The Carpet Jane Wanted

“Answer the door, Jane.”

            Jane looked at her husband blankly.

            “Who’s here?” she asked.

            “I said Franklin and Molly were coming,” Roy answered, scratching his nose.

            “What did you just do?”

            “What?”

            Jane leaned forward, the white couch creaking slightly.

            “You just snuck something into your mouth.”

            “Jane, can we answer the door?”

            Jane sighed and slouched to the door. She hesitated, then returned to the sofa.

            “No thank you.”

            Roy returned the sigh and went to their heavy, clunky apartment door. He opened it as Jane stayed on the sofa, her back to him. At Roy’s invitation, a pair of drawn out and overtly grand “Hellooooo’s,” entered the living room.

            “Hi Jane!” Molly chirped brightly at the slumped figure that barely indented the sofa.

            Jane’s silence did not dissuade Molly, who sat gracefully across from her on a matching white chair. Franklin threw his expensive jacket on the back of the sofa and plopped down beside Jane with a loud, too loud, exhale. He swept back his light red hair and gave Jane’s shoulder a friendly squeeze.

            Hey Jane.”

            “How’ve you been?” Molly spoke after her husband.

            “The baby’s sick,” Jane stood and dug her bare feet into the carpet.

            “…Oh,” Molly looked at Roy.

            “It’ll be fine, Jane,” Roy assured.

            Little shag threads clung to Jane’s toes, and she hopped away from the carpet.

            Roy took his wife’s place on the sofa.

            “How are the kids, Molly?” Roy asked.

            “Oh great, just great! Straight A’s for Eddie, Clay won the wrestling match on Saturday. Liz is Sandy in Grease. The twins both made the swim team. I’m forgetting things I know it, let’s see…”

            As Molly cooed over her roost of accomplished little chicks, Jane stared at her. Molly’s long black hair draped over her shoulder like a theatre curtain. Her charcoal blouse bore no wrinkles, even in her curved sitting position. Her lipstick outlined her mouth perfectly. Not a thing out of place. Yet, here she is, vomiting worthless bile into Jane’s living room, onto Jane’s carpet.

            “Jane?”

            “What?”

            “Oh, I said this cake looks lovely,” Molly repeated.

            “It’s store-bought.”

            “Oh.”

            The cake in question sat innocently enough on a glass coffee table, shiny with syrup and artificial-looking fruit. A tea set sat beside the cake, not innocent at all. From the China teapot decorated with delicate pink flowers, leaked an unusual and unpleasant blend of tea, infecting the sinuses with ginger and lemongrass.

            Molly deterred from the tea but sliced the cake. Jane studied the knife as it slowly divided the cake, removing a piece, destroying it.

            It seemed the whole room was focused on Molly’s manicured hands pillaging her slice of cake. Jane thought the three seated figures looked like a picture in a magazine. This idea was disrupted by the ceiling fan, vigorously spinning to no escape. Round and round, jolting against the base.

“How’s work, Roy?” Franklin asked, breaking Jane’s little picture.

            “Fine, same old job as it was ten years ago.”

            Roy rose and made himself a drink in the corner of the light green room. At his removal from the sitting area, Franklin looked at Molly. Molly swallowed the glob of cake in her mouth and did not look at her husband.  

            “Jane,” Molly’s voice sounded like gentle cotton against the ear.  “I love what you’ve done to the apartment, the furniture is so classic!”

            “I haven’t done anything to it,” Jane said in a not-so-cotton tone and moved to Roy.

            “How long are they staying?” she whispered. Was she whispering? She must have been, since Roy conveyed deafness. “The baby’s sick, she may have to go to the doctor-”

            Roy downed his drink.

            “Well, I’m going to check on her,” Jane hissed.

            “How’s your work going, Frank?” Roy turned and went back to the ever-safe sofa.

            “He’s actually going into his own business,” Molly answered. “He learned enough from them anyway.”

            “Really?” Roy asked, glancing at his friend, who sniffed dismissively and smiled.

            “Yes,” Molly continued in an automated-recording-voice, “People prefer freelance nowadays, and he’s got the computer to do those designs, so he can work from home now.”

            Roy nodded. “Well, good for you, Frank. I’m sure the family missed having you around anyway.”

            “You uh, got a drink for your guest, Roy?”

            Franklin meant to ask this in good humor, but its execution sliced awkwardly. He attempted a reassuring chuckle, but failed once again, and the room was filled with a dry wheeze. Dry wheeze and displeasing tea.

            “She’s coughing a lot, Roy,” Jane returned to the living room and looked down at her bundle. How could Roy ignore such a precious thing? A precious thing.

            Jane recalled the night her baby was created.

