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Something
Once Learned
By
Michael Copperman
One year in my late twenties I lived for a time with a twenty-one year
old drug-dealing stripper named Alexa. Being with her required constant
restraint, but I was naive enough to mistake pity for love, and so,
insomniac, I often walked the dark apartment while she slept, traced
circles about the entry, living room, and kitchen, whispered the soles
of my feet over the carpet. The thing I never touched was the green
mountain that rose from the living room floor, the bounty of her night:
a pile of ones. I would stand at the foot of the pile and gaze at the
framed poster on the far wall, the promotion for the 91 Winter performance
of the American Ballet Company: a ballerina posed in mid-arabesque,
hands stretched forward, chin upturned proudly. Everything Alexa had
wanted to be at fifteen, back when she spent three hours a day in the
studio, practicing and dreaming of bigger things, higher stages, applause
so loud even her father would put his hands together and clap. That
was her before the back injury, before the surgery that ruined her dancer’s
posture but gave her torso a certain curve that men found sexual. The
doctors had told her she would never dance again. About ballet anyway,
they were right.
The last night, we had already fought and she had gone to bed. It was
always the same fight: I talked down to her, I was distant; she sold
coke, she liked being ogled for cash. I walked a long time, decided
I would leave the next morning. When I entered the bedroom the earthy
scent of pot enveloped me. She was on her stomach, naked the way she
always slept, her salon-tanned skin dark against the white sheets. I
lowered myself to the bed so as not to wake her, lay on my back listening
to the night sounds. Faraway a train whistle howled once, twice, and
then there was the muted click of wheels on track, rising to a roar
as the train neared, falling again as it receded. In the quiet the train
left behind a woman called out in Spanish, the words unintelligible,
only the rhythm giving the language a name. And then I felt a shifting
near me, and Alexa crawled cat-like onto me, rested her head on my chest.
She wasn’t awake, it was only that this was how we’d always slept. After
a time her breathing slowed with sleep. She didn’t know I was already
gone, any more than she understood it wasn’t desire that had held me,
but fear of being alone. Her elbow dug mercilessly into my ribs, and
soon pain bloomed through my back and I was too hot all over. But she
was soft and warm and looked like an angel, so I clenched my teeth and
after a time the pain ebbed to a throb.
I couldn’t sleep that night, not like that, but I didn’t move and wake
her either. I lay admiring the dark sweep of her hair, the long, clean
line of her shoulder blade curving to the hollow of her back. The way
her legs bent away symmetrically, ankles together, ballet-muscle memory,
perhaps, but also something more. Something that once learned, the body
could not forget.
I don’t remember
who taught me that devotion is a form of mourning for what is lost,
just as I’ve forgotten what city Alexa moved to, something starting
with an ‘A’ or ‘M’; I get it mixed with where other lovers have gone,
all the places that might be different. All I still know of Alexa is
this: even in sleep she flexes the lean muscles of her calves, extends
her toes in a dancer’s point.
Michael
Copperman teaches composition at the University
of Oregon. He has an MFA in Fiction Writing from the University of Oregon
and a B.A. in English with Creative Writing from Stanford University.
He also taught fourth grade for two years in the black public schools
of the Mississippi Delta. Currently, he is working on a novel about
that experience.
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photo by Dinty
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