English lecturer Graham Hoerner was in the university’s faculty bathroom stall, his pants coiled around his ankles, his eyes focusing on a critical anthology of essays on Gogol’s Dead Souls, when he sensed the presence of Mary Beauregard, one of his students, standing just outside the stall’s locked door. How did he know it was her? Was it her familiar breathing, rasping and strained from her chain smoking? Was it her familiar smell of mothballs and cloying talcum powder wafting from her green nicotine-stained skin? Anyway, it didn’t matter. Wheezing and clenching her fists, she was standing before her squatting professor trying to compose herself enough so that she could argue that he had given her an unfairly low C grade on her last composition. Her mere presence had disrupted Graham’s circadian rhythms and he resented her for impeding his usually reliable mid-afternoon purge.
“Mary, I know it’s you. You shouldn’t be in here.”
“I wanted to talk to you about my grade.”
“What you’re doing is illegal. I could have campus police arrest you. Now I suggest you leave at once.”
“No, not until you explain why I got a C.”
He did not appreciate Mary—or any student for that matter—harassing him about a grade while he was sitting on the crapper. “We can talk about your grade in my office,” he said. “This is not the place.”
“You didn’t even read my essay about the convalescent home I work at, did you.”
This much was true. He had not read her essay, about her claim to sacrificing her time bathing dying old people in what most likely was some imagined geriatric hospice. Not word for word anyway. He had given up reading student essays in that fashion many years ago. A man of acute perception, Graham could grasp an essay’s merits or lack thereof by reading the first paragraph, after which he would merely skim the bulk of the manuscript. In the case of a third-rate thinker like Mary, her proclivity for sanctimonious clichés, elephantine syntax, egregious incoherence, jarring non sequiturs, and apocryphal claims made her expositions so painful that, massaging his headache, he quickly turned to the last page and scribble a canned “critique” of her assailable shortcomings. He had been warned by other professors of her mental deficiencies, her delusions of grandeur, and of her propensity to whine and make threats for a better grade. But he knew that if he indulged her, giving her anything higher than a C grade, she would glom onto him and enroll in all of his classes. Her classroom presence was so intrusive and malignant that she would ruin what little joy he had left in teaching.
Her track record was well known. A forty-year-old student, Mary had changed her major nearly a dozen times over the last eighteen years and was what many called a “university fixture,” and a notorious one at that. In fact, she had become such a grotesque figure that she was better known as Scary Mary. Often she could be seen hanging around the campus ale house, marching at protest rallies, and attending a variety of campus “forums.” Her most common hangout was the library where she could be seen “studying” anywhere between seven in the morning and midnight. Perhaps most notoriously, Mary nagged professors for better grades. She nettled instructors in their offices, filed grievances and lawsuits, and wrote recklessly illiterate letters of complaint to the local newspaper, where she slandered professors, spewing a venom of lies, exaggerations, and half-truths. The university had amassed so many of her complaints over the years that the Department of Student Relations eventually had to purchase, not one, but two filing cabinets in order to house her shoddily typed and chicken-scratch hand-written missiles of screwball invective.
Mary was now pressing her body against the stall door. She put her hands over the door so that Graham could see her long reptilian fingers. He cowered at the thought of seeing her ugly head peer above the door. In fact, it did. Her cavernous eyes, dark and soulless, fixed on him. Her long locks of hair also hung over the door. Some had described her hair as dark mossy green, the slimy tendrils of a waterlogged swamp hag. Others said it was dark brown streaked with a sallow, nicotine-stained hue. But hopelessly colorblind, Graham thought her hair was black. Or to be more specific, her long, stringy hair suggested boiled kale, spinach, and seaweed darkened with black octopus ink.
“You didn’t answer my question,” she said, her head inched over the door and beholding her professor’s compromising position. “I asked if you really read my essay. Because I spent a lot of time on it.”
“Get out of here before I have you arrested.”
“No. Not until you explain my grade.”
“Your writing is awful. Worse than a fifth grader’s. You have no business going to college.”
“Just what I thought. It’s not my writing. It’s me. I’m not so bad, you know. Really, if you’d just take the time and get to know me. Anyway, you’re being completely unfair. You haven’t heard the last of this.”
She seemed satisfied and left him in the bathroom. He quickly pulled up his pants and scrambled straight to the office of the English Chair, Wilson Kitabu. Broad-faced and bald with gray hair on the sides, Dr. Kitabu was a large man who spent much of his time behind his desk, with his bare feet wrapped inside blanketed foot warmers heated by an electric coil. The device was prescribed by his podiatrist for gout, but what the Chair really needed to do was go on a diet and lose forty pounds. So far no one was brave enough to tell him.
Graham sat in front of Dr. Kitabu’s desk and explained that Scary Mary had followed him into the men’s room and threatened him while he was sitting on the toilet. He expected the Chair to immediately make the appropriate phone calls and have Mary suspended or suffer some other legal action, but Dr. Kitabu sat back with an amused expression. He seemed to have no interest in Scary Mary’s intrusion. Instead, he asked Graham where he had purchased his shirt. Graham was befuddled. His shirt seemed of no consequence, especially in light of the ordeal he had just suffered.
“That’s a very colorful shirt,” Dr. Kitabu continued. It was in fact a very striking color—lime green and made of a gauze material. With its puffy sleeves, some might call it a “pirate” shirt.
“Did you wear it today while you were teaching?”
“Yes. Is there a problem?”
“I believe so.” Dr. Kitabu squinted at the billowing sleeves, then Graham’s chest. “If I’m not mistaken, I can see your nipples.”
“Through the shirt?”
“Right through it.”
“Shit.”
“So you didn’t know. Oh well. You can go home and change before your next class.”
“I certainly will.”
“Would you mind if I asked where you bought it?”
“A catalog,” Graham said. “International Male. It’s hard to find shirts that fit me.” He was referring to his bodybuilding physique, which he enjoyed showcasing inside rangy, broad-shouldered peasant shirts and the like. “The shirt sits on my shoulders well.”
“The color,” Dr. Kitabu said, still studying the shirt with wonder. “Almost fluorescent. Like a parrot. I’ve never seen anything quite like it.”
The electric foot warmers made the office hