Read Sister Slam and the Poetic Motormouth Road Trip Online
Authors: Linda Oatman-High
Twig snickered.
“It sucks,” she said,
and then she went
to bed.
I didn't care
what she said.
It was PMS
in the Sleep Best Inn
when Twig acted
like that.
She was a brat
about once a month.
I needed to practice,
even though Twig
was as prickly as cactus.
I also needed some Tums
to calm my stomach,
so I made up my mind
to find a vending machine
and to practice like a fiend
in the wobbly-chaired lobby
of this roach motel.
Proud as a peacock
in my old, holey-toe socks
and funky monkey nightgown,
I made my way down the
dark halls of puke-green walls.
This took balls:
walking alone
in a place
so far from home.
I'd made lemonade
from venomous lemons,
and I was the Queen of Beat,
the feminine
go-get-'em
winner of the slam
tomorrow.
Whispering my poem
as I swished along
the halls, I had a vision
of Pops
and wished
to call him.
Homesick or Pops-sick
was not an option
on the Poetic Motormouth Road Trip.
What was I:
a wimp? a gimp? Then,
limp with missing Pops,
and Mom,
and my toad-colored
bedroom at home,
I slumped on the
cracker-crumbed
floor by a snack
machine, bummed,
and way too alone.
The sunrise
in the morning
hurt my eyes,
and I couldn't
disguise my disgust.
“Look at the dust
in this light.
And look:
these musty cheap curtains
won't even bleepin' close right!
What a bite:
eighty-nine dollars a night
just to sleep
a few hours
and take
a ten-minute shower.”
“Don't complain,”
Twig moaned
and flopped over.
“We're going to need jobs,
or more money from Pops,
at this rate. I hate
how quick money runs leakin'
down the freakin' drain!”
“Don't be such a pain,” Twig muttered.
I must confess
that I wasn't in the best
of moods.
“What's up with you?” Twig said.
“Better get your head
together, whether
you want to or not,
or you don't have a shot
at this contest.”
I rummaged, grumbling,
through my old suitcase,
manic with panic:
a certified nut case.
“I swear,
I don't know what to wear.
I shouldn't care,
because it's not about clothes,
I know.”
Twig just shook her head.
“Why do I have to be so fat?”
I asked.
“I don't want to be like that!”
“Laura,” said Twig,
“you're cool,
just the way you are.”
“I guess it'll be the ever-popular
polyester vest,” I said,
wrestling a red vest
from a nest of messed-together threads.
“Red is your color,” hollered Twig.
“Like fire. Sister Slam will lift you higher!”
“Liar,” I said. “You're just saying that
to make me feel good.”
“Look,” said Twig,
“if you don't lose the mood,
I'm quitting this gig.
I can get a lift
and whiz
right back to Banesville.”
It made me quit bitching,
to think of Twig hitching
a ride and leaving me alone.
“Let's start over,” I said.
“I'm sorry. I need coffee.
I need eggs. I need ham.
Never start a slam
without grub.”
We went for breakfast
in a grease-messed restaurant
next to the Sleep Best Inn.
The waitress was brooding
and rude, but at least she brought food,
and the coffee
was sweet and steamy
with sugar and cream.
“This seems
like a dream!” I said,
sipping, slurping,
burping, wishing
for the position
of Slammer
Number One
at the Tin Can
Poetry Slam.
I was ablaze
and out of my
haze, unfazed,
and crazed to
begin my win.
It was close to slam time,
and I waited in line, shiny as a dime,
ready to word-whip whiny Lemon Pie Guy
and all the other hopeful poets. Most were
younger than thirty, and some were flirty.
There were girls in low-cut shirts
and hip-hugging jeans, exhibiting cleavage
and thongs.
“That's just wrong,” I whispered
to Twig. “They think they're going to win
if the judges are dirty old men.”
Jumpy-grumpy
with an overdose of caffeine,
pumped with adrenaline,
I felt almost lean
and way too close to mean.
“Ssh,” I said
to the socializing people
woozy and schmoozing
in a conference room
reeking of cheap perfume.
I was oozing competition:
a magician wishing
for the best rabbit trick.
I made a stage
in my mind
and practiced the lines
of my Lemon Pie Guy masterpiece.
Nervousness ceased,
and I was a beast:
the Queen of the Slam
about to begin.
Twig and I were
slam virgins, having
never been alone on stage
before. This would
be our first burst
into the world of
performance, which
was enormous.
We went into the slam room,
which was just another
gloomy conference room, with
carpet as stiff as the bristles of
a broom,
air-conditioned cool as a tomb,
with Ruffles chips crushed
into the rug.
The competitors were nervous,
and they bit their lips,
nibbled on fingernails,
and shuffled and whispered
in muffled voices.
Aluminum folding chairs
were lined in close rows, facing
one microphone standing alone
on a stage that looked like
plywood. I hoped it would
hold my weight, as I waited
for my name to be announced.
A lady wearing floral print flounced
to the stage and bounced around,
chirping, “Welcome to the
Tin Can Poetry Slam!
