FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Doggy-Style
By Heather Scott
When
I mistakenly opened the door, the bright lights engulfed me, leaving
only a sliver of shadow behind my body. It was the quality of light
used on movie sets or to beckon people in fatal accidents down a
long hallway. Two bedside lamps were on, an overhead chandelier
was illuminated, and the bright sunlight of high noon was streaming
through the window
all combined to create an agonizingly bright
reflection off their alabaster skin. I was standing on the threshold
of my parents' bedroom and on the bed -- without the benefit of
a concealing blanket or a forgiving shadow in sight -- my parents
were having sex
doggy-style.
When he was clothed, and standing, my father obsessively turned
off lights. It was his last bastion of control in a house full of
insurgents -- tighter lighting restrictions followed every indiscretion.
When he caught my oldest brother, Jack, smoking he implemented the
"one light per room" rule. After my brother, Rob, came
home with his ear pierced, light usage in the house became as controlled
as a prison camp's. When I turned sixteen he entered a preemptive
stage -- the mere prospect of wrongdoing was enough to warrant blackout
conditions. I couldn't read in my bedroom without my dad entering
and, without a word of explanation, turning off every switch until
the room resembled a religious ceremony where only the manuscript
in front of me was illuminated. And yet, to have sex -- something
parents should do in the dark -- he preferred the subtle ambiance
of a police searchlight.
I had been standing in the doorway for anywhere between one to thirty
minutes when I noticed a distinct and piercing noise. It was a tone
that I had previously only heard on a nature program coming from
a baby animal as predators tore it from the comfort of its lair
and ate it alive. It was a steady and high-pitched squeal, not a
sound traditionally associated with joy and comfort, rather a manifestation
of pure terror mixed with the realization that the home as a sanctuary
was a myth. The most disconcerting aspect of the cry was that, without
opening my lips or moving my mouth, it was coming from me. I had
been making the noise since I entered the room. Without it I probably
could have silently closed the door and walked away. Instead, there
we were -- my parents were naked on their hands and knees, eyes
locked with their only daughter, watching her squeak in the doorway.
The ample lighting afforded unfettered eye contact between my mom,
my dad, and me. And back again, eye contact between my mom, my dad,
and me -- while they were having sex
doggy-style. Actually,
they had stopped having sex; they were just in the position to have
sex
doggy-style. The three of us were motionless, frozen in
a tableau reenactment of one of the seamier Greek tragedies
with
eye contact. I was eighteen and eye contact was not something I
was accustomed to -- especially at home. This episode would do little
to help this condition. It was two months past my thirtieth birthday
before I found out what color my mom's eyes were.
Time was passing, but at an incredibly slow rate - nano-seconds
dragged into minutes and minutes were too long to comprehend. With
each tick of the clock, the situation became weirder and weirder
as we all began to question, "Why doesn't she just close the
door?" and "Will she ever stop making that noise?"
Evidently, I had gone into a low level of shock. Unfortunately,
the two shock symptoms that I would have welcomed, unconsciousness
and an out of body experience, eluded me.
The one logical thought I had was, at that moment, I could have
asked for, or told my parents, anything. Unfortunately, they didn't
seem to have a checkbook on them. And to blurt out "Now I'm
definitely gay," seemed a bit over the top (yet, I had no problem
screaming like a dying animal). Instead, I eventually closed the
door, went to the kitchen, and wondered how I was ever going to
erase that image from my memory. I feared that my naked parents
would become a fixed hologram in my vision; a vision that I would
carry around like a phantom limb for the rest of my life.
I thought about scouring the Yellow Pages for a professional to
help me with the psychosis that would no doubt ensue from the incident.
Technically, I could bill the sessions to my parents -- and that
seemed appealing. But my mind was a sewer that I was not willing
to dredge. The phrase "Doggy-style" could only be repeated
a finite amount of times before the conversation turned on me.
I wanted to run out the front door and down the street, and practice
my scream in the open. But I couldn't leave. I would silently put
this memory away in the family-file, sandwiched between "Rob
had a boyhood crush on Paul, our mover" and "Jack took
disco lessons for four years, through middle school and into high
school." They would go under the heading "We know too
much about each other" because that, combined with a genetic
predisposition for grotesquely long thin toes, is what truly defines
our family.
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