SASHA MARTIN
This fictional story is copyrighted, please respect that. WARNING: This story is inappropriate for those younger than 18. It is disturbing. Please keep this in mind when you decide whether or not to read the story.
SURPRISE
When told that
life is full of surprises, you obviously can’t imagine what these surprises
will entail—then they would no longer be
surprises. When waking up, planning the day, thinking about future dreams, no one
ever internalizes, “yes, the
unexpected will most likely occur at such and such a time, for such and such an
interval, and affect me in xyz ways.”
You see, when the unexpected happens? It doesn’t take you by surprise as if ah, there’s a mouse! No. These surprises
come at you like an angry boxer, sweat spraying and gut heaving, taking as many
swings as it’ll take to hit you— hard.
And, eventually a red glove will connect with your cheek: CRUSH—BOOM! You’ll be lying on the floor, never fully realizing
what hit you, or why. This angry boxer and his mean punch came to me three
years ago, hidden in an AC Transit bus.
It was the
notoriously unpredictable 51B. I emphasize “unpredictable” because this is the
reason I would have normally walked. But, the dark clouds were leering at me,
smoothing their hands together in plot: how to get Clara the most wet in the
least amount of time. And, as much as I loved the rain, my exposed artwork did
not.
The teetering 51B was
hurtling towards us grungy passengers far too quickly, pulling too close to the
curb—I had to step back quickly to avoid getting clipped (what the fuck, learn to drive!). The driver looked as angry as his
driving, wearing a dirty dust mask about his mouth to avoid our germs, only
revealing his flared nostrils. “If you can’t find your bus pass, wait at the
back of the line! Come on now, move back there,” the bus driver said this to
the man in front of me, fumbling about his wallet aimlessly—he had no pass. He
had no money.
I sat beside an
older woman, wearing a sheer, red scarf about her graying hair and a teal dress
taken straight out of the 50’s. She watched me intently out of the corner of
her cat-eye glasses, pursing her matted lips. Finally she looked directly at me
and said with a grin that spelled I don’t
mean to intrude, but—“Dear, you know that texting that much will ruin your
dexterity! You young people these days use so many different forms of
technology, it’s a wonder you people haven’t warn your hands away. Boy,
eventually our babies will be born with ten fingers a hand to make up for the
damage.” I remember looking at her, wondering why she was so concerned with my
fingers.
Older people
always shepherd young people into better places; she must have a granddaughter
in her twenty’s like me. I looked at her as though I will take your advice, and said, “You’re right. I shouldn’t text
so much. There is a disease called Blackberry thumb, can you believe it?” I
showed her in an overly dramatic gesture that I was turning my phone off. She
smiled and winked, “Good girl.”
As I tucked my
phone away I saw a starched face peering at me in the screen reflection. His
eyes were investigating my black braid, as though searching for my spine
through the thick hair. Though duller in the screen of my phone, they appeared
to be as blue as robin eggs. Even when I turned my head to see those robin egg
eyes in a better light, he did not look away. His features were chiseled and cold,
as though carved from ice. He was handsome in this coolness, frozen there like
the youthful version of Dorian Grey. I wanted to be flattered by his attention.
I wanted to smile back, but his stare was unnerving—the painted eyes of a
portrait, following its audience about the room no matter the trail of their
movement. It was the kind of stare that sent small chills up the spine and to
the shoulders, where they lay there, trembling a while. My shoulders did not
relax, and neither did I. The elderly woman winked at me through her cat-eye
glasses. The elderly may have deteriorating vision, but they seem to pick up on
everything.
It was raining,
I remember, streams from prank buckets finally falling atop the head from perches
atop smug clouds (Fine, you got me! I wanted to shout). It was dark too;
I could barely see my apartment a block away. I tucked my artwork close to my
stomach and bent over to protect it from the rain. And, the last thing I can
remember thinking is: Shit! Why is it so
hard to get this phone to start again? Fu—; a hand clutches my jaw,
covering my mouth; lips peel back unwillingly; grabbing at me from the dark; another
hand forcing my arms behind my back—painful contortion; “Don’t move, don’t speak”; two
seconds equal two hours; lips free and I want to cry out—“I said don’t speak”; more grabbing and metal darts
to the edge of my ribs—barely breaking skin; “Shhh, not a word,”; nodding; can
the knife feel my heart beating? I could. It was as though my heart held the
Jaws of Life to my ribs and breast. I remember that all I could hear was the
pounding of irregular intervals—boom-boom, boo-boom-boo, boom-boom-boom-boom,
boom.