Poets will perform
in alphabetical order,
backward. No merciless
heckling or cursing at
competitors. The prizes
will be surprises. First
contestant: Ed Zedman.”
Ed Zedman was a dead man,
pale and boring.
I was almost snoring.
Then came Sarah Yahn,
who bombed, stuttering,
fluttering the air
with words that
meant nothing.
Next was Twig,
and I was big
enough to wish
her luck.
“Break a leg, Twig,”
I whispered
as she swished in fishnets
to the front of the room.
Twig did
her “Revolution” poem,
and a heckler booed:
pollution in the room.
I clapped and cheered,
snapping my fingers
like those old Beat poets
back in the sixties.
Twig took a bow
and then sat down.
I looked around,
and the man who'd hounded
Twig was picking his nose.
“Gross,” I said. “That's just
crude, dude.”
Twig put her hand
over my mouth.
“Don't be so rude.
It ruins the mood.”
Two hours later,
it was finally
my turn to burn, churning words
like milk into butter,
like ice cream
in the freezer.
Some geezer observer
had the nerve
to make a smart remark
about the size of my chest,
and it was a test
of my temper to ignore
the simple pimple-nosed
old fart.
I bebopped up
to the front,
and took a deep breath,
and pushed out my chest.
At the top of my lungs,
I shouted out my poem,
screaming, keeping the beat
of the sentences
with bounces of my chest
and with the rest of me.
My fat was moving, grooving,
all in one direction,
and there was no correction
because I made no
mistakes, baby.
Sweating, forgetting
my flesh, I almost
wet my pants
with the dance
of Sister Slam.
Hoarse by the time
I finished yelling,
my leg flesh turned to Jell-O,
and I noticed a flash of yellow
hair in the judges' stand.
It wasn't just any old man:
it was the obnoxious, cocky
Lemon Pie Guy. The other
judges looked just like him:
old as mold, cold-shouldered,
with hearts like boulders.
My face red
as raspberry-cherry
Kool-Aid,
I made my way
back to my seat,
where I knew
that I'd been beat.
“Geez,” I hissed
to Twig,
“Sister Slam missed
this one.
I messed up big!”
“That's why,” said Twig,
“you should be nice.
Take my advice
with a grain of rice,
but I think that mean words
are like head lice: they ice
the judges so much
that you'd never win
with words like that,
even if they weren't
about him.”
My eyes brimmed,
and on a whim,
I hugged Twig.
“I'm sorry,” I said.
“I've been a moron.
I'm going to work
harder at being smarter
before I talk
so stupid.”
My voice squeaked
like chalk
on a board.
“You can't afford
to blurt out words
like puke, rebuking
everybody who rubs
you the wrong way,”
Twig said.
I nodded,
my body heavy.
“Rule Number Four
of this most-hip road trip,”
whispered Twig.
“Always check out the judges
before a slam.”
We checked out
of the Sleep Best Inn
and headed
for the rotten-egg-scented
parking lot.
“Laura, your car!”
shouted Twig.
Somebody had written
witless shit, scribbled
in dribbled soap on the doors:
FATTY'S ROAD TOURS, it said.
I just shook my head.
Some people needed
to get a life.
I noticed that a bunch of
hunched-over pre-teenyboppers
were cracking up,
cackling hysterically
until they practically rolled
on the ground.
“Yo,” I yelled.
“Sticks and stones
can break my bones,
but words will never
hurt me.”
I was lying.
I pried
my eyes wide,
trying to look
cruel, but it was bull,
because I knew
I looked like a fool.
Twig played it cool.
She waved like a
beauty queen,
like Miss Teen Americaâ
a barracuda of coolnessâ
like she was riding in a
lime-green limousine,
or inside a fine convertible.
“Let's make an excellent exit;
don't hex it,”
she whispered,
and we drifted sexily
in the direction
of my 1969 Firebird,
ignoring the door words.
We threw our suitcases
into the backseat,
gleaming, beaming
screamingly fake smiles.
I stared straight ahead,
at the steeple of a Jersey church,
and pretended that God
was throwing rocks
at the jerks, giving them
what they deserved.
The nerve of some people
who call themselves human.
I was fuming
and started the car
by racing the accelerator.
We left
the Sleep Best Inn
of Tin Can
with a squeal of wheels,
leaving rubber
skid marks
in the parking lot.
I laughed fearlessly
at the sight of the weirdos
in my rearview mirror.
“Good-bye and good riddance!”
I said. “Hope we never meet again.”
Then Twig said,
“Where to next?”
“I don't know.
Let's just blow
this clown town
and hit the road.”
“Laura,” said Twig,
“I mean, Sister.
We can't afford to
waste gas.
You know, we're low
on cash.”
“Nah,” I said.
“Don't fret.”
But just then,
with a sputter
and a mutter
and a flutter
of a cough,
the gas tank
of my poor old car
went empty,
which was exactly
the most embarrassing
exit we ever
could have made,
one-eighth
of a mile
from the Sleep Best Inn.