A year-younger Jane ruled against her usual frumpy-dumpy pjs, and instead put on her silk pink nightie with white lace in all the places women think men want lace to be. Jane thought maybe if she asked for a baby in this nightie, with her usually limp blonde hair teased and her sharp face softened in lamp-light and evening darkness, Roy would comply.

            So, Jane summoned whatever goddess of fertility probably laughed down at her razor burned legs and hidden push up cups in her negligee, and gave Roy some sexy line about baby-making she could no longer remember. But she never forgot what Roy said back.

            “We both know you aren’t a mother, Jane.”

            Anything that made Jane feel like a woman in that moment deflated and vanished. She failed to convince Roy before, but this was the first time he said that.

            Compensating for her current lack of confidence and underwear, Jane started yelling, and the question of why they even got married popped up. When neither could answer it, Roy slammed the bedroom door on Jane. Oh, but then came Jane’s favorite part of the bittersweet memory. Roy burst out of the bedroom and gathered up his sobbing wife, holding her close to him. He begged forgiveness over and over for the poison he spat at her, for the insults. He kissed her between the ‘sorry’s and embraced all sadness out of her frame. Roy never apologized like that, and that night the baby was conceived.

             Jane saw that in her baby’s sickly face, which she looked up from to eye her seated guests. Franklin and Molly appeared less perfect. Molly’s unreasonably costly foundation could not conceal a breakout of raised acne under her cheekbones and on the tip of her nose. When Franklin lifted his muscle-rich arm and rested it on the back of the sofa, he exposed a u-shaped ring of sweat spreading through his dark button up shirt.

            “Don’t you want any tea, Molly?” Jane asked, squinting. Molly looked up at her, mid-sentence through a kid-story Jane did not desire her to continue.

            “Roy made you both tea and bought that cake. He must have done it while I was taking care of the baby. It’ll get cold soon.”

            Molly looked down at the dreaded teapot. She poured herself a cup. The smell worsened now that the concoction presented itself uncovered in the little teacup.

            “Did you see the new couple who moved into our building last week?” Jane probed her question slowly at Molly, who took a tentative sip from her cup. She swallowed politely.

            “No, I don’t think so-”

            The tweed of the white chair itched at Molly’s legs, causing them to sweat.

            “Jerry and… oh what was the wife’s name, do you remember, Roy?” Jane asked her husband.

            “No.”

            Jane clicked her tongue, pretending to think, her eyes not leaving Molly.

            “Blonde hair, skinny-”

            “Wendy,” Franklin answered curtly.

            Molly set her cup down hard on its saucer, the first unpleasant noise she made. Her eyes winced slightly at her own action.

            “I met her in the elevator,” Franklin explained to no one’s inquiry. Franklin rubbed his lips together behind his groomed crimson beard. The pomaded hairs twitched, and he stood up to pour himself another drink.

            The sides of Jane’s mouth moved upward in satisfaction.

            “You don’t have to drink the tea, Molly,” Roy interjected. “I never make tea so I’m sure it’s horrible.”

            “Actually,” Molly clinked the cup and saucer more carefully on the coffee table, “I think I’ll take a drink too, Franklin.”

            She gave an airy laugh, poorly performed.

            Jane sat with her baby in the accent chair near Molly, red leather. It was only an accent chair in that absolutely nothing else in the apartment was red, and Roy vouched for its striking “vibe.” Jane’s feet pushed down into the plush of the carpet. Franklin handed Molly her drink and took his seat on the sofa with Roy.

            “I couldn’t find the baby Aspirin, Roy, did we use it all?” Jane asked when the baby jolted her with her sudden cries.

            Now this time, she knew she had not whispered, yet Roy still showed no acknowledgement.

            Jane noticed Molly’s expression.

            “What?”

            Molly blinked several times.

            “What?” Molly parroted guiltlessly.

            “There’s no need to-” Jane cut herself off when she saw Roy scratch his nose.

            “You did it again,” Jane said at him.

            “Did what?” Roy asked, pushing up his mock-vintage glasses, not looking at his accuser.

            “You just put something in your mouth again. It’s the baby Aspirin, isn’t it? I said to use the regular kind if you had a headache-”

            “I didn’t take any pills. Maybe you should start taking yours again.”

            Molly chewed the ice in her drink uncomfortably, and a shard went down the wrong side, triggering loud coughs and sputters. The room turned to her, and she set down the glass, waving her hands apologetically and taking a bite of cake to smother the lodged ice chip. This helped nothing, since the cake dried up in the time it was left uneaten. Now stale crumbs and ice choked the wildly embarrassed Molly, who grabbed for the tea next. The sour beverage put a sour face on her, but the hacking finally ceased and Molly survived.

