs to me. Her love for me validating my love for
her.
But she doesn�t love me. My thoughts turn to her more than her thoughts
include me.
�You�re so tense,� she whispers, her hands in motion, fingers roaming my chest
and abdomen, searching for weak points in the armor of my flesh. I�m weak all
over.
�Lot on my mind, I guess.�
�Guilt?�
�I don�t feel guilt.�
�Why not? It�s an interesting sensation. Kinda like anticipation without all
the giddiness.�
My thumb presses against the divot in her chin that she hates but I love.
�Holly, I love you.�
The words escape. Immediately, I want to apologize. My little ineffectual
defense mechanism. She hates those two meaningless bullshit words. I�m sorry.
When she answers, her voice continues its trend of emotional vacuity. �We
agreed from the beginning this wasn�t going to be a �love� thing.�
�I�m sorry.� The words hang there. Holly draws away from me. �No, wait,
Holly. I�m not sorry.�
�You can�t love me. I don�t love you.�
�Don�t you feel anything about me?�
She crouches on the edge of the bed, cat-like. Her eyes. I stare into her
eyes, hoping for a flash of emotion, anything. Her dark eyes like vortexes
sucks the light from the room.
I can�t hold her gaze. My eyes drop down to her lips. So long I�ve fantasized
kissing those lips. The reality of her lips pressed against mine is worth this.
Her mouth that I�ve claimed is not given to smiles. I�m such a liar. She
smiles all the time. She�s quick to laugh. She�s not my melancholy angel.
Strange I should fictionalize her in such a way.
She�s not smiling at the moment.
�What do you want me to say, Vic?�
�Nothing. Never mind.�
�No, nothing, never mind. What do you want me to fucking say? That you�re my
number one man?�
�I don�t categorize people numerically. Guess again.�
�Oh, listen to you. How do you categorize people? By whether I fuck them or
not? You�re the one always asking who I�m talking to. Always afraid you�re
gonna get knocked out of the saddle.�
She�s off the bed and gathering her clothes. The boring white panties. The
boring white bra. The jeans she has such a difficult time finding at the stores
because her legs are so stubby and her ass is so wide. The shapeless blouse
with the dollar store floral print she claims is of African design.
�I�m not asking you to marry me. I�m happy. I�m happy with you. So I tell
you I love you. So what? I know you don�t love me. I know I like you more
than you like me. You remind me this every fucking day. Or at least every day
you�re gracious enough to make time in your busy schedule to speak to me.�
I keep talking as she keeps getting dressed. If there�s a combination of words
that will make her stop, get undressed, lay back in this rented bed and forgive
me; I�d spit in my mother�s face for a hint at the sequence of words.
Holly grabs her purse and the hotel key.
�How dare you ask me if I feel anything for you? I�m here, aren�t I?�
�I�m sorry, Holly. I didn�t mean...�
�Go home to your wife, Vic. Tell her you love her.�
She leaves the room the way she entered - furtively, like a thief.
It�s all I can do to keep myself from stepping, naked, into the hotel corridor
and calling her name. I stare at the phone like an anchor dropped on the table.
I could call her cell phone. It�d be long distance. What could I say?
I lay back down on the bed. Her smells are everywhere. I close my eyes and
inhale.