By blackrandl1958 and
GeorgeAnderson
I have long been a Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band fan. The ballad, "Turn the Page," is one of their finest. This story is based on that song, but more closely on the music video of the Metallica cover. This story is for my daughter, who pointed the video out to me and asked me to write a story. For you, with my love. Credit to whom due:
Thanks to my team: Harddaysknight is my mentor and gives me critical review. SBrooks103x also gives me a pre-post read. Thanks to Hale1 and GeorgeAnderson for their editing and to GeorgeAnderson for his writing contribution. Thanks to the good folks at Systeme International, for their input.
I awoke in a strange place again, and confusion gripped me. I reached out for Nathan, wanting the reassurance of his warmth. The bed was empty, cold lonely emptiness. I fell back on my pillow and the gaping wound of my life overwhelmed me. I wept, the bitterness of my tears scalding my cheeks as it had every morning for five years. I heard stirring in the next room and quickly reached for the box of tissues beside the bed. I composed myself. Merrilee was awake, and I couldn't let her see me crying.
I heard her footsteps and she appeared in the open doorway. Her angelic little face peeked around the door. She saw that I was awake and her face lit with joy. She walked toward the lonely bed, Claire in her right hand, being dragged by one foot, her foam-stuffed head bumping along the carpet.
"Hi, Mama," she said. "Can we get dressed and go get breakfast?"
"Yes, baby," I told her. "Let Mama shower, and we'll go." She kissed me and scampered back to the other room. I heard her shower start. I needed a cigarette. There were two left, and I lit the morning's first, got to my feet and staggered off to the bathroom. The hot water washed away the excesses of the night before, and I dressed, my mind a million miles away. I tried to remember where we were. Somewhere east of Omaha, I remembered. So many places had jumbled in my mind that I couldn't remember.
I dressed casually, packed my bag for later and went outside. Merrilee was already outside, sitting on the parking pylon in front of the door in the motel parking lot, talking to Claire. We got in the car and I put in the keys. There was only a click when I turned them. Damn it! This was the last thing I needed! I breathed a quick prayer and turned the key again. On the fourth try, it caught and the car started. I thanked whatever deity had provided and we went down to the diner.
I stopped at the convenience store for a fresh pack of smokes, and we went inside the diner. Merrilee ordered breakfast, and I got coffee. We were running a little short. She chattered away and I divided my attention between her and absent-mindedly looking out the window, lost in my own misery.
I had been happy, once. That all came crashing down on New Year's Eve, five years ago. Nathan and I had a huge fight. I had gone for an audition, and he was very angry with me. He wanted me to go back to college, but I was an actress. The audition turned out to be for a soft-core porn film some sleazy producer was putting together. Nathan hit the roof when I told him.
"Damn it, Alyssa, why don't you just stand down on the corner and sell yourself?" I had never seen him so angry. "Go down to the Kit-Kat club and strip off! What the hell is wrong with you?"
"Nathan, it isn't like that." I tried to explain. "It's all about getting a break. Someone sees you and you're on your way, a producer or a director. You get your face in front of the camera and that's what it takes."
"Your face!" he exploded. "No, your tits and your ass, that's what you get in front of the camera! Do you imagine that anyone will be looking at your face? Do you think they'll be listening to you do lines? The only reason they will look at your face is to see you fake coming while some diseased porn actor feels you up. I've had enough, Alyssa. I'm through with this 'actress' shit. Get dressed, we have a party to attend."
That had been the beginning of the end. I was mad as hell. Why couldn't he understand? He didn't own me, and I WAS an actress. We went to the party without speaking a word, I got smashed, and the next thing I knew, I was signing the contract to do that film. I would just hide it and Nathan would never know. When that major production came around, I would know I had done the right thing. Of course, someone tipped him off and that was the end.
"Mama, can I get a Coke to go?" Merrilee asked.
"Yes, baby." I signaled the waitress.
I never spoke to Nathan again. He refused to have any contact with me and I got the divorce papers a week later. I had a drunken weekend, ended up sleeping with my "co-star" and six weeks later, I found out I was pregnant. I never saw my co-star again, and never wanted to see him. He might have tried to take Merrilee from me. I later heard he got hepatitis and died from complications.
The waitress brought Merrilee's Coke, and we went back to the car. It started and I took her to the park for a while. I pushed her on the swings and the merry-go-round until it was time to go.
The sign outside Wild Cherries said "Classy Ladies." Right. Well, it was a job, and I needed a job. I even acted. I acted as if I was having a good time, was turned on by all the creeps trying to get their hands on me, and gave a damn about anything that happened.
I took Merrilee to the dressing room, got her a can of Coke to refill her drink and got dressed. Maybe undressed would be a better word. A black leather jacket, black leather shorts, so short my ass hung out, a red lace bra and panties; that's what we actresses wore. At least the ones who worked at Wild Cherries. I kissed Merrilee, put Claire in her arms, told her I'd be back after my set and walked down to the runway for my intro.
I did my thing, shuddering on the inside as the creepy men sitting around the stage, eyes glinting like ravening beasts, greasy lank hair and sweating faces, leered at my routine. Old men, bitter and cynical, young losers, unable to get a date, all lusting over the gyrations of a 30-year-old woman who looked older than she was, five years of self-destruction showing in the lines around her eyes, boobs beginning to sag, ass no longer as tight as it once was. We were a crowd of losers, huddled together in our misery, which always loves company.
I finished my routine and the desultory rain of bills followed. I smiled my plastic smile, gathered the money and strutted off stage, my self-disgust almost more than I could bear. This was the least disgusting thing I was.
When I got to the dressing room, I discovered the most disgusting thing I was. There she sat, in front of the mirror, garish makeup applied to that innocence, a pink boa around her little shoulders, some scraps of lace tied around her child's body.
"Look, Mama, I'm a dancer!" She was beaming with pride, and my soul withered and died. The tears fell from my eyes in a bitter rain and I collapsed to the floor. If I'd had the means, I would have taken my life, right there in that dressing room. My heart, my only reason for existing, had just finished my own personal tale of horror and despair.