Authors: Jennifer Saginor
Playground
I can tell he wants to cry but he controls himself. The pain in
his eyes is almost too much for me to bear. I stare at him in disbe-
lief.
“I took care of everything related to my burial, and the hospital
knows you have power of attorney to arrange everything related to
my death.” I am frightened by the figments of his imagination that
tell him he is dying or could be killed. I manage to listen to him
continue.
“I want a quiet burial without too much fuss. Twenty or thirty
of my closest friends, you know the drill. It’s time for me to go and
I am determined to go peacefully,” he rambles as I am consumed
with guilt for not knowing how to help him.
I peer over at the attorney, whose eyes are as icy as Dad’s can be
at times. Today Dad’s eyes are full of gloom and sorrow as if he has
seen the evils of the world. I want to reach out and touch him but
it’s as if he is already gone.
“I want to thank you for everything. Forgive me if I’ve been
too harsh on you at times, but I did it out of my deepest love and
devotion for you. I’ve only ever wanted you to lead a happy, ful-
filled life,” he says, and all I can do is nod and accept this peculiar
act of contrition.
I sign the papers, and Dad and I leave the office. We ride down
the elevator in silence. Neither of us mentions the attorney visit
again.
That evening, I sit on Grampy’s balcony smoking a pipe. I can no
longer move or speak. My insides are shriveled into a tight ball. My
eyes are red from crying.
“I need to get out of that house,” I tell him.
“Running away never solves anything,” he replies.
“Spoken like a true escapist.”
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“I keep telling you to broaden your horizons. Get involved
with something outside of yourself. Why don’t you go to college on
the East Coast,” he suggests.
“I’m afraid Dad won’t let me go.”
“If you had any discipline you wouldn’t be concerned with
what others demand. You would do what you need to do.”
“No one seems to understand, school is not the issue. I can’t
live in that house anymore.”
“I am telling you to focus on your future.”
I am frustrated with his response.
“My future? At this point, if I don’t get out of there, I may not
have a future.”
“What you need is a real education,” Grampy demands.
I take my dark shades off so he can see my face. “Do I look like
I’m ready for finals?”
“You look like you’re ready for a change,” he says. “Most of the
time we make up stories in our head that aren’t even true. They’re
illusions to keep us from doing something.”
“The only illusions I see are Dad’s hallucinations on the tennis
court late at night,” I tell him, a cloud of smoke between us.
His loyalty to my father runs deep. He seems to overlook my
father’s lack of boundaries, his antagonistic, condescending ways of
making even the smartest person in the room feel stupid. He knows
I am right about the drugs, his neglect as a parent, as a human be-
ing, his inability to differentiate between fantasy and reality; yet
Grampy continues to enable him out of guilt, out of pure love for a
son he can no longer reach.
“Darling, there are many ways of looking at your life. There is
what happened, the story of what happened, and the story of what
can happen. And depending on how you interpret it, you can
make it mean something negative or you can create new possibili-
ties for yourself. That’s for you to decide.” He lowers his head so he
can see me over his thin spectacles.
“You make it sound so easy.”
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Playground
“You can’t control what other people do. But you can control
how you respond to it, whether you allow it to eat you up and oc-
cupy all your thoughts, and how much you let it affect you.”
I try to digest what he is saying.
“You have everything you need,” he tells me.
But I can’t understand what he’s talking about. I’m so used to
the little voice in my head that believes the world owes me some-
thing and that civilized behavior is a waste of time.
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I t’s 1987. I graduate Beverly Hills High School with the rest of
my class and when the ceremony ends, we shoot confetti and cham-
pagne corks high into the air. Though we have grown apart, we
will always be there for each other.
We are reunited again as we were as kids.
We may not see each other every day, but our old bonds will
stay in our hearts forever.
Liz, Amber, Hunter, Michelle, Sonya, and I snap photos of our-
selves outside on the front lawn. We gather around making funny
faces as we capture the last of our days together. A knot swells in
my throat as I say my good-byes.
I turn around every few steps and watch as my old friends
blend into the distance.
J E N N I F E R S A G I N O R
I drag through the next few days and think seriously about leaving
town. I need a hiatus from my life. Somehow, it is less painful to
run away than to face the insanity of my everyday existence.
One of Dad’s friends owns a suite at the Plaza Hotel in New
York City, so I arrange to stay there for a couple weeks. Three
thousand miles away, I lock myself in my suite doing lines of coke
all night until the next day. I keep the curtains closed at all times to
keep the sunlight out. Cat Stevens’ “Wild World” drowns out the
street noise below. I spend my days on the phone with Kendall and
order room service for every occasion. At night, I drop a Halcyon,
sip vodka tonics in crystal glasses, and take cabs to clubs like Lime-
light and the Tunnel.
