
There must be a
God. Now that all those nations that got together who knows which
ones? I've never been any good in Mr. Frank's geography class
Russia's one of them and Korea's one, I think, some Korea or
other now that they've launched their nuclear missiles and we've
launched ours and all the old geezer anchormen are crying at the same
time zap, zap, zap with the remote in my hand and Tom and Peter
and Dan are weeping like babies right there before us, one after the
other now that all this end-of-the-world stuff everybody's been
talking about till you just want to go, "Oh shut up, you people," now
that it's finally suddenly happening, here I find myself sitting on
a couch right beside the hottest girl in school, right here in the church
teen center, and nobody else is around but her and me.
Like, I've got these parents who are probably taking the trash out now,
cleaning the toilets or something, determined not to let a thing like
this upset their routine. They had to drop me off for the Youths for
Jesus meeting half an hour early so I wouldn't be late no matter how
bad things sounded on the TV. And Jennifer Platt is sitting here right
next to me, her own parents out of town somewhere, and she walked over
from her house, not even knowing how things were going in the world,
her being the silliest, hottest, sweetest girl God ever created. And
now she sits beside me, me of all people, with my face breaking out
and my hair geeking around on my head, and her long daisy-blond hair
is rippling down her back and her big blue eyes are wide with terror,
turned up to the TV watching Dan Rather mopping at his eyes with a handkerchief,
and she's making a little choking sound in her throat.
"Is this, like, for real?" she finally
manages to say.
"Yes," I say. "It's all over, Jennifer.
Life on planet Earth."
"Aren't there supposed to be horsemen
or whatever?" she says.
"Horsemen?"
"Like in the Book of Revelations?"
She's looking at me now in a way she
never has. She's got nobody else. Her eyes are as blue as the sky that's
about to disappear for a year or so in the nuclear winter and they are
still wide with how wonked-out she is. These eyes are turning to me
for guidance, but I never have listened very close to the prophecies
and stuff that Pastor Lynch has been trying to explain. I've been too
busy watching Jennifer Platt and thinking I didn't have a shot in the
world at her and praying that I was wrong. God does answer prayer. I
can finally testify to that.
I say, "Nobody ever knew what that horsemen
stuff meant. Now it's clear. God's brought us together to cleave
unto each other." I like that, "cleave." I think I've absorbed more
in this place than I realize.
Her eyes widen a little bit more. "What
are you saying, Alvin?"
"I'm like the horseman."
"Pardon me?"
"To carry you away."
"You can't run from the bomb, Alvin,"
she says, and her voice is faint.
"I'm talking, like, in metaphors, Jen.
Carry you away in the passion that God has put between a man and a woman
when they, uh, cleave. Like, aren't we Adam and Eve here? Only in reverse?
Like we're the last two left? See, God arranged this."
She's getting confused, but I figure
that's okay. She's not saying "no" right off. I'm plugging into a thing
she's been looking forward to. Maybe not with me. But I'm in the ballpark.
I say, "The missiles are going to hit real soon. There's nowhere else
to go. But here we are, you and me. God realizes that neither one of
us wants to die a virgin."
Jennifer suddenly looks away and clamps
down with her teeth on the knuckle of her right forefinger.
I can hear myself. I'm impressed. Here
it is, what's going on outside, and with the White House about twenty
miles from where I'm sitting Jennifer and I are pretty much on
ground zero and I'm being cool as Harrison Ford or somebody.
Jennifer stops biting her knuckle and
looks back at me. Her eyes aren't wide anymore. They're narrow. She's
suddenly pretty cool herself. I know she's considering my geekhood.
This
is the moment when I'm vulnerable. I'm sitting here wishing I knew more
about the Bible. I maybe could find just the right passage. Something
like, "Give thou to the plain man and thou shalt have riches in Heaven."
Which isn't bad, really. I'm thinking about quoting that and pretending
it's real. But Jennifer lasers her eyes up and down my body and then
she looks at the television.
Just as she does, Dan Rather stares straight
at the camera and says, in a quavery voice, "Speaking simply for this
reporter, I'd suggest you go as quickly as you can to someone you love
and hold them close."
Jennifer's face swings back to me. I
figure Dan has given me a real boost here. This should be it. But Jennifer
seems to have simply gone back to checking me out, critically. I know
there's not much time.
And suddenly I have words. I cry, "Jennifer
Platt, the world's coming to an end! We must have sex!"
Her face softens. Well, not softens exactly,
because it's still not, like, soft. But the criticism is gone. The hard
eyes are no longer hard. She nods very faintly and she stands up and
puts her thumbs in the elastic waistband of her skirt and I can feel
my Little Mister Man rising in my pants like a mushroom cloud. I can
even set aside the hatred I have for my mother giving such a name as
that to my dick and making it stick in my head, like, forever. All that
vanishes from me. There is only Jennifer Platt, her skirt down at her
ankles now and her legs long and smooth rising to her panties where
her thumbs are now poised in the waistband and the very tip of me, the
tip of, yes, Little Mister Man, is throbbing like crazy and I say a
quick thank you to God, who is definitely in his Heaven.
And now the panties descend and a sweet
golden plume rises from the center of her and it is a color darker than
the hair that is cascading around her face now, this gold, it is not
the color of daisies but of sunlight on a white wall at the end of the
day. A stopping happens inside me. I cannot breathe from the beauty
of it. The beauty of the hair of her loins and also the beauty of sunlight
on the wall.
She is moving, lying down on the other
end of the couch, and she opens her legs and I am still struggling to
draw a breath, and something else is going on inside me. The sunlight
will not show itself in this world like Jennifer Platt's pubic hair
ever again, not with anyone alive to see it. Jennifer's legs are open
and I look at this secret place on her body and it is as pretty as her
face, it is the pink of my mother's azaleas and it is pouting like a
spoiled child and I love this soft place as it draws me to it, asks
me to enter, and it whispers to me now of all that there is to destroy
in this world, my mother's flowers and her hands that tend them and
the spoiled children and the good children, and I cannot move, I feel
the warmth of my tears and I am afraid.
For more Robert Olen Butler, read:
Stars and Stripes Forever
Liquor License
Deep Green Sea (a preview)
©2000
Robert Olen Butler and Nerve.com
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