*To my reader: I wrote this for my creative writing English class in college. This actually happened to me… only I exaggerated certain parts of it to make the point! Basically, it’s a lesson when a relationship goes nowhere fast and my need to get out…
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“What made you turn off the Clearview?! Elizabeth and Matt said turn right off Bell Boulevard,” Malaia shouted.
“I know where I’m going,” Chris responded. “Trust me.”
“They’re calling. Hold on. They said you definitely missed it,” Malaia replied back.
“I’m sure it’s over there; I saw the movie theater from the bridge,” he said.
“No, we passed it and I would’ve gotten us here if we asked for directions again. Yeah, Matt’s an idiot, but it doesn’t mean you should be one right now too.”
“I know where I’m going. Trust me.”
“Jesus Christ. We just passed Shea Stadium! We’re on Northern Boulevard! Dude, this is nowhere near Whitestone Cinemas. So much for the movie.”
Malaia sat with her arms folded across her chest, peering out to the eeriness of the streets of Queens. She didn’t want to do this anymore. The air conditioner in the car broke down last week. It took way to much manual power to open the windows, so Malaia just sat there in the cracked leather seat.
“No, it’s up ahead. We need to drive further up,” Chris assured her.
“I’m telling you we’re headed west toward the other boroughs. When the numbers on the streets decrease, it means you’re heading toward the city!” Malaia retorted.
“No, that’s not true,” Chris answered.
“Okay, because you’re a fucking genius right? You always know where to go?” Malaia scoffed.
“Call Elizabeth and ask then,” Chris told Malaia.
“I’m trying,” Malaia stated. “I have no reception.”
“Why did I see it from the bridge and not here now?”
“I told you already, you got off at the wrong exit. Pull over before we head further in the wrong direction.”
Malaia thought about the temptations she had at college orientation, and how Malaia spoke of Chris so lightheartedly and affectionately to her new friends. Yet he was none of those things.
She looked out the window, noticing the reflection of the monster. The conspicuous people on the corner of the each block waned as they moved further north.
“No, I’m sure we’re going the right way,” Chris informed her in his false tough voice.
“No, we’re REALLY NOT though,” Malaia huffed.
Instead if smiling at her stubbornness, he made a grimace that made his nose flare… he really did look like a rat-like retard.
“At least we know we’re on Northern Boulevard,” Chris pointed out optimistically.
“Too bad we’re not on Long Island though,” she stated plainly.
“We’re still in Bayside,” Chris said.
“Okay Chris, we’re still in Bayside,” Malaia she replied, rolling her cold blue eyes.
The car was officially overheated. Chris breathed heavily, causing more difficulty for his girlfriend to breathe, let alone concentrate on her thoughts. The sweat from Chris’ crew cut began to landslide down his face. Malaia was praying he could sweat away to dust.
“Why aren’t there many people out right now? It’s only 11 or so.”
“Maybe because they’re smart and don’t wander the streets of the middle of nowhere! We just passed the sign. It said Brooklyn, Staten Island, left. Bronx, right. You jerk!!!!” Malaia bellowed.
Chris was stunned. He had never seen his girlfriend this angry since her graduation party when he failed to call for a ride home.
“I’m the one driving,” he asserted.
Malaia thought about her driver’s license, and the fact she didn’t have hers yet. She sighed in frustration. She never found the words to say what she wanted. All she could was, “You shouldn’t be. Why can’t we just turn around? It’s that fucking simple.”
Chris peered up to his rearview, examining the miles behind him.
“I didn’t see any sign,” Chris said puzzled. “Besides,” he pondered, “this isn’t so bad.”
“So bad? So bad? So bad?!” Malaia’s face grew scarlet.
Chris attempted to soothe her. “Come on, I’ll find it.”
This was no longer about his ignorance. To Malaia, this was deeper than that. She could not handle the anguish and the wrath she felt. She wanted to slap his across his shaven face, make his beady rat eyes wince like the baby he truly was.
“I’ll give you so bad! Do you remember getting lost in the Hamptons? During the day time?! And we couldn’t get back onto the L.I.E from the Sunrise Highway because you kept missing the exit.”
Chris defended his actions and his ego. “We couldn’t figure it out. I never drive on the Sunrise!”
“Did you also forget how terrified you were going to get lost in Flanders? Well, I’m afraid of going to Long Island City or Jackson Heights or whatever that I don’t know the area and no one here knows us and they would happily help us by car jacking us or holding us at gunpoint!”
Silence. Chris continued heading north, despite Malaia’s request to head home. Malaia eyed the dreary summer streets; steam rising to the windows from the surrounding sewers.
Malaia thought about the first time they officially met. She was stacking magazines at Barnes & Noble (which she wanted to quit so badly) and they bumped into each other and he gave her a lift home which gave her butterflies.
Now, she was stuck in the car with a nimrod, and there were no butterflies. Just nausea.
“There’s a used car dealership up ahead,” Chris muttered.
“Where the sign is written in a different language,” Malaia pointed out exasperated.