This memory is
like a series of Polaroid photographs in my mind, one after the next: dirty and
underexposed. There is no way to feel what
I felt in those moments unless you allow yourself to crawl below the emulsion
with me…
He is asking me to
lie down face-first behind thickly leaved shrubs— dirt, wet with the rain. But
he doesn’t wait, tucking me into the wet dirt as though he’s treating me with care.
He loses patience and my head snaps back with his renewed force, hitting an
edge of hard tree root. Dizziness consumes my body, pressed belly downward and
flat into the ground. I twist my head toward him, and I can barely manage to
watch his inkblot body blur in violent, abrupt movements. His robin egg eyes
are almost lost in this blur.
He grips my elbow
and twists at my arm, a direction in which an arm is not supposed to bend:
backward and down. I can feel my body, convulsing abdomen and short gasps. And,
I can feel my mauled artwork seeping into the ground beneath my hip. Just
seeping. Into the wet dirt I seep too, melting.
Just melting.
Tight spaces pushing at me. Tight spaces.
He is catching
his breath, but no momentum has stopped and my body is still riddled with pain.
I can hear his panting, shallow mist sickly warm on my face. He takes my chin
roughly, squeezing it, shoving it to the side. He puts his hand inside my
mouth, pressing hard so that I have no air to scream. He rips at my blouse, my
beautiful, wet, chiffon blouse. And, I am trying to lie still, but I am
shivering—he doesn’t like this, so my ribs are kicked until I don’t move at
all.
He is digging
his knees into my calves, bruising me there, holding me so still—I never knew I
could be so still. He asks me to tuck my head away from view, but again he is
losing patience, so he kicks my head in place himself: “thank you,” he says.
And, he presses the knife into my skin further, so that I can really feel it grinding
against my rib. I can’t breath, so I do not cry out.
Two minutes
equal eternity.
They say the
world fades away, and that everything goes blank, don’t they? My world is not
blank and nothing is fading away.
I feel myself
moving at the pace of a heavy stone—not at all. My body feels as though it is
about to go under anesthesia—me and my dysphoria, trapped in limbo. But, I feel everything. Everything. I feel every
inch of moment.
Kicking my
head—“under the bush you go”; kneeling on my calves—heavy and sinking into me; thoughts
no longer run through my head—is this what it’s like to die?; knees pressing
into the backs of my thighs now—I can feel the mud on my chest; “take off your
belt,” (no) but the knife is asking
too, so—; pressing my face in the wet mud—lips sucking on dirt, no air—; my belt wrapping about my arms; I am trembling, he is
tugging—no more cotton pants, no more lace-trim panties; pushing down on the
back of my neck as he adjusts his position; waiting for the rip of a condom
packa—; no condom; knife slips in his excitement, jagged cut running like a
stocking tear down my back; where are his robin egg eyes?
He rapes me.
He does not even
hesitate. And, he rapes me.
Vacant intimacy is stripping me more than any nakedness
ever could. I can’t help but moan and curl my toes. “Yeah, you
like that?” His voice carries a smile as though I’m enjoying myself. No, get off of me, I scream, but no noise emerges, just an empty moan.
He is too big
and going too fast—ripping and tearing into my involuntary squeezes. More
ripping—he is moving even faster now. So much pain and hints of pleasure,
throbbing all through my body; there is no one place to concentrate the hurt. Dull
and slow, it all melds together. Still, there is a ripping sensation where
tight skin is being peeled apart; warm, trickling blood pools between my inner
thighs—spilled milk.
Tight spaces.
Cramped, tight spaces.
His hand still presses
inside my mouth.
He rapes me.
His hand moves from
my inner thigh, wrapping beneath my stomach that is pressed against the dirt.
His hand pins me fast, leaving handprint bruises on my hip.
Ripping. Tight
spaces.
Slower! I scream inwardly, slow down please! Please! Please! Even
this inner voice is shaking and rasping, echoing to no one.
A warm sensation is
flooding my insides, and he is done. He kicks my legs in place, and the wet
dirt burns against my raw skin.
Ripping. Tight spaces.
And he is done.
And he throws me
aside.
Now that you are
sealed inside the emulsion of each photograph, can you feel it too?
He was an angry boxer,
and he had hit me over and over and over again until he was sure he’d knocked
me cold. And, I wake from this unconsciousness once in a while, still
wondering: who had hit me? Why?
All I know now
is the sensation of every moment beneath him: cool edge of metal pressed to my
rib bone, the moving—up and down. All I know is the wondering if it would end,
the submission to time, the stripping of pride, the muddied nakedness, the
robin egg eyes.
Afterward, it
was as though time no longer existed. As though I were left in this constant
state of limbo he had put me in. As though my body were a flimsy shell, blowing
about in the wind. As though I could never be completely comfortable. As though
my thoughts were never quite complete. As though the world were tinged a little
bit darker.
