Author's note:
this story works as a self-contained entity, but it is the second and final (god willing) story involving our narrator, Noora Afshar, and our antagonist, Paul. Their first encounter is depicted in the story 'Blue Dress with Yellow Flowers.'
"Are you staying over in Culpeper again over break, Noora?" the student editor of the sociology journal asked across the breakfast table in the dining hall. "I know you were there over Thanksgiving, with Lizzy Baines."
"No," I said. "I can't contrive a reason to stay away from my family for five weeks."
"Ah," the editor said. "The north then."
I nodded.
"You seemed different when you came back after the summer." The editor was a perceptive girl, but nervous, fidgety.
"Well I was fucking ready to go to school," I said. I looked around for our mutual friends, who were still fixing their second plates, still filling their mugs with hot chocolate, still gathering their spoons and forks.
"I mean, you looked, I don't know, sick. Ill. Noora, that place seems toxic. I mean, your father is," the journal editor leaned forward, pushed her bobbed hair out of her face, "like a religious fundamentalist."
I declined to defend my father's bonafides as a secular, left-wing Afghan exile, and nodded instead at the editor's sagacity.
"Oh yes," I said. "He is the problem."
I did not leave Virginia until the very last. The train takes twelve hours to go from the college town in the Appalachian frontrange to the college town on the northeastern seaboard. And it was not until I packed, on the night of the winter solstice, to go home that I realized how different I was from the girl who'd boarded that northbound train at the end of May.
She'd had two suitcases full of clothes of all colors, long black hair that reached down between her shoulder blades, an open, easygoing disposition.
But as I looked at myself in the dull reflection in the double-paned window in the corner room of the university-owned victorian on Roanoke Place, I could see the accumulated changes.
A thinner face, almost gaunt, answered for the childish cheeks. Black hair, cut to a uniform severity ending at the bottom of the jaw, replaced the great sweep of locks.
I even had another tattoo, a line of verse in Tajik, down the outside of one thigh. The shoulder which Paul had pressed into the brick wall, however, remained always a little higher than the other in a state of permanent tension that left me with burning upper-back pain.
And a black t-shirt, slate-gray sweater, black jeans and black docs replaced the colors, the variance of fabric. In what I packed for home, there was so little, just repetition of black and gray and here and there a splash of red or muted blue. No color, no rich greens or sky blues, no yellows glowing with the promise of sun, no rich browns or burning oranges. So little, I could fit it in my smaller valise.
I found, in the bottom of my dresser, that blue dress and the gray cotton panties. I couldn't remember packing them for school, but I must've brought them from some talismanic need. I had scrubbed the cum out of the panties in the sink in the bathroom at home before I put them both through the wash after Paul, once a friend, raped me in the courtyard behind our hometown coffeehouse on the hottest day of summer.
I'd not worn either since.
And I thought about the semester intervening since my rape. Hard drinking, too much bad, sober sex with a sizequeen sorority defector who wanted to date me, too much bad, drunk sex with a rotating cast of men who gave me a passable version of penetrative pleasure. Too much relief at my first period after Paul raped me, birth control being less than 100% effective. Too much vomiting after meals, too much crying on too-fast walks around campus, with my music turned as loud as it would go. Too long spent lying on the bare wooden floor in my underwear, drunk sometimes, nearly catatonic others.
I closed the shades. I changed into the panties, into the dress. I masturbated.
Noora Afshar looked back at me in the train window as the shit-brown and dull-green of Virginia raced past under the lowering gray sky. She looked back at me as the fallen factories and leaning rowhouses of Baltimore and Philadelphia crept by, as the endless ranks of New York City marched past and the broken coast of Connecticut fell to darkness in the short twilight.
I could not avoid my own eyes, not until I disembarked in my town, somewhere east of Old Saybrook and south of Boston. I'd worn my old underwear on the train. I couldn't explain why.
But I kept it together as my father and brother picked me up, as we made it through a good dinner and a slow movie and evening prayers.
In the quiet of my childhood bedroom, I undressed and I sobbed in silence for the girl Paul had ruined behind the coffee shop, for all the ease of life I'd lost, and for the friendship poisoned now by violence.
The university puts lights up all around downtown, and the northern December gets so dark that when the clouds cover the sun those little silvery strings are all there is to light the place by day.
I spent the day before christmas eve walking downtown, sneaking around the empty university buildings and the quads. And I made my pilgrimage to the coffee shop. I tried first in the morning, but could not bring myself to enter, then went again as the afternoon waned. I took my coffee and went out into the blue twilight and walked to the spot on the wall where Paul had pinned me. A few small flakes fell. Nothing stirred, no one moved. There was no drama to this place.
But as I looked at the spot where he'd fucked me, the fearful arousal grew. And I snuck back into the coffee shop, down into the dark hall where the bathrooms were. I locked myself in one, balanced my coffee on the sink and slid my fingers into my pussy as I faced myself in the mirror.
The need to orgasm was overwhelming, even if the act of masturbation was, at this point, humiliating. I had to stifle my own moans and cries, and when I stopped shaking afterwards I had to wait a while longer to blink back tears.
My phone's vibration shattered the empty silence of the bathroom.
'Katie' the screen said.
Hey Noora, long time no see lol. Simon is hosting his yearly christmas party again on the 26th. I know you missed his black friday bash but i wanted to see if u were coming to this one
A pause.
idk if ur even in town
I snatched it up.
Simon was the year between Paul and me, a gregarious kid with a huge house in the northern part of town. His parents, a hospital administrator and a lawyer, made ungodly money and were the 'it's better they drink in the house than on the street' types.
All through high school he'd thrown parties, a strange combination of rager and formal, girls in fancy dresses and boys in slacks getting Drunk on the third floor, while in the basement the borderline junkies played ping pong and did lines off a cracked hand mirror.
And Katie, my old friend, Simon's girl.