Read Sister Slam and the Poetic Motormouth Road Trip Online
Authors: Linda Oatman-High
made the cake
and decorated
it with the colors
of Banesville High
and a graduate's cap,”
Twig said, dropping
cake crumbs on my bed.
I nodded.
Pops was
a great baker
of cakes.
That's one thing
I'd miss
when I was away.
“Let's make a
list,” I said,
“of everything
we need to do
for the road trip.”
“We don't need a list,”
Twig said. “Pack clothes.
Write poems. Eat, sleep,
pee, breathe.”
“Okay,” I said. “Time to create.”
Sprawled across
my sloshy waterbed,
we mulled alone then
in our own heads, thinking about
what we could yank out
and put down on paper.
Vapors of poems,
ghost poems,
floated in our
brains, part of us,
but not yet out of us.
Twig broke
the quiet diet of words.
“Remember what you called
your pillows,
when we were little?”
she asked.
“You don't expect
me to forget,”
I answered.
“Gloom pillows.”
My pillows,
like weeping willows,
had seen gallons
of tears through
the years, so I know
it sounds weird,
but I called them
gloom pillows.
They were as gray
as doom, the shades
of tombs, and some days,
soaked sopping wet.
“Maybe I'll write me a poem
or a sad, sad song
or a long sonnet
about my gloom pillows,”
I mused, pulling off
a blue pillowcase
and burying my face
in the gray.
“Hey,” said Twig.
“Don't start
excavating your heart
and feeling sorry for yourself,
Laura. This is no pity
party. Sorry if I got
you started, but now stop.
This is going to be
one fun summer, and our first road
trip ever. Pick yourself up!”
Twig pounced around like a pup.
I sighed, looking at
the photo of Mom
on my closet door.
I'd gotten it blown up
as large as possible,
hoping to make
Mom life-size again.
“The Zen of death
is that she's with you,
big as ever,
every breath, every step,”
said Twig,
guessing my thoughts,
messing with the
depths of my head.
“Stop reading
my mind uninvited,”
I said.
“Quit trespassing
in my brain.”
“Okay,” said Twig
with a grin. There
were red cake crumbs
on her chin. “Let's write.”
The silence returned,
and our muses churned.
The cool thing
about Twig and me
is that we don't need
to talk.
We can be quiet
at the same time.
No-Obligation Conversation.
I was writing poems.
Twig was writing poems.
My lava lamp rolled
slow and relaxing
like the melting wax
of an old Christmas candle
lit for the Fourth of July.
“We might be white,
but we can write
like soul sisters,
man,” said Twig, doodling
and chewing on the eraser
of her pencil.
“Listen to this,” she said.
“The title is âRevolution.'”
Then she read:
You say you want a revolution,
but the Constitution
and John Lennon are dead.
Yoko Ono's alone in the bed,
shaking her head over something
John said Yesterday. What a mess today.
I Want to Hold Your Hand,
somebody or anybody's hand.
Do you have a Ticket to Ride?
I lost mine, when John Lennon died.
I applauded.
“It's just like you,”
I said. “Political
and totally cynical.”
“Well, you know
I've been a Beatles
groupie since I
was a fetus,” Twig
said, “thanks to
my mother playing
records to her
pregnant stomach.”
Twig's parents are
eccentric. Way flaky.
Her mother does Botox
and her dad's always in detox
for one substance or another.
“I'm beside myself
for this gig,” Twig said.
“Can you dig it?
Our words are big,
Sister. They stick
like burrs in the skin.
I can't wait for the
slam to begin.”
Twig had this
smug mug of a
satisfied face,
and she was
wearing a chaste
pitch-black
lace dress: the best
poet's dress, I must confess.
The rest of her getup
consisted of fishnets,
a Wish Upon a Star
hat from Disneyland,
a ring on every finger
of her hands, and Twig's
favorite Chuck Taylor
sneakers: high-top
black and white.
I myself was a mess,
with a bird's nest
of bed head, elastic-
waist imitation leather
pants, a feather headband,
and a red polyester vest.
I wear lots of vests
because they are best
for hiding my breasts,
which are the size of Texas.
I was hexed and vexed
by the size of my chest,
which brought
too much negative
attention from pests.
All of a sudden,
I knew what my
first slam poem
should be about,
and I shouted
it out in the quiet
of my room:
“Gloom Pillows
and Huge Boobs!”
Twig looked at me
like I was crazy.
But baby, I knew this was it.
I'd be the hit of the gig
in Tin Can, New Jersey:
the first-prize surprise of a
big-bosomed poet chick,
quick as a whip with words.
Maybe I'd get a silver trophy
or a golden medallion
or a wad of cash or
a flashy engraved plaque
with my name on it.
But mainly,
I wanted to get revenge
on the royal pains
from my gym bench
(by being better and
more famous than them),
and also to remember
Mom and how I cried
into my gloom pillows
when she died,
and for a long time after.
Packing my Firebird
with all the happy crap
of two hip-hoppin',
poetic rap girls,
we hung strands
of pink pearls
from the radio knobs.
It was kind of like
a Mardi Gras bash
(except Twig and I
didn't plan to flash
anything at anybody).
“How do you like my bag?”
I asked Twig. She gave
me the thumbs-up sign.
“It's fine,” she said.
“Girly pink. Sensible,
yet feminine.”
My suitcase was an old
My Little Pony bag that
Mom gave me when I was eight
and taking ballet class.
My ass hadn't danced since then.
“On the road again,” Twig sang
as we threw junk
into the trunk of the car.
Pops added gas cans,
jumper cables, and tools,
which I wouldn't know
how to use anyway.
“Laura,” said Pops,
“maybe you should just
stay in Banesville,
where I know you're safe.”
“Don't worry, Pops.
That's what cops
are for,” I said,
hoping to reassure him.
“Safe is a state
of mind,” added Twig.
“You don't have to go,
you know,” Pops said. “Minds are
made to be changed.”
“That would be wrong,”
I said. “It would be
like a song without music.
Like a gong without the boom.
It would be the ultimate of doom,
to stay here where we don't belong!”
Pops sighed.
He tried to smile.
“Pops,” I said, “I'm now
an official graduate of
twelve years of torture
in Banesville High,
which was the low point
of my entire life. It's
time to come alive.”
Twig slapped me five.
“Yeah,” she said.
“We'll be driving
into the so-cool
School of Real Life.
The College of Reality!
The University
of Gray Road, Blue Sky,
and Yellow Lines.
A free ride.”
Pops cleared his throat.
“It's not exactly free,” he said.
“Don't forget who's financing
this trip. Remember the loan?”
“How could we forget my
rockin' pops with the generous
wallet?” I said. “And Twig's
gram? You're the sponsors
for Sister Slam, Twig, and the
Poetic Motormouth Road Trip.
We're going to be a big hit!”
“Please be careful,” Pops said.
“You're still my little girl, you know.”
“I'm bigger than you think.
Just because I carry a pink
My Little Pony bag doesn't mean
that I'm a baby,” I replied. My
voice sounded like a whine, even to me.
I climbed inside the car, settling
into the driver's seat, as Twig leaped
into the passenger side.
Pops waved good-bye
and he was brave,
keeping the tears
inside of his eyes.
“Buckle your seat belts,”
he yelled as I started
the car and moved the
gearshift from park. I
raced the engine and
peeled out of the driveway.
Surprisingly, disguised
as heartburn,
I had a slight yearning
to turn around
and stay in the town
I knew by heart.
“Laura!” hollered Twig.
“Watch where you're going!”
I swerved, just missing
a kissing couple on the
side of the road.
PDAsâPublic Displays
of Affectionâare accepted
after graduation, I guess. I must confess
that no boy had ever kissed me in public
or
in private.
“Call me Sister Slam,” I said to Twig.
“I'm Sister Slam on this trip.”
Twig nodded, pressing
her hand to her chest
as if I had startled
her almost to death.
She took deep breaths.
“Relax,” I said. “Kick back.
You're in the good hands
of safe Sister Slam. So just chill.”
I pressed the pedal to the metal
and settled deep into the seat.
A sinful wind was blowing
through my just-dyed spikes,
and the dizzy spinning
of wheels on road felt good.
The red needle
of the speedometer
was pointing higher
than I'd ever gone before.
The roar of the motor
was like a lion,
and the steering wheel
vibrated like fate
beneath my driving-
fast hands.
“Laura,” said Twig.
“Slow down.”
So I did. Then I said,
“Sister Slam, Twig.
“I'm Sister Slam on this trip.”
“Shut up,” said Twig.
“You're already making me sick.
You're getting on my nerves
way too quick.
Maybe this trip
was a big mistake.
Maybe you should take
me home, or just dump me
somewhere along the road.”
That was not like Twig:
wigging over nothing.
I slammed on the brakes,
for heaven's sake,
and the car screeched to
a stop with a whopping thump.
I turned off the ignition.
Twig's skinny arms
were crossed,
and she had this saucy
look on her face,
like she was the boss of me.
“
Whatever,
” I said, and Twig
shook her head.
“So you wanna get out,
or what?” I shouted.
Then I saw that Twig
was getting half-moon circles
beneath her blue-sky eyes.
That's Twig's warning sign
that she's about to cry.
So I apologized,
even though I hadn't done anything.
“Listen,” I almost whispered.
Twig's eyes glistened.
“I'm sorry,” I said.
“Don't worry. Everything's cool.”
Twig uncrossed her arms.
We were parked by a farm.
The odor of pig manure
was disgusting. The car motor
ticked like a clock,
and it was hot.
“That's okay,” Twig said.
“I just don't want to be dead
before I get to be twenty.”
Steam was hissing
from under the hood,
and I thought:
This isn't all good.
The radiator was overheating
again, and when
I started the car,
it sizzled like a hot star.
“Darn,” I breathed,
and heaved
myself from the car
so that I could check
under the hood.
It was then that I saw it:
we'd hit a pig, a big fat
hog of snorting pink.
“Holy cow!” I shouted.
“Twig! We hit a pig!”
Twig leaped out