Authors: Mary Gaitskill
They attacked her and beat her. That's what Edie said. Not at the party, but later, they swarmed her and beat her. She didn't even try to fight back; there were too many of them. Her little brother was there, but he didn't help. He actually stood there and laughed.
Between me and Ginger, there was hell to pay. Leave the girl alone, I told her. What do you want to do, get her hurt worse? And she went
nuts.
She beat the wall and screamed that if it weren't for me, she
could
come stay with us and nobody would hurt her again and I told her she was crazy and selfish and she ran out the door. It was raining and she just ran out into it. I waited and she didn't come back for I don't even know how long. So I went out in the car and found her walking in her sopping pants.
I opened the door; she got in. We drove around, up in the neighborhood where we'd first taken Velvet bike riding. I waited for her to talk. She said, “Please don't take her away from me. You wouldn't let us adopt, so at least let this happen. Can't you see how good it is for me? Don't you see how even Edie finally respects me? She finally sees me as a normal woman. I
am
a normal woman. I want to be normal. If we can't adopt, this is the closest I can come to having a child.”
I told her I was willing to consider adoption. She said no. She said, “I love her.”
I struggled to control my voice. I said, “If you love her, think about her safety. She's already been hurt. The truth is, she could get more hurt on those horses.”
She didn't answer until we were almost home. Finally she said, “I know.”
But when we talked to Velvet, she said it wasn't about the clothes. She said those girls just didn't like her. She said the clothes made them respect her. She said she was friends with some of them again.
It wasn't all of them right away. It was Alicia that called me a pig at recess and told me to “go hang around with the rich people.” I hit her and knocked her head to the side; I was strong because of working in the barn and she did not dare hit me back or even talk, she just held on to her face and stared at me.
It was later that her friends came up on me when I was walking to the train with Dante. Dante laughed while they hit me, but what else could he do? He was only seven. If he didn't laugh, he'd have to put his head down and feel like shit. So he laughed, and when they were done, he picked up my backpack and carried it for me. And when I got home, my mother looked at the places somebody'd cut my face with heavy rings and she put medicine on it. It made me remember when I was little and she would wash me and comb my hair more softly than she does it now. Sometimes she would hum a song and her touch and her voice would wrap us up in a place where there was nothing but her and me. I would be very still and I would want her to keep doing it forever. It was like that now, except it was even better because she was angry too, and not bitch-angry like at Mr. Nelson at the grocery. She was deep angry, but not at me; she was angry
for me.
This angry was big and warm like a horse, and it felt better than her nice. It was better than anything Ginger had, and what Ginger had was
good.
My mother said, “If this ever happens again, if they do this to you again, swear to God, I will hurt them like they have never been hurt before.” She said what she said before: “I will come after them with my
body.
”
Except that she didn't. It was Shawn that helped me the next time. They were following me down the street, and not even Dante was there. They were saying they were gonna beat me down, put me in the hospital this time. I looked at the buildings and cars going by and it was like everything was normal, like me getting beat down was normal. I thought of Ginger and my mare; that didn't make me feel stronger. It made me feel weaker. The girls got closer. And then like in a movie, Shawn came up beside me. “Hey, girl,” he said. “What's good?” I said, “Nothing good now. You see those girls?” He looked, I looked. “They gettin' ready to jump me like before.” All he had to do was look their way with a hard face. They stopped; him and me started. He asked if I wanted to smoke some weed with him. And I said yes.
On the phone, I asked if those girls were still bothering her. She said they were not. I told her a story from when I was her age, how a bunch of girls attacked me, how I knocked one of them down and they didn't bother me anymore.
She said, “I wouldn't do that.” She sounded amused.
I asked her, “Why not?”
Instead of answering, she asked if I believed in hell. At first I said no. Then I said, “Honestly, I think it's possible. Though I don't think you get sent there. I don't think God would have to send people there. I think they would go there by themselves.”
She asked, “Why do you think that?”
I said, “Look at how people act. They walk right into horrible things all the time. They actually go out of their way.”
I told her about the time I dreamed of going to hell on purpose. I was only seven, and in my dream, I went to hell to take the devil's treasure. I got lost, but finally I succeeded and I came back up and put the treasure under my bed. The dream was so realistic that when I woke up, I looked under my bed to see if the treasure was still there.
“Was it?” she asked.
“I don't remember. But really, those girls, they aren't bothering you?”
“No,” she said. “Not anymore.” And then, “I dreamed I went to hell too. Because my grandfather told me to. There was a door in your backyard.”
The hair on my arms stood up when she said it.
I went with Shawn because I wanted to get away from those girls and also show them what I could doâwalk away with a boy who looked famous. And because even though he wasn't Dominic, he was close to Dominic. Maybe Dominic would even be there, where we were going.
But he wasn't. There was only Shawn's grandmother there, and I could see where he got his dark skin; she was very black with her gray hair up in a net and she did not look happy to see me. The TV was on really loud; we sat on the couch and watched it. A woman was in the hospital and she had cancer and her man was with another woman. Shawn's grandmother said there would be dinner in a minute and we went into his room.
This time I did smoke. The smoke filled my body like Dominic's leg, only this time it was Shawn's leg. And then it was his hands. He kept trying to kiss me with that mouth of vampire rabbit teeth, and it just made me want to laugh. He kissed my lips soft, but it felt angry. He said, “You not really his cousin, are you? How old are you?” I said, “How old are
you
? What grade you in?” He said, “I'm not in no
grade,
” and the smoke filled my body again. He started kissing my neck. I said, “Your teeth are funny.” But he just said, “That so?” and then he took my hand and said, “Girl, you ever felt a man before?” And I pulled my hand back and said, “I've felt horses.” He laughed in this nasty way. I said, “I ride horses. Horses are bigger than a
man.
” I said
man
like he said
grade,
and he pulled back and said, “I don't see no horses here. It's me here.”
A lot of minutes had gone by and dinner was not ready.
The clothes that woman bought my daughter! They were nice, but too nice, like the woman was saying to me,
What's wrong with you, you can't even dress your child right?
I know that's not what it was supposed to be, but that was my first feeling and my first feeling is always right; whenever I've gotten into trouble, it's been because I didn't follow my first feeling. Besides, when Velvet put them on, she just looked conceited, a bitch royale, and she looks like that anyway. Maybe where Ginger lives girls can go around looking like that, but here you're gonna get
hurt
and
I knew it.
But everybody keeps telling me I'm too hard, I yell, I don't understand it hereâokay, fine. I can see she hates the clothes I can get for her, she always wants better and moreâokay, fine. Let her have it. Let her see. And she did see; she never wore those things again. But how stupid was this Ginger that she didn't even talk to me? How
disrespectful,
did she think she was dressing a doll? I knew she was silly, but I believed her to be good, or good enough. Was she? There
was
something strange in her eye, es raraâbut it never stayed long enough for me to know what it was. Mostly she looked immature, more girl than womanâa sad girl trying to be happy. Una sufridaâwhat else could she be, married but not one child? I could see the sadness and emptiness in her eyes and I'd feel her, that surely she's been through some real hell. Then she'd stare at me, and I'd know she was also something else. But what? She acted so big, walking up to me like she knew my daughter better than I did. But then the next second she'd seem so
lost.
Who was she? Why was she being so nice?
Then she sent me fifty dollars, and whatever she was, I had to take it. Mr. Diaz was moving out and I didn't know what I was going to do.
She passed her grade, even though she failed. Her grades were crap, but they pushed her through anyway. If the school passed her, did it make any sense to punish her? She was going on to middle school! So she came up again for the summer, this time for six weeks. I was going to tell her mom about the horses at the end of it, but I didn't. I sent her money instead. I sent it in a greeting card with a picture of horses on it. I said it was for Velvet's graduation, but really it was because Velvet told me that her mom was so broke a woman gave her money on the subway. The woman gave it to her mom because her mom was crying. The woman was Dominican, and she asked Mrs. Vargas why she was crying and she said, “I have no money for my family.” And the woman opened her purse and gave her five dollars. She said she wished she could give more, but she had a family too. Which I don't.
When I went back to the barn, Beth wasn't there anymore. Some of the horses weren't there either: Spirit and Blue Boy and Baby were gone. Instead there was a new girl named Heather and her horse, this weird pale horse she called Totally Crushed. Heather wore gold things, rings and little chains, and she had short, shiny nails and Barbie hair. I thought maybe she was one of the rich people Beth told me about, the ones who Beverly trained the horses for just so they could look good. But Heather already looked good on Totally. She was everything right and did everything right and everything that wasn't right made her sick. She didn't like Joker because “he doesn't want to work.” She didn't like Rocki because he was “wimpy.” She didn't like Fiery Girl because, besides being “psycho,” she had “ugly ears.” Who she liked was Beverly. And Beverly liked her
a lot.
I hated her worse than Gare and I think Gare hated her too. After Heather came to the barn, Gare didn't eat her lunch with everybody anymore. She went out and ate her sandwich on a feedbag, her shoulders curled up and her dumb purple head down in them.
The day Joker got loose was the day Heather finally did something wrong. It was mad hot, we were all sweaty and the horses were sleepy and all the big fans were going, and I was pushing this wheelbarrow of dirty sawdust to dump it when I heard Heather scream, “Loose horse!” And it was Joker. He'd gotten away from her when she was going in to clean his stall, and he was running, heading for the door, with his eyes going
Hee hee hee!
Pat yelled, “Get out the way!” and I threw myself flat against the wall and he went past like a smiling tornado, heading right for the door where Beverly was. I thought, Now
she's
gonna learn some respectâeven her.
But I was wrong. She saw him coming, and she grabbed a rake somebody left and stuck it right up in his face. He made a scared noise and turned around, and she followed him with the rake, chased him back into his stall.
“Good goin'!” yelled Pat.
“Watch what you're doing next time,” Beverly snapped at Heather, who turned red.
Which I would've liked except for what happened then. When I first rode Joker and he didn't do what I asked and Pat said, If he was your little brother, what would you do? I said, Hit him, and she said, I wouldn't try that with Joker. I didn't try it. I was nice and he did what I wanted and I was proud. Now Beverly was in his stall hitting him, like it was nothing. Like he was nothing. And Pat didn't say nothin'.
So I stood around Beverly and waited for her to say something about it. And she did, kind of. She told me a story about a boy my age at a place she used to work at in Texas. She said he worked in his father's stable and one day this stallion got loose. She said this boy knew that horse, that it was unpredictable. Still, that boy was stupid when he knew better. He saw that horse running right at him, and he stood in front of it and tried to stop it by waving his arms, and that stallion stood up and knocked the boy out with his hooves.
“The kid was out of it for days. They weren't even sure he'd come back to normal,” she said. “And he deserved it. Even his father thought it. People thought he'd put the horse down, but he didn't. It was a valuable horse and the kid did a dumb thing.”
“His own father?”
“Yeah.” She looked at me the way she looked at the horses when they were starting to make her mad. “It wasn't the horse's fault. He was just saying, âGet outta my way, you idiot.'â”
Then I really didn't understand. I still thought Beverly was cool. But like you think somebody scary is cool. Because she thought horses should be hurt if they acted up. And she did the same as the boy did, she got right up in Joker's face. But she was still on the stallion's side, and all I could think was, she felt that way because he was the one who hurt somebody. Like she did.