Her fingers rested on her windpipe as she croaked a-

            “Sorry.”

            Jane would not have heard Molly if she convulsed to the floor and choked to death on that ice. Her ears heated to a degree which muted all the sound in the room, but her heartbeat.

            She felt the same way on her wedding day, during the reception. Jane dreamed of having a quiet wedding in an outdoor garden venue lit only by the twinkly glow of Christmas lights strung above them. The white of her dress would stand out from the pale-yellow chrysanthemums and green shrubbery surrounding them. She’d look so angelic that people would think her too perfect to have anything wrong with her.  

            Yet there she sat inside a rented-out room of a night club in the city, at a plastic table with a garishly gold tablecloth. She could see Roy and his wide smile, shouting something to Franklin and their other male friends across the room. She could see the women dancing in front of her to noisy and incoherently written music. But not a sound. Nothing reached Jane’s ears but pulsing, hateful blood. On the day which she felt should have been only about her, Jane wondered if anyone noticed her presence at all.

She recalled the exact burgundy-black color of wine that stood in high stemware before her, inches from her hand. If she took that hand, burdened only by a ring, and pounded it down on the goblet, would it break? Did she possess enough anything to affect that thin crystal glass? And if it did shatter against the table, staining the hideous tablecloth, would someone come rushing with napkins to soak up her mistake?

No. Jane decorated the wedding as much as the wine, something to be at a table, something to sit be beside Roy, something to pour, and drink, and empty, and say, “hm, very nice,” and never think about again…

“Jane? …Jane?”

A few timid fingers grazed Jane’s arm. Jane stood and whirled around to see Molly, whose startled eyebrows raised in alarm.

“He kissed someone that night,” Jane whispered. “Did you know that?”

“Wh-what?”

“Franklin and that bridesmaid who got drunk. You were dancing with Roy, but I saw it. He kissed her, six feet from you.”

“Jane- I don’t think you-” Molly was breathing unsteadily.

Franklin cleared his throat and scratched the nape of his freckled neck.

“Sandwiched together all night, those two,” Jane continued, “And you didn’t even see it.”

“Jane.” Roy uncrossed his legs and set his drink on the coffee table with a thick clank.

“You never see it, do you Molly. Not even in our own apartment.”

“Jane, that’s enough,” Roy’s shoulders tensed, the muscles trying to support his raising tone.

“It’s pretty late,” Franklin stood up and grabbed his coat.

Jane just realized how close she was standing to Molly, and how tightly she was squeezing the baby’s blanket. She backed up and shifted her feet into the shag.

Surprising everyone, Molly stepped forward, her features hard and focused.

“I saw it Jane. Maybe not as quickly as you did, but I saw it. I am sorry you aren’t always in your right mind, but that gives you no right to talk to friends this way. And, unlike you, I try to keep matters between a husband and wife private. Our personal affairs are no business of yours, especially when you have no room to talk.”

Molly exhaled entirely through her nose, and finally stepped away. The weight of her tears gave way and trickled slowly, streaking the beige makeup and black mascara.

Jane licked her dry lips as Roy opened the door for Molly and Franklin.

“‘Affairs’ is definitely the right word for it!”

Had Jane said that? No. She couldn’t have said that.

Though perhaps she had, since Franklin stopped at the door.

“She uh-” Roy spoke to Franklin, who swung his shoulders around to face Jane.

“She didn’t mean it, Frank-” Roy finished.

Franklin’s size seemed immense. His now disheveled hair and beard surrounded his eyes in tangerine flames.

As if blind to the amassing energy of intimidation, Jane chuckled.

“You know, when she was choking on that ice like an idiot, I thought you were going to let her die.”

Jane closed her eyes to laugh again, a sound absent of joy. When she opened them, Roy was standing in front of her, his back against her cheek, pushing Franklin away toward the door.

“Franklin stop!” Molly yelled.

Franklin sighed hard and stared over Roy’s shoulder into Jane’s eyes.

“You’re fucking nuts.”

Molly pulled her husband away and the door closed with a hideous wack. Like a tub plug being lifted, the strength in Jane drained out of her and she sat down on the white sofa.

While Jane’s venom flushed, Roy’s filled. He stood at the closed door when he spoke.

“Well, you got what you wanted.”

“This isn’t what I wanted-”

“What?”

“This isn’t-”

“Speak up!”

Jane stopped talking altogether.

“What is it Jane? What? What? Because I can’t keep going like this. I can’t keep inviting people over to see you like you’re a fucking zoo animal!”

Jane suddenly stood, her face trembling with a furious retort on the horizon of her lips.

“THIS,” she set the baby on the sofa and waved her arms around the apartment with wild gesticulation.

