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- "Indecision"
- by Sarah Jahn
-
- I rolled the glowing tip of ash against the edge of the cup, and
- watched the burnt tobacco and paper fall. I'd been smoking too much
- lately. Funny how I could think that and keep lighting one damn
- Dunhill after the other. Must be stress. Yeah. That was it. My hand
- crept up to my temple and started to massage it lightly, then harder,
- dragging strands of hair into my eye. I had found myself obsessing
- today... I was lying on the still damp grass near the pond with a
- friend of mine.
-
- We were watching the ducks swim aimlessly around, and the swan make a
- general obnoxious pest out of itself; both normal activities for the
- pond life at the University. And she and I both were shifting position
- every so often to catch a view of the passing students, and to see
- what the step sitters were up to over at the Student Union. Like I
- said, normal. It was spring. The hormones were out.
-
- Today was beautiful. The sun was shining down, drying off
- the last of the spring run-off. The wind was just cold enough to carry
- the memory of winter. It hadn't taken much convincing to get her to come
- with me and hang out.
-
- She flipped through her newly-purchased Cliff notes on Moby Dick, and I
- stared up towards the south end of campus. So many people. It seemed
- like thousands passing by. Maybe it was. Damn, this University had a
- lot of students. I looked at them. A woman, dressed in a sheer skirt and
- loose top that clung to her chest as the wind blew over her. The skirt
- billowed attractively around her tanned calves as she went by, and I
- smelled the faintest spice of perfume. A man, in faded green pants, black
- sweatshirt, tightly-laced combat boots, long brown hair that curled
- at the nape of his neck. The sleeves were pushed up, and I could see
- the hard muscles of his forearm as he pulled his falling backpack up.
- I looked further, past the immediate crowd that I'd already seen. Then
- I realized who I was looking for, and sighed. This was getting pretty
- stupid.
-
- I was graduating in a few weeks, and here I lay, looking for a guy I
- hardly even talked to. Maybe I should get pushed back to freshman year
- for being such an idiot.
-
- It had started... When? I wasn't sure. After I realized who he was.
- That he was in my class. Of course, I was the second of us to realize
- who the other was. One day he had seen me log into my account and
- placed me. Not long after that, I had asked to borrow his notes from
- our course together. I had been skipping too much this semester.
- Sleeping in, or just being a slug and reading junk like "Macho Sluts",
- or "Sandman" comics. Anyways, I needed to catch up in this lecture,
- the midterm was coming up pretty soon. After I had taken them from
- him, I didn't look at them, but just stuffed them in my bag and took
- off. Later that night, I had opened the cover and caught a glimpse of
- the name penned inside. Hmmm. I wondered if it was the same person
- that posted those letters to the file. I started flipping through the
- lined pages. No dates. He didn't bother with writing them in. Shit.
- This was going to be harder to get than I thought. Screw it. I could
- borrow them from some drone in the back of the class that went there
- religiously. I looked at the doodles in the margins and grinned.
- Universal. I put the notes back in my pack and dropped it under the
- bed.
-
- I returned them the next class. He smiled and asked if I had been able
- to interpret his scribbles. I laughed and said sure. So what if I
- hadn't copied them, I could have read his writing. I got the others
- the next class. She had the dates. Dates, and she had parts joted in...
- I stared closer at the ink. Greek? Great. Oh well. If the professor
- thought I could read and write Greek, if I remembered them verbatim
- from her notes, could be brownie points in there somewhere. Yeah,
- right.
-
- I was logged in the next day, seeing who was on the system, reading my
- e-mail. I scanned the account names. Hurmph. Let's see if this is the
- same person. I tried the naive approach: "Hey, did you ever take a
- Classics class?" "Yeah, you borrowed my notes," the reply. Heh. I sat
- back in my chair and smiled. Nailed. End of conversation.
-
- Next class I said hi, and sat back up in the front, my usual spot.
- There was a small interval in between when I got there and when the
- professor arrived and started his lecture. With the knowledge of who
- the other was, we both just sat there. I pondered what to say, gave
- up, and opened the college paper. He opened his notes. I started
- reading the editorials. Rape sucks, racism is bad, the bureaucracy
- here pisses me off, I'm graduating and am whining... The normal. "Ok,
- class, here are last week's quizzes. Miss Bonivito?" I closed the
- paper and stuck it under my notes, opened to a blank page, dated it,
- and waited for the transcribing to begin.
-
- It went on like that. More letters appeared in the file - a public
- mailbox of mine that received mail from about ten people and had a
- couple lurkers as well. I had set it up my freshman year to discuss
- sex, pervert frosh that I was.
-
- It had passed from machine to machine as I got new accounts on each. Now
- students with accounts, mostly those in a small clique I was in, wrote
- in... I was glad to see new, well, aliases. His letters were
- well-written, intelligent, showed he'd been doing quite a bit of
- outside reading. Refreshing. Paganism, the occult, science fiction
- television, tantric approaches to sexuality, feminism,
- bondage/domination, gay curriculum in schools... The topics blew
- through as the days passed on. I found myself writing in almost every
- day.
-
- A couple days ago I had seen posters up around campus, advertising the
- lecture by a visiting author. He wrote cyperpunk stuff. Being a
- compu-geek, I was naturally interested. I walked into the graduate
- research center, going in to see if anybody I knew was around. They
- were, and as we stood around talking in the student consulting room,
- the lecture came up. A friend of mine had decided to go... She asked
- me if I wanted to meet her later in the high-rise after she taught her
- discussion. Maybe, I offered, and went off to check my daily influx of
- mailers. The terminal room was crowded, full of computer science
- newbies, writing their low-level programs or playing dungeon games. I
- went to sit down at one of the dinosaur terminals, a Morrow. Piece of
- Neolithic hardware.