Around 1 p.m. I’m in a deep fog.
Hidden beneath two fluffy down pillows, I hear faint noises
that begin to sound like ringing. Flailing my arm, I bang some-
thing off the end table and lift the receiver to my ear.
“Hello?” I answer, wiping sleep from my eyes.
“Hey, kiddo, it’s me. I’m coming to New York,” Kendall says. It’s
as if she read my mind.
“I’ll be there tonight,” she whispers and hangs up.
Hours later, there’s a knock on the door. I slowly open it and
see Kendall standing in the doorway wearing a sheer white linen
dress. She is tan and toned and looks happy to be alive.
She jumps on me and we fall backward onto the bed laughing
and rolling around like kids. She seems a lot calmer than the last
time we saw each other. I tell her about my falling-out with Hayden.
“It’s about time,” she says, ordering up a bottle of Cristal. Within
minutes room service arrives and we lie on the bed feeding each
other pâté on French bread.
“Everyone thinks we’re having an affair,” I tell her.
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Playground
“Aren’t we?” she laughs.
“Are you going to tell me why you’re here?”
“To see you, silly.” She takes a small bite of pâté and licks her
lips flirtatiously. It’s difficult to ignore how sexy she is. Her beauty
drives me to distraction as she gently caresses her fingers through
my hair and we look at each other.
“Have you been a good girl?” she whispers and I blush.
“Tell me how much you missed me.” She rolls on top and pins
me down playfully, our bodies now pressed together. Her hand
slides naturally down my stomach as she slowly unbuttons my
pants. She slides her fingers gently between my legs.
“Tell me how much you need me,” she says, and I swallow hard,
breathing heavily, tortured, yearning to be loved, touched. I’m not
sure if she’s a game in my head or if she’s for real. She draws me
near, kissing me, teasing me, keeping me in her complete control,
and the impulse to give her full power turns me on even more. She
squeezes my hand and hesitates.
“I love you,” she says softly.
“I love you too.” I pause, absorbing the intensity of my feelings.
She strokes my face and I put my arms around her, unsure of
whether I’m her lover or her child. She leans her head against
mine. We are far enough away from L.A. that we can say whatever
we want, yet somehow I can’t help but always feel like somebody is
watching us.
It’s past eleven at night by the time we motivate to go out. After
painting our nails and taking a relaxing bubble bath, we rummage
through our wardrobe trying on at least three outfits each. She
ends up wearing a low-cut dress showing off her cleavage. I throw
on ripped jeans and a rhinestone tank. We stumble out of the ho-
tel room, kissing and holding hands in the elevator.
We go to Limelight, a converted church, where all the guests are
on display in a sea of glitter and camouflage. Flooding the dance
floor are partygoers in painfully bright short jackets and miniskirts.
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Long-legged girls wear carefully ripped aqua jeans, neon-blue and
candy-apple-red pantyhose with glow-in-the-dark stilettos.
Boys squeezed into tight leather pants and Spandex biker
shorts circle the scene, shirtless beneath lambskin jackets. Girls
sweat to Madonna’s “Holiday,” their blown-out bangs sturdily held
in place with red glitter hairspray.
The energy in the church is perverted as fluorescent lights and
wild sexual videos flash against the walls. Men wearing Calvin Klein
underwear and combat boots and topless females in thongs and
high heels dance in cages above the stage of clubgoers. Too many
kamikazes later, we dance, surrounded by gays, straights, and strays.
Kendall puts her arm alluringly around me and we make our way
through the hedonistic crowd. We recognize the same openness to-
ward sexuality and drugs as life at the Mansion. There is something
very enticing and exhilarating about breaking free from restrictions
that bind us to who we are rather than to who we are supposed to be.
In the morning, I can barely open my eyes as I hear faint, muffled
sounds of someone talking.
“I have to go.” Kendall whispers through my sinking haze. She
kisses me gently on the lips and she’s gone. My eyes droop and I go
back to sleep for hours.
It’s late in the day when the phone rings, startling me.
“Hello?” I answer, groggy.
“You’re not going to believe what happened to me today.” It’s
Savannah.
“Dad and I went to Nate ’n’ Al’s and he fell asleep in his soup!
He told me the turkey made him tired.”
“You’re kidding.”
“No, and then he made me drive him home!”
“You barely have a permit.”
“It was a nightmare.”
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