“This isn’t what I wanted, this was all you. The- the- the-”

The wedding, the unhappy years of condescension toward her mental state, the night she wanted a baby, the apartment. This apartment. The green walls, the white furniture, the accent chair…  

She finally allowed the plush of the carpet to engulf her feet, squeezing between her pale toes. Could she move? No, she was stuck, Jane was certainly stuck.

“The carpet-”

“What?”

Jane felt paralysis creeping up from her sweating feet, to the denim which suffocated her legs.

“This isn’t the carpet I wanted!”

Roy stared at his wife, who shivered in her own desperate fear. His forehead lines showed frustrated confusion, but his voice was level.

“Carpet?”

“I never liked it, but you just had to have it. You insist on everything in our lives to suit your picture, but it’s not my picture. I wanted… a different picture.”

“You picked it.”

“What?”

The intensity grew in Roy’s voice.

“You picked this carpet. You don’t even remember, do you? Everything we have ever done has had to be on your terms, but your terms are always changing! You wanted the wedding to be in a city club, then after the honeymoon you say you wanted it in the country. You wanted an apartment with green walls and a red chair, then when we move, you say you wanted a little house with a little fence and a little dog. Then you tell me you want a BABY? What am I supposed to say, Jane? If we have a baby you’ll say you never wanted kids!”

Tears poured out of Jane’s frantically blinking eyes, collecting at the curve of her nose and the corners of her mouth. She felt her body working against her, her mind losing focus. She was reaching for the words, the words to make Roy understand, the words to make him feel sorry for her just once.

“We have to save the baby, Roy-”

Roy panted until the blood settled back into his cheeks. He shook his head wildly and went to the couch. With a great magician’s flourish, he yanked the baby’s blanket, revealing nothing inside.

Jane stared at the blanket, unable to move or speak. Roy wrapped himself up in a grey puffy jacket, put on his hat, and opened the door.

He said something his wife could not hear, and left without shutting the door. The inaudible words floated ominously around the room and drifted down, past Jane’s ears, onto Jane’s carpet.

The Shakey Shack

Blue and Gray Like a Parrot Fish

But As Stiff As A Board

This Was My Escape

Chopped, Sweet Genius, Iron Chef

Oh How The Meals Taste

But Hands Were Not Laid

Not Enough To Share But It Would Do

Because Our Imagination Allowed Us To Be

In Any Movie But Not Just Me But Only When We

Self-Affirmations (Poetic Edition)

Before I do anything

I stand up

Walk to the mirror

And ask myself,


“Would the action I’m about to complete lead me to being diagnosed with female hysteria

in the early 19th century?”


If the answer is yes,

Which it typically is

I walk away 

Giving myself the reminder


I am the daughter of a witch that a man could not burn.

The Me Inside Of Me

i love the rain, but hate cloudy days

i’m a pessimistic asshole, but also a hopeless romantic

i am flawed,

chaotic, 

afraid of being loved,

drink too much coffee,

and can never keep my mouth shut


i hate too much

i hate the color navy

i hate math 


washing my hair

disco music

and republicans


but,

i learned to love the things that i hate,

there’s always a sunny day beyond those clouds

i am made up of flaws and that is what makes me human

without disco music, ABBA wouldn’t exist

and my favorite pair of jeans are a navy blue 


(i’m still trying to find a silver lining with math and republicans) 


i learned that there are good days and bad days

where hating everything feels so much easier than loving something

there are days where hitting rock bottom is easy

but that isn’t living,

living is learning how to love through the silver lining

it is waking up in the morning and washing your hair while singing your favorite song

it’s reading your favorite poems

it’s dancing

singing 

screaming


for a pessimist, i am growing up to be fairly optimistic

Do you know what it is like to feel like dying? (but not actually die) aka Epilepsy

It’s the feeling of sonder

(n. the realization that each random individual you see is living a life as vivid and intricate as your own—populated with their own dreams, friends, schedules, anxieties, and inherited madness)


But it isn’t poetic or profound

It’s a paralyzing feeling that snowballs into some realization that you are living a life that is no longer your own

You’re in debt to your own mind and there was no previous transaction to leave you in this crippling state and you can’t beg yourself for forgiveness because you are your own greatness weakness

And your own worst nightmare

(Can you sue yourself for fraud? Or is that just an identity crisis?)


Your body becomes this hallowed cage where a monster rattles in your ribcage 

The last real thing you can remember is someone begging to call for help 

(Was that someone me?)


It’s this feeling of feeling nothing because you don’t remember how to feel anything 

You’re alone and numb and someone is having to hold onto you and remind you how to breathe

(How the fuck can that concept be taken from you? How can you just forget to breathe?)

NOVUS Literary and Arts Journal
Lebanon, TN