Crumpled in the
dirt where the robin egg eyes had left me, I remember no longer knowing how to
move. I remember, too, the voice: “What
the fuck! Hey! Miss? Miss! Are you ok? Shit, Daniel, call an ambulance. Now,
man! Fucking call it!” And, that the words seemed miles away. A face was
peering at me intently; worry lines receding into his skin. He made me feel
less empty, more durable, filling me up with his brown almond eyes and his
crayon freckles.
His calloused
hands and jean-covered knees were smeared in dirt as he fished me and my
remains from the soil (What did remain of
me?).
“Hey, miss,” he turned
me over and rested my body in his lap. He covered my body with his
sweatshirt—it covered my nakedness, but left my legs exposed, each painted with
drying mud and pearls of precipitation. “What’s your name?” he wanted to know.
I looked at him, and my lips did not know how to move. “It’s ok, just lie here
‘til the ambulance comes. I’m here. My friend, Daniel, he’s here too. Don’t
worry…” As he spoke, my eyes closed. I knew how to sleep. And sleep is exactly
what I did.
I don’t ever
dream of that night. My nightmares are stained with other, daily worries. But,
I find myself thinking about those moments sometimes in the safety of day’s
light. And when I do, I begin to let the limbo intertwine into my nerves,
puppet strings slowing me and my thoughts.
Recovery? They ask
me sometimes, “How is your … recovery.” They ask me, “How are you doing, since
the… incident?” They ask me with the face of It’s so disgusting that I just have to look. How is my recovery,
they want to know? They want me to say that oh,
I’m fine, but to keep me human they want to see a tremor, a twinge reflecting
pain at the mention of it, too. I refuse to say I’m anything but me. I refuse to twinge, too.
What I will say
is that the flickers of emotion I have always felt are still a part of me:
fishing for a sense of belonging. I still feel love, anger, desire, hatred,
sadness, passion, shame, admiration, and loathing…. The robin egg eyes damaged
me, but I am not so flimsy, not so easily dissolved. I am still me. I can still love and be loved. And,
though I questioned what was left of me—what was mine—in the moments of the
rape and some moments afterward too, I know I am mine.
The rape doesn’t
make me any less of a woman. It doesn’t make me any less me. Rather than taking over, it has grown to be a piece of me—a
little sliver. It does not weight me down as his body did. It is a small thorn
in my palm, which new, tougher skin has grown over—and, let me tell you, my
skin is tough. Sometimes, when the
thorn does move about below the skin, I remember and look at the elderly, cat-eye
woman. I look at her sheer red scarf,
“Boy, eventually our babies will be born with ten fingers a hand to make
up for the damage.” And, she winks at me.
And, I’m on the
dirt.
Ripping.
Tight spaces.
Slower! I’m screaming inwardly, slow down,
please! Please! Please!
And he’s done.
And he throws me
aside.
I live in a new
apartment now. Its walls are white, and its tall windows are elegantly simple,
inviting pools of light to spill onto the cream carpet. The white in the
apartment is warm, absorbing shards of yellow from the sun and letting them
dance a while in its surface.
I cleaned out
the laundry room; it’s no longer crowded. There are no tight spaces here. And, I
made it into a studio because it has the tallest windows—the room is bathed in
light and dust particles floating through the air. The washer and drier are
flecked with paint shrapnel, and white tarp shines on the ground. The room
smells like turpentine, so all of our clothing smells like turpentine too. Un-stretched
canvas is draped on the open wall, nailed there in happy repose. Oil paints meld
to the canvas, still drying. Their deep layers and soft shine form the image of
a man.
The bulk of his
muscle is concentrated in the upper half of his body, but his thinner legs
carry the weight well, balanced and ready to spring forward. His skin is a
deeper hue, and his hair is tossed in sweat and salt. He is wearing red,
silk-like shorts that are only mid-thigh long. He is wearing two gloves on his
raised hands; they are as red as his shorts. And, he is punching at nothing.
The muscles in his back, in his arms, even in the dipping of his eyebrows are
all flowing forward in this powerful punch.
And, behind his
left shoulder, I spray-painted the delicate image of a baby bird about to take
flight. The acrylic spray paints always have poetic names, this blue paint is: #82,
Robin Egg Blue. It is easier to let go, than to forgive or forget. Painting has
helped with me this. I control the
brush. I choose the fate of those I paint—even
the small bird.
Right now, I’m
standing in the living room, still with the smooth white walls. Sunrays are
dancing through the window. Sunrays are unforgivably hot when held by their
maker, but here, faded out in my living room? I let whatever warmth they still
carry seep into my skin.
