FRESH
YARN presents:
I'm
a Believer
By Hilary
Shepard
1968
I was lying. Mickey Dolenz was not my favorite Monkee. I only said this
to throw Marcy Stein, my annoying, bespectacled and metal-mouthed (but
hey, who wasn't) schoolmate off the scent. Who I really loved, loved with
all my heart and soul, with an intensity so acute it vibrated through
my nine-year-old string bean body and sent my metal braces clicking --
was Davy Jones. I loved him with the worshipping unconditionality that
rendered me at times unable to function. Most afternoons, after rushing
home from school, breathless with anticipation, I would sit mesmerized
in front of my parents' 36" wood-look console, for 30 way-too-short
minutes as I watched him sing and beguile. All I could do afterwards was
sprawl out upon my puce bedspread, surrounded by my Troll dolls, my flower
power stickers, and my official Davy Jones Fan Club poster taped to my
cottage-cheese ceiling for easy viewing, and gaze up at his twinkling
brown eyes while I repeated my sacred mantra, "Davy, Davy, Davy."
It was an
all-encompassing worship that I would never quite feel again for another
human being, no matter how sexy or dark or dangerous they were. I would
not feel it for Leif Garret, Cat Stevens or even my ex-husband. My love
for them was never like my first love. For that was a brand new heart-unbroken,
clean, untouched by disappointment, regret or knowledge love. And it was
filled with Davy-ness.
I didn't
care that he was short. It would be years before I would sprout up to
my full-grown height of 5'10", so height was not an immediate issue.
We could deal with that problem later. After all, if he could love with
me with my slightly crossed eyes, glasses, braces, Olive Oyl bod, headgear
and all, then he wouldn't mind if I towered over him too.
What I loved
about him was EVERYTHING. He was perfection. With his little boy charm.
His choppy Prince Valiant hair. His crooked smile. And the clincher: the
way his brown eyes would sparkle a wild starry blue whenever he fell in
love each week with some unworthy actress who was just lucky to
be on the show. I would put my own face onto theirs, keeping their curvy-bod
and boobs (as I myself had nothing but bee stings) and bask in Davy's
love glow as he sang "I'm a Believer" into my adoring eyes,
which were of course, at that moment, uncrossed and conveniently free
from their coke-bottle cages.
As I sifted
through the tangled-web-memories that made up my life, I could pinpoint
my 9th year as the one that got me used to longing for things that didn't
really exist. An exciting, sexy world where you could be on TV, and older
boys could love you and sing you a song that would confirm to every doubter
in your school that you're special. IT. THE ONE. NOT a geek. Like Marcy
Stein, who, by the way, had taken the bait and claimed Mickey Dolenz as
her favorite Monkee. He was the man she would marry that
afternoon in a backyard ceremony, where the four unsuspecting Monkees
would become forever bound to four pre-pubescent girls from Manor Haven
Long Island Elementary School, 'til death do they part.
I made my
move slowly, pretending to protest. "But Marcy, you married Mickey
last time. Which ended, need I remind you, in a bitter divorce when you
left him for Bobby Sherman."
Marcy held
fast. After all, it was her house, and her stove, on which
we girls were now stirring a pot of strawberry Jell-O, to serve as the
main course wedding feast.
"Mickey
and I have a history together. YOU'LL have to take Davy."
My heart
soared. I hesitated. Pretended to give in.
"O.K.,
but only if I get the lace tablecloth veil this time, and you take the
smelly crochet afghan."
Marcy, who
in later life would choose the wrong career and become a lawyer based
on the mistaken idea that she was a good negotiator, accepted, and a pinkie-deal
was struck.
"Yes!!"
I thought. The day, which started out badly with a smashed cream cheese
and jelly sandwich and a nothing part in the school play, was going to
turn out all right after all!
"Jell-O
is fattening," offered Cara Batista, whose obsession with her ever-expanding
waistline had rendered her unable to think of much else. "Peter likes
me thin."
Peter Tork was Cara's first pick, and one of the reasons she was invited
to this after school shindig -- no conflicts. Amy Slatkin, a pimply, morose
child who had a strange smell, rounded out our foursome. Amy was invited
to partake because she was just happy to be invited anywhere, and would
gladly marry the Monkee no one wanted -- Mike Nesmith. That lame wool
hat he always wore just rendered him "not cute" and Amy was
the perfect wife for him, because she was "not cute," too. Even
then, we all knew our places, we fourth grade girls, like seeking like,
water rising to its own level.