-
- I heard music behind me as I turned to sit and saw he was
- there. It had been raining outside, and I was in a black jersey dress.
- Well, a damp black jersey dress. Wet, I corrected myself. I felt
- odd... The water had beaded up on the fabric like silver beads. I
- greeted him, and sat. More and more of the beads sunk through, meeting
- my skin. I logged in, and checked my mail, checked the file. Nothing
- new.
-
- He asked me, or I asked him. It was the class. "What were you doing for
- your paper?" "Not taking that final right?" "Oh, Dionysian orgies?"
- "Man, I thought I had to do... " I moved and turned to sit sideways in the
- chair, letting one arm hang over the back. He didn't look directly at
- me during the whole conversation, I thought. Maybe a flick of an intake
- with his eyes but that was all. I asked if he was into the "whole
- cyberpunk thing", knowing his reply. At a yes, I followed up with if
- he was going to the lecture that night. "Oh, really? Cool". Skipping a
- class to go even. A friend ran in then, to ask me about a concert we
- were going to the next day. After that, I got back into my account.
-
- After wasting about a large chunk of time, I figured I should go get
- something constructive to do. Maybe a paper... Yeah. When I came back
- in, I ended up across from him. As I tried to write an analysis of _The
- Aeneid_, failing miserably, I kept catching myself wanting to look up,
- over. His hair, thick and glossy, curled over his head in onyx
- waves, over his neck. Dark lashes, brows. Stubble a clean shadow,
- clear brown eyes. He laughed at something he was reading off the
- screen. That smile. I forced myself to turn a page in the book and
- look at it, and start typing.
-
- Later, I asked him if he was still going, my voice light. "Oh, what time
- is it? Shit, thanks, I would've been at that all night if nobody
- stopped me." We walked together out into the rain. None of us had
- umbrellas. The rain fell coldly, I wrapped my arms under my breasts
- and shivered. Once inside, I felt the warmth start to dry my skin and
- hair. Sitting, in the dimness of the lowered lights and the heat of
- the dark, I listened to the author speak, laughed at his jokes. He was
- good. I'd have to get his book. The shoulder next to me moved against
- mine briefly and I found myself focused on that small space of
- sensation, through layers of fabric. To imagining more, like the
- warmth of his skin, the scrape of his rough face on my lips, smell of
- his hair. My heart beat hard in my throat as I eased myself back in
- the seat and recrossed my legs. I had ideas of being blunt then. Just
- asking him straight out what he thought of me. But the incredible fear
- of rejection kept my mouth silent.. and me stuck in a world of banality.
-
- It ended, and I was entrenched in a group of people I had just been
- introduced to when he brushed past me with a goodbye. I caught him in
- my eye, holding his olive-green bag, then he was gone. As the talk
- went on in front of me, I pushed the image away, and put on a grin.
- Flicking away my hair, I laughed at one man's joke, watched his eyes
- as he looked me over. Here was a guy, perfectly blatant in his
- appraisal. I, on the other hand, was being a complete coward about the
- whole thing.
-
- "Though I've tried before to tell her/Of the feelings I have for her
- in my heart/Everytime I come near her/I just lose my nerve/As I've
- done from the start..." I refolded the lyrics and put them down beside
- the stereo, turning up the volume.
-
- I stripped off the clothes, and put on a robe. I stared at myself in the
- mirror. Black kohl around my eyes, dark lipstick, two pairs of gold
- hoops in my ears. They'd gone well with the grunge look today. I
- pushed the long bangs out of my eyes and took out the earrings. The
- sweatshirt lay crumpled on the floor. I kicked it out the way as I
- passed by, going to the shower. Nothing like your own cowardice to
- induce self-pity. My mouth turned down in aggravation as I flipped the
- water on. As I watched the rivulets run down into the drain, I
- thought. Contemplating what to do, how far to push this, an
- infatuation. Pros and cons flashed briefly past in my mind.
-
- Graduating in a very few weeks. So was he. He was heading off to
- grad school, in physics, in Pittsburgh. He listened to industrial
- music. He was from Chicopee and commuted here. Sources had it as
- unknown whether or not he "seeing" anyone. Did it matter anyway? All
- this information I had learned and did I give a shit. I had not dated
- anyone since my last boyfriend and I broke up... in late 1991. Almost
- two entire years. Sex between then and now had been sporadic. It was
- pretty unfeeling on both sides. Superficially sastifying. I was tired
- of emotionless couplings. Passion would be nice. I didn't need love
- now.
-
- I kept having these pictures come up at the oddest moments in the
- day, from my imagination. Thoughts of possible sensations and words.
- Even as I typed in these words, I wondered at my motivations. A friend
- of mine had suggested I was writing it in on Unix, in Emacs, only to
- post it or send it to him. I denied it but it nagged at me. Maybe it
- had been the reason, subconciously lurking, and he had exposed it.
- Because now it was a thought to me... send this to him? Post it to the
- net? Delete it? I wavered between all.
-
- I rinsed the final traces of soap off. It was like a weighted scale
- tipping back and forth in my head. At first it swung back and forth
- quickly, slowing as the loads evened out. I grabbed the towel and
- started to dry myself. It clicked back from one side to another. No
- resolution. Jesus, even mental props didn't help. I laughed and
- stepped out of the stall, put the soaps away.
-
- 20 days left on this campus. No matter what, there would be something
- decided, whether on purpose or simply through my own dreary
- inaction. I'd have to see... I had watched so much. How sick was
- I of it? The wallflower role was wearing thin.
-