And my body is
swaying to Billie Holiday’s “He’s Funny That Way”, and I have hands wrapped
about my waste—gentle and slow (Never had
nothing, no one to care. That’s why I seem to have more than my share. I’ve got
a man crazy for me. He’s funny that way. Sings Billie). These hands belong to a man I met a year ago in the park. Since we met, we've barely been apart. And, here, in my living room, he dances with me.
There is a
feeling that completely covers the body when in the arms of someone you love.
This is the reason why the phrase “in his arms” is hackneyed; no other phrase
brings to mind feelings so tangible, so people recycle it with the hopes that
others will just know. It is the
feeling of inward warmth, security and the fading of the world about you.
It’s funny
actually; I think the world has confused the response to pain with the response
to pleasure. Pleasure doesn’t cover it, I should say: bliss. It isn’t pain that
yields a fading, blank world. Pain is not so merciful. Its angry boxer punches
you hard every step of the way, making sure you feel it. And, if it isn’t sure
you’re feeling it? It will wait until it knows you will. But, bliss? Oh, bliss. Bliss lets the world fade around
you. Bliss is when the world goes blank. Bliss is when it’s just me and just
him, in this room of white, dancing slow to the languid, atmospheric voice of
Billie Holiday.
Bliss is what
I’m feeling now, as he brushes the hair on the back of my neck away so that he
might kiss me there—centered warmth is rising to the surface of my skin towards
the kiss: X marks the spot (It’s the mood that I’m in. Can it be the
music that they’re playing, or the magic of the violin that intrigues my heart?
Sings Billie).
As he is spinning
me around, I think he can see the light that reflects from my eyes back at him.
I think he can see the smile on my lips that roots deep into my body, my breathing,
the beating of—spinning, spinning, spinning. I think he can feel the tips of my
hair brush his body, soft—spinning. I think he can see my cheeks flushing with
the warmth my body is feeling, but I’m not sure how internalized the warmth is.
I must look radiant, maybe glowing.
I feel that way
anyway. Spinning, spinning, spinning; (A
sailboat in the moonlight and you. Wouldn’t that be heaven, a heaven just for two.
A soft breeze on a June night and you, what a perfect setting for letting
dreams come true. Our chance to sail away. Sings Billie); white walls and
tall windows merging into each other; spinning; his hands softly guiding; my
body moving to his; gently spinning; (The
memory of all that. No, no they can’t take that away from me. The way your
smile just beams. The way you sing off key. The way you haunt my dreams. No, no
they can’t take that away from me. Sings Billie); dress smoothing to my
form, dancing about my ankles as we are; warmth completely consuming my body;
spinning. This is love. Gentle, soft, and full.
Can
you feel it below your skin? Have you let yourself fall below the emulsion of
this Polaroid series? My Polaroid series.
Roll yourself in the pigment of each photograph. Imprint these feelings into
your skin—beneath your skin. Feel the angry boxer punching you over and over
and over. The old Polaroids the angry boxer took are too dark, grungy, and
ripped at the edges. But you can still see the photograph—still feel the moment. Feel the mud on your
chest and the suffocation of the robin egg eye’s body pressed, heavy, on your
shrinking body. Feel the ripping—the tearing. Can you feel it?
And, spinning,
spinning, spinning into the smoothness of fresh Polaroids, soft and pastel-bright.
Can you feel the soft glow of day flushing your skin? Can you feel the small
indents held in each white wall? Can you feel the I’ve got a man, crazy for me. He’s funny that way. When I hurt his
feelings, once in a while, his only answer is one little smile. I’ve got that
man crazy for me, he’s funny that way… but, I’m only human, of Billie
singing, vibrating like a butterfuly-wing-touch atop your skin. Can you feel
the gentle turns he guides your body into? Can you feel the warmth of his kiss?
Now that you have
slipped into my memories, beneath the emulsion—you can see me. You can feel the
punch, CRUSH—BOOM! You can feel the release of time.
Are you surprised?
The Woman Behind Unleashed and the Words
The Woman Behind Unleashed and the Words
I am a Practice of Art Major and Creative Writing Minor at UC Berkeley. My passions are writing and the arts in general. I created Unleashed for the empowerment and enlightenment of women everywhere. I am the editor, designer and contributing writer. I truly hope this magazine speaks to each and every woman. Sasha Martin
2 comments:
i can't believe what i just read, but i must - this was horrific, and yet so bravely and beautifully retold. i am surprised and emboldened by your resolve. holy fuck, sasha.
This is a fictional piece, but thanks Warren. It was difficult to write
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