"Cara,
put the Jell-O in the fridge!" Marcy shrieked. "Don't drink
another spoonful or there'll be nothing left!"
Cara, her
lips stained a guilty red, pouted, "But...... I'm tasting it for
poison!"
"Oh,
who'd poison the Monkees?" snapped Marcy.
"Bobby
Sherman?" I offered, proud of the comeback, which brought the double
reference of professional jealousy and Marcy's recent divorce betrayal
in one cutting swoop.
Marcy was
stumped for a witty reply, which was often the case, for she was the baby
of us four. Poor Marcy was a pale pink speckled thing, with a beak-like
nose that would be bobbed off for her sweet sixteen, but would still not
render her face a pleasant one. Hers would be a life of bad dates and
long litigations, but for right now it was HER house and SHE was the boss.
This gave her the authority to shriek in a fish-wife manner whenever she
felt the situation was getting away from her, and now was definitely one
of those times, so she let out a deafening, "IT'S TIME TO GET DRESSED!!
LET'S GO INTO MY PARENTS' ROOM, AND REMEMBER -- NO TOUCHING!"
We four friends
ran down the lime green hallway into the forbidden zone: the Stein's marital
sanctuary. The bedroom was a bright pink and purple affair, with a shag
carpet so thick, once an object was dropped into its greedy tentacles,
it was a safe bet it would never be seen again. I clutched my gold charm
bracelet, the one with the four Monkees' heads, dangling like victims
of the French guillotine, and fingered Davy's face protectively. I'd saved
four months worth of weekly allowances for this priceless jewel and was
taking no chances. I plopped myself down on the festive flowered bedspread
and waited for more of Marcy's bossy instructions.
"You
get the lace veil as per our previous verbal agreement," Marcy intoned,
imitating her dad's lawyer-speak. "I get the afghan, Cara, you get
the Pucci scarf and Amy, the doily will have to do."
We accepted
our fate calmly, and solemnly draped ourselves in the flowing material.
Our manner grew more reverent as the actual ceremony drew near, little
pulses quickened as we began the transformation from ordinary "fiancées"
to "blushing brides".
Slowly,
regally, we trooped into the bathroom for the finishing touches. No Bonnie
Bell kid make-up for us girls, we were after the real stuff -- Mary Quant
wet-look-lip-slickers, Maybelline midnight-blue mascara, and gobs of extra-hold
Aqua Net hair spray. Our technique was not to enhance the natural beauty
that might be lurking somewhere just below the surface, but to paint it
on thick and pasty, like a magician's assistant, just in case it wasn't.
Amy looked in the mirror and shook her head vigorously, hoping the spotty,
sad-eyed face gazing back at her was really not her reflection and therefore
wouldn't shake back. It did. She sighed and applied some more peach blush.
Marcy squinted her tiny eyes at the blur in the mirror and hoped for the
best. With her glasses off, she couldn't really tell if she was beautiful
or not, so she pragmatically decided she was. Cara, on the other hand,
was thinking Cat Woman, and had given herself a new black beauty mark,
thick black cat-rimmed eyes, and a full red mouth. She smiled at herself
suggestively, turning proudly to me, then drew in her breath, slightly
startled as she eyed my reflection with a newfound suspicion.
"Hey!" she blurted out, "You're kind of pretty. I never
noticed it before."
Three heads
turned to me accusingly. Confused, I checked out my reflection, bending
in closer to see myself as I, too, had taken off my thick tortoise-shell
specs, and could hardly see. Having had a beautiful blonde sister who
was three years older than I, who'd shown me the real way to apply makeup,
had inadvertently stirred up something that had been heretofore invisible
to the naked eye. Sure, I was a walking cliché, which many a boy
had cruelly reminded me of, lest it slip my ever-occupied mind. I was
tall, painfully thin, had glasses, braces, freckles and long, dangling
arms that brought to mind one word -- orangutan. But luckily for me a
strange new realization was beginning to take hold in my slightly expanding
consciousness; I just might be another cliché -- the ugly duckling
turned, well, if not swan, then at least regular duckling. I felt a slight
flutter in my heart as a tinge of excitement shot through my skinny limbs
-- maybe I was going to be 'okay' looking after all! It was this very
thought, this hope, that caused my entire universe as I knew it to warp.
I could sense at that exact moment a whole new dimension of possibilities
open up to me like the promise of a big unopened present, beautifully
wrapped.
"Here
come the brides!" I sang out with my newfound zest for life.
