The Center Won’t Hold

by Melissa Goodnight

Their hair was smoking. That’s what the kid said. Our eager faces crowded around him. He’d seen it all, smelled it all. Watched the Beetle take the curve too fast, too close to the edge. Saw it ricochet over the guardrail. Watched the firemen climb down the steep hill. Watched the wrecker crew lift the VW from the embankment. The medics showed up then quickly left. No lives to save here. The coroner van arrived when the kid’s acid tab kicked in. Three aliens in blue uniforms lined up in front of what was left of the car. Green heads. Atomic guns. Marvin the Martian style. The fourth, probably the constable, was just a giant glass of orange juice. Every time he’d lean over to flick his pen against a charred ear or forearm or toe, a little of him spilled out of the glass. It all happened right there. Their parents sobbing. News copters hovering. Right there on side of the 101. He waited for us to say something. One girl ran off crying. A boy followed. The rest of us just stood. Where’s the kaboom? There’s supposed to be an earth shattering kaboom.

On the weekends, we’d skate down to the boardwalk, talk to the cute girls on the tilt-a-whirl, throw darts into balloons for a mirror with four stuffed bears painted over the top. Dead heads. Every couple of weeks news came from L.A. or San Francisco or Portland. Dead runaways. Overdose or car accident or suicide. Heroin or cocaine or love. We’d shake our heads. Not us. We’d ride the coaster eight, maybe nine times if the cute girl taking tickets let us look down her shirt. Hands up, mouths open, out of minds. Our bodies fluid, butts lifting, stomachs sinking at the edge. Too close.

Our minds filled up with ideas about sex and love seeping into the corners that had been reserved for cotton candy or GI Joes or Capture the Flag. Song lyrics blasted from our bedroom windows teaching us all we needed to know. Our parents had given up. Let school handle it. Our history teachers mingled war and rebellion. Our English teachers tried Kafka and Shakespeare, but it was Freddie Mercury who taught us about theatrics. The Dead whispered sex. Drugs. We knew the rest. We learned about ourselves in dark, yellowed basements with mold growing up the pastel walls painted with lead. Paisley wallpaper, covered by pinball machines, dank couches, girls in mid-drift shirts. Ethereal dreams of a Black Magic Woman. Monkeys in space. Mercury screaming into a mic, slapped on a t-shirt, resting just above a girl’s pierced belly. Sacred. Hallowed ground.

We’d rail against our parents. We’d rail against the man. Whoever that was. Whoever we were not. We didn’t believe in our own mortality, or we did, and we didn’t care, or we didn’t, and we did care. Kids die every day. The news would remind us. Our parents would remind us. Our heroes would remind us. We’re different. We know how far to go. Not too close to the edge. Once in a blue moon, our mothers liked to say, things don’t go as planned. As if blue moons are all that rare. Why don’t they say once a decade or once in the tail of Halley’s Comet or in the time it takes your father to decide to loan you the car Saturday night. That feeling of forever. Slow burn.

Sometime around midnight we’d drive up to Haven’s Hill. We’d sit in clumps around a fire, burning branches or twigs or empty Marlboro packs. We’d yell to the black space that made us feel small. We’d have a bump. We’d argue about one hundred proof. Molotov cocktails and Soviet cities. We’d take a hit off a joint and pass it. We’d sing. I’ve seen fire and I’ve seen rain. We’d yell to not get too close to the flames. I’ve seen lonely times when I could not find a friend. We’d fall hard against a log. Can Bob Seger and the Silver Bullets Band really kill a fucking werewolf? Yes, we said. Saw it with our own eyes. It’s true. The stories are always true.


Melissa Goodnight is an emerging creative writer, with a focus on creative non-fiction, and a recent graduate of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, with an MA in English.