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sherrybryan
Sherry Bryan
United States, CA, Los Angeles

Words: 1239
Access: Public
Comments: 6

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Pillowcase

PILLOWCASE

Fay set her alarm early every Saturday morning so that she could beat her neighbors to the washing machines. With only two washers and dryers to accommodate the entire building, they reverted into pack animals armed with All Temper Cheer and Bounce. All of the civil cordiality they had exchanged by the mailboxes or on the front stoop dissipated into a raw desperation for clean clothes. Most weekends Fay would find a laundry basket staked out by her 80-year old neighbor Helen, usually preparing for multiple loads. Fay thought bitterly that Helen could just do her laundry during the week everyone else was at work. But, with a smiling face and resignation she politely conceded the machine to the blue-haired alpha of the pack, and retreated back upstairs.

But not today.

Fay grabbed her hamper and jogged down the stairs, quarters jingling in her pocket. The building was still, everyone was sleeping. She opened the door of the laundry room to discover it was empty, it was hers. Fay could wash, spin, and tumble dry in peace. Smiling in triumph, she tossed in her clothes, towels, sheets and favorite detergent. Laundry was such a small act that gave her such a tangible sense of satisfaction. She went back upstairs to a pot of brewing coffee that filled the apartment with a comforting scent.

She turned on her cell phone to check her messages. As expected, he had called.

"Hi baby, isss me. It's'¦about 2am. Jus' finished up my last game of pool. And'HEY! Manny1 Whas' up, man? Yeah. Anyway. Fuck, I'm buzzed, baby. Wish I could come over. Mmm. Miss you. Wanna come over right now and--Tommy! I got quarts on the table, next game is mine, bitch! Heh. Oh, anyway you're probably asleep. Oh well, jus' wanted to say hi, and I was thinking of you. If you get this, give me a call. I can be over in like ten minutes or something. You know'¦Manny, you dick! No, this one's on me! I'm a have one more and---"

<Click>

She was irritated at his slurred words and Jim Beam-fueled affection. On another man, she might have found this charming, or even saved the message. But on him, this was unattractive. She just didn't want a night of sloppy, drunken kisses. Well, not with him.

They had been dating for a month, and she had tried. But, she knew it was pointless. 'I'm going to have to break up with him. Damn.'¯

She looked out the window at the morning sky. God, it was gorgeous. She had the whole day ahead of her.

An hour later she was folding her clean, warm laundry on the couch. Her building was beginning to wake up, through the walls she heard her neighbor moving around and the scratchy sounds that came from his clock radio.

She picked up her softest, oldest pillowcase with great affection. It was the color of lavender, and had faded but still exquisite stitching of daisies on the side. She had bought it years ago, her first set of sheets for her first apartment. Now it was almost threadbare after a decade of resting her often weary head upon it. No matter what sheets she bought, she always kept this pillowcase; and put her cushy down pillow in it so every night she could lie her head down on the softest pillowcase in the world. She pressed it to her face and breathed in the scent of her dryer sheets.

She looked for the familiar gray smudge that had marred the fabric for several months. It was traces of mascara. Her pillowcase was stained on a warm summer night that had followed a bad day, the kind of bad day that one could remember in excruciating detail for years. On that day Fay had managed to hold the weight of her tears until she was safely home and completely alone. Her head felt so full, so heavy, she had to lie down--a tempest churning under her skin. She was not one for self-pity, but that night she was beyond her own discipline.

She had curled up on her bed and cried. It was a hard cry; gasping, candid sobs, sniffles, and fat tears that rained from her eyes. She cried until her eyes stung and there was nothing left. Finally, out of exhaustion, she drifted off to a dreamless sleep, determined that that was that. Tomorrow would be different. Tomorrow she would begin letting go of him.

A perfect storm of mistakes, misjudgments, and misguided hope had been a long time coming and hit with F5 fury.

Fay never saw him coming. She never expected him.

With her laundry scattered over her, she began to recall all of it. Her spell was broken by the sound of her neighbor's radio. She heard Louis Armstrong sing of 'dark sacred nights.'¯ She liked that. She'd like a dark, sacred night.

