She was a big tough woman. The first to come along. That showed me being female meant you still could be strong...
On the third floor of Lofgren Hall, Shari Keefer stared up at the ceiling in the room she shared with fellow incoming freshman, Becky Karceski. Welcome Week at Blake College was already in full swing. The campus and residence halls buzzed with activity in spite of the oppressive August heat. The Blake College campus was beautiful. A verdant expanse of neatly trimmed lawn stretched beneath the shade of trees too numerous to count. Blake, the city's namesake college for women, swarmed with students and parents. Small groups gathered outside under the shade of a trio of towering birch trees. Others carried suitcases and boxes of personal belongings as they came and went in the six residence halls.
Shari was excited and she looked forward to the start of her classes next week. When her parents helped bring the last of her things up to her dorm and said their goodbyes, the 19 year old knew that at long last, she officially reached adulthood. She was on her own now; free to make her own decisions and do whatever she wanted as long as she kept her grades up. The feeling was exhilarating and a little overwhelming at the same time.
School is school wherever you go, she supposed. But high school was stricter, and at times, suffocating. That feeling was made worse by the presence of hall monitors and five minute passing periods with the constant threat of detention for the high crime of being more than one second late to the next class. College is different; something that many teens looked forward to. With college and dorm life came an unprecedented amount of freedom. And although each residence hall at Blake assigned a dorm mother, their only real concern was keeping rowdiness to a minimum and ensuring compliance with house rules set by campus staff. As long as a student attended classes regularly and kept her nose clean, they'd never pry into anyone's life or ask any hard questions.
Shari turned her head and watched while Becky hefted one of two suitcases she'd brought onto her bed. The diminutive brunette opened it and started putting the contents in the top drawer of their shared dresser. "Maybe we can go downtown when I'm finished unpacking." Becky said. "Get a pizza and see a movie or bowl a few games at the Comet."
"I can't, Becky. I'm kinda busy."
"Busy with what? Class doesn't even start until Monday--and I don't wanna go eat in the dining hall--not yet. Figured we'll be seeing enough of it when class starts!"
"I'm just...going to see a friend." Shari realized she shouldn't have paused mid-sentence like that.
Becky pounced. "Who's your friend? Can't be Craig Carlson. He left town last week. He's going to Loyola I think...at least, that's what Irene Olofson said."
"I haven't seen Craig since graduation, so no, I'm not seeing him."
"Then who?"
"Look, I'd rather not say, okay?" Shari said. "It's just a friend, that's all. Maybe we could go downtown tomorrow afternoon unless you're busy."
Becky closed the now empty suitcase and stowed it under her bed. She reached for her purse and paused at the door. "Okay. I gotta walk over to the bookstore and then I'm getting something to eat. I'll be back later." She stuck her head back in the doorway. "Hey--don't let Miss Olsen see if you plan on bringing your friend back here sometime." She said, referring to Miss Martha Olsen, Lofgren Hall's house mother.
"I'm not seeing any guys."
"Yeah, okay..." Becky's voice faded down the hall.
Shari sat up and moved off the twin sized mattress of the bed she occupied. She stood in the middle of the small, nondescript room staring at a clutter of boxes and suitcases containing most of the clothes she was able to grab in a single armload from her closet at home. A laundry basket sat on top of the small writing desk next to her bed. It was empty except for a small batch of record albums. Becky's parents brought a small record player so the two of them could listen to music any time they liked. It was a thoughtful gesture. They even bought a few new albums.
There were about 10 LP's in the stack and a couple 45's. Shari plugged the record player in and looked through the albums. Shari knew Becky since they both went to Talcott High School, but they didn't have any classes together then, and their friendship was casual. She figured they'd have the same tastes in music, and she was right:
The Who
,
Badfinger
, and
Led Zepplin
gathered together in the laundry basket like a reunion of old friends she hadn't seen in ages. But instead, Shari's interest was piqued by an album she'd never seen before.
I Know You Know
. The singer, Meg Christian (Shari presumed that's who it was), stared back at her from a monochrome forest of trees and fallen leaves. She turned the album over. It was brand new, and it still had a price sticker. "Diana's WomanSpace..." That's the feminist bookstore downtown, about a block or so away from the Comet. She'd passed by the storefront many times, but she never went inside.
Shari skimmed the song titles, and her eyes settled on one in particular.
"Ode to a Gym Teacher..."
Her lips uttered the words, compelling her to take the record out and play it. A little music wouldn't hurt while she changed her clothes before heading out to see her friend. The turntable spun and the needle slowly lowered, making contact with the vinyl grooves. A volley of crackles and pops added an audible layer of familiarity, pairing nicely with the strumming guitar.
Well, in gym class while the others
Talked of boys that they loved
I'd be thinking of new aches and pains