“Oh shit!” he cried, as he u-turned to head eastbound toward Long Island.
“Oh, now you listen, when we could have just turned around before when Matt and Elizabeth told us to? God, how dense are you?” she snapped.
“Um, sorry,” Chris managed to say.
Malaia held her hand up. At last! Reception on her cell phone was their gift from God for the night.
“Elizabeth is calling again.”
Malaia answered and gabbed for a few minutes. Chris entered the Long Island Expressway, stalling slightly with his stick shift car, meticulously watching the lanes surrounding them. His feet touched the pedals gently as though he was playing a piano for a different sound than the lack of conversation in the car. The car slowed as red taillights illuminated the night.
The radio repeated the top requested songs of the night from two hours prior their journey to the middle of nowhere. Malaia tapped the window with her chipping manicure, prodding the radio buttons with another. There wasn’t a station that played a song that didn’t make her want to regurgitate everything- everything she wanted to say or do. She wondered what Chris was thinking and why he so patient, why she saw this distorted face staring back at her from her passenger window and why there was a traffic jam on the expressway at this hour.
Cars were on all sides, slowly boxing them in. Chris just looked straight ahead. What was he thinking? she wondered. Probably about college. He was always talking about going to this merchant marine academy. They were going to different schools this year, and it was going to change. High school was easier. Senior year was easier. College was a dead end for their relationship; or what was left of it.
Chris drummed his fingers on the edges of the steering wheel. He never honked the horn. He should, especially due to the fact that there was no reason for people to adhere to a speed limit of 55 mph without any logical explanation. One time there was a woman driving on the wrong side of the road, charging for them headfirst without a clue. Malaia reached over to honk the horn for him and he continued to resist. They could have died!
She was wondering if she should say something like, “So that was interesting and kind of nightmarish,” but it no time seemed appropriate to break the silence. All Malaia really wanted was to hang out with Elizabeth before the summer was over, before Malaia and Matt were home taking nightly trips to Dunkin Donuts, and complaining about how boring their town was when their friends were no longer home.
Chris didn’t say much. Come to think of it, he never really did. He pretended to be outgoing. He was sometimes so phony around certain people, and when he and Malaia were alone, he would tell her what he really thought of her friends. Not the smartest thing for a guy to do when his girlfriend has been best friends with the same people for so many years. Chris continued on with his stupid driving skills, his stupid facial expression, his stupid stupid-ness…
But Malaia realized she was stupid. It was no longer about going to the movies.
She started thinking about “The Tell-Tale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe. How although the man was dead, the killer could hear his victim’s heart beating. The madness of the guilt had taken over him. The monster she had become was the same way. It was going to win. It would make her say or do something she may regret.
The traffic began to move more rapidly on the expressway. Exits 28 to 34 were a blur. Malaia was incredibly tired and bitter. She was even being meaner to her parents and siblings. Malaia acted like she hated them, when she really wanted to say “I love you, I’m being held prisoner by my own guilt to let it go this far! I don’t like him as much as I thought! Please, for the love of God, help me!“
Malaia turned up the volume on the radio to drown out the voices in her head.
Chris mumbled when they got off at their exit while his girlfriend watched her monster conceal itself in the shadows. He finally spoke up a few blocks from Malaia’s house.
“So, are you coming to my training camp ceremony for school?” Chris asked her.
Z100 played “This Love” by Maroon 5 on the radio. It was too disgustingly appropriate for the moment. Each lyric kept going and going…
Malaia was paying close attention to the lyrics. They were speaking to her.
She said goodbye too many times before…
He waited for her response. “Huh, M?”
“Oh, um I don’t know. What date is it?” Malaia inquired, though she knew perfectly when it was.
And her heart is breakin’ in front of me…
“The thirteenth,” Chris replied. “And I’m not going to be back until after your birthday.”
And I have no choice…
“Oh, um that’s cool,” Malaia said, shielding her disappointment. “I mean, I doubt I’ll be doing anything serious.”
Yeah, nothing serious, Malaia thought. I’m only turning eighteen! “I mean, I’ll come but my brother has a Swimmer’s Banquet I have to go to.”
“You’ll be back on time. I promise,” Chris said, “my parents will get you back quick.”
Unlike you, she wanted to say, but hesitated.
They pulled up to her steep driveway, as though it was to pull her to the high heavens and away from the craziness of Jackson Heights, the hideousness of his old car, the drama of this soap opera-worthy relationship!
He leaned in for his routine kiss good night. Malaia really wanted to extend her hand out like it was a meeting. Like a “sorry we can’t and shouldn’t be together anymore, nice knowing you, lose my number, don’t ever come to my job ever again” type of thing. Instead, she kissed him on the cheek.
“I’ll see ya,” he said, his typical one-liner that caused her to cringe and cackle inside.
She looked at him inquisitively, one last time, trying to remember what she fell for.
“Yeah,” she said, “I’m sure you will.”
As she closed the door, her monster, the one she tried to hide from all this time, gave her a wink and a nod through the passenger window.