Fay had a propensity for guilt and great embarrassment, and sometimes she would lie in bed on a dark and not-so-sacred night and think about the larger missteps she had made, the ones that caused the most damage. She wanted to repent. But redemption is slippery, and hers were not nimble fingers.

The first time she saw him Fay had the slight sensation of being punched in the stomach. And looking at him, she saw something utterly lovely and completely unique to her. It wasn't a physical or sexual response, well not at first. It was just a tremendous something that she saw, that she believed that only she could see. She could feel it, the rare beauty that lived in him. She saw him in a way that made her senses sharpen and made her completely understand fragments of lines by Theodore Roethke or ee cummings that she had read long ago.

That was months ago, before everything went to hell and she ruined her pillowcase. It was with impossible sadness that she realized that she would never inspire see any such poetry in him. He didn't see her and never would. So she let go of all her daydreams, her hopes, her very secret and embarrassing wishes that humid night, and cried away the expectation of him.

As Fay fingered the gray stain, she realized that it had become her badge, her souvenir. It was an unsought education: that purity of intent and desire is not necessarily enough; that wanting with a true heart, mind, and libido insured nothing. It reminded her that sometimes the truth is ugly and hard, and no place for ee cummings--or her heart. But above all, it reminded her that for a brief time, she felt dizzy and taken by love-raw, unruly, unreciprocated love. Despite the outcome, Fay felt fortunate to have had even a few months consumed by such powerful feelings. She had been so high that everything felt vibrant and new, and that was a gift.

Fay went to her bedroom and tenderly put her pillow in the pillowcase. She stretched out on the bed, her hand tracing the mascara stain. This was the only piece of him she could have. But, she felt only comfort as the closed her eyes. The small piece of him that held her head as she slept was as precious and sacred as a prayer.

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Comments  
Wildefriend Comment by: Wildefriend - 2008-05-01 17:08
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Wonderful stuff for the most part. BUT...

Clean up the typos. If you read it again you'll see where they are. it just looks amateurish.

Don't know what F5 fury is. If you explain it to me, it will stick jn my mind like a dart. I'm a dumb shit.

Love the idea that redemption is slippery. Very good!
sherrybryan Comment by: sherrybryan - 2007-07-27 15:20
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Gregory,
First off: thank you thank you thank you!!!! I do so appreciate your encouragement!
Second: EXCELLENT point about the pillowcase being her favorite. I will indeed work on that.
Third: Thank you. Honestly, your input is so very helpful and appreciated.
gregoryhall Comment by: gregoryhall - 2007-07-24 06:15
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You are in an entirely different league.

How you get such depth and passion in a short story about laundry is amazing. I'm serious. I often watch people in the mall or just walking down the streets and I wonder what thoughts are they lost in? B/c you never know. It could be something as simple as "I'm hungry" or "I hate work". But THIS, this is what I always hope to find in their faces.

A nothing, an old pillow case to anyone else. Someone just doing laundry. We have no idea it's really about pain and memories and a man who name we'll never know.

ONLY critique I have is you stated the pillow case was her favorite long before this man came along. Had been for years. The story-whore in me is dying to know why it was special in the first place...simply b/c it's very soft? Or did her grandmother give it to her? Does it always remind her of summer in Rhode Island? Did she win it on Price is Right? Might be nice to toss us an extra memory and mention a deeper 'why' it's her favorite.
CraigQuackenbush Comment by: CraigQuackenbush - 2007-06-30 19:29
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This piece chokes me up every time I read it. It expresses a sense of loss so well. A simple gray smudge on a pillow - a tangible, touching reminder of what she'd known and what she'd felt. The emotional context is so delicate, and Fay seems so bereaved and vulnerable, but she also conveys a sense of hope and strength through her sorrow, and the love she'd known. There is a mournful tone, but so much life and hope remains. She's beautiful.

"The small piece of him that held her head as she slept was as precious and sacred as a prayer." That line destroys me. A perfect closing.
matt1 Comment by: matt1 - 2007-06-30 02:41
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This was really a sensitve poem of unrequited love and how we all learn from them. I love the line " A perfect storm . . ." Fantastic.
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