I was only
slightly aware of the effect this had on Marcy, for it was another thinly-veiled
Bobby Sherman reference, as he was on a hit TV show with the exact same
name. Marcy chose to ignore the affront and ran after us girls, who had
all forgotten the queenly manor in which brides were supposed to conduct
themselves, and were now heading helter-skelter, limbs and hair a-flyin'
into Marcy's postage stamp sized yard.
We gathered
haphazardly under the gold cherub fountain, which towered proudly over
the manicured lawn that seemed to cower under this suburban rococo monstrosity,
submissive and afraid. To us, who were still childishly attracted to all
that glitters, it was the most beautiful fountain we had ever seen. It
was precisely why Marcy was chosen time and time again to host the backyard
nuptials, as it afforded the perfect setting for a wedding between four
imaginary pop stars and their underage brides.
"Let's
practice kissing first," Cara suggested.
Being Italian,
she had a slight edge up on these things, as she was already starting
to sprout one tiny bump that would soon grow into a full-fledged breast.
Unfortunately, the other one would be slow to follow, which would cause
many hours of worry on her part, and many yards of Kleenex, stuffed in
her one cup to even them out, until the other one caught up. Cara was
born on the verge of puberty. Even as a baby she was dark and musty. Her
upper lip was tinged with a slight mustache and her eyebrow was just that
-- one, not two. She'd begun to carry herself a little differently than
the others, since her recent discovery of her dad's stash of Playboy
magazines under the rec room couch. Within the next year, way before the
other late-bloomers, she would start her rigorous run around the bases,
offering her one breast up to anyone who'd show the slightest interest.
Cara had a lotta livin' to do, and right now, kissing practice was her
number one priority.
She perused boys with a critical eye, and began to figure out exactly
what it was that they would expect from her, and had recently concluded
that she was definitely ready to comply with the first step -- kissing.
"Yuck,"
pronounced Amy.
She suspected rightly that no one would want to kiss her for a long while,
and chose the defensive tact. Marcy looked intrigued, while I decided
to take the initiative, grabbing a nearby lounge chair pillow, writhing
wildly around with it on the grass. The others quickly followed suit,
with Cara getting a little too carried away. That synthetic foam-filled
pillow was really ravaging her, and just when she was in danger of becoming
the first girl to become pregnant by a cushion, a sober Amy snapped us
love-drunk girls into attention by threatening to turn on the lawn sprinklers.
"You
guys! Save something for the honeymoon!" she whined, more out of
boredom than a sense of morality. "Marcy, you may start the ceremony."
Marcy, who
had elected herself rabbi and had already directed the conversion of the
Monkees to Judaism at a prior play date where they were fed bagels and
taught to say "Oy!", was determined to make this a proper Jewish
wedding. So she insisted on placing four Frisbees on the imaginary groom's
heads for yarmulkes. Pausing for effect, she lifted the arm of her official
Monkees record player, and the haunting strains of "I'm a Believer"
filled the air.
We lined
up, breathless with anticipation. As I covered my face with the makeshift
veil, I began to feel a strange tingle through a part of my body I'd never
really felt before. Somewhere dark and deep and secret; the first tickle
of sex beginning to stir. As I bride-walked slowly down to the fountain,
step-together-step, I could hear Marcy's voice echoing in the distance,
as if in a languid dream.
"Do
you, Hilary Shapiro, take Davy Jones to be your awful wedded husband,
'til death do you part?"
"I do,"
I answered, and it resonated from that same secret place inside me, so
special and sacred.
"I now
pronounce you men with wives."
"Mrs.
Davy Jones, I am Mrs. Davy Jones. Hilary Shapiro Jones." The words
filled my head like a magic spell.
"You
may now kiss the bride." And I saw my husband lifting my veil, slowly,
seductively as I offered my eager face upwards, his sapphire eyes twinkling
like jewels, and he was kissing me, my one true love his hot sweet breath
all over my face, and all my love-lust burned through my tiny chest, searing
me with such intensity, it marked me for life. It would be a long time
before a man would make me that blissfully, unconditionally and unequivocally
happy.
Any hapless
observer who might have glanced into the Steins' tiny piece of backyard
heaven would have witnessed a strange sight indeed. For there we were,
four girls with our heads tilted up towards the sun, our tiny lips moving
sensuously as we kissed the air and basked in the warm glow of imaginary
love, our hearts so full of the hope that one can only feel when you're
that young and that untouched and that open.
In later
years, there would be crushing betrayals, ugly divorces and broken hearts.
But then, it was 1968, we were nine years old, miracles occurred on a
daily basis, love was a beautiful thing, and anything could happen if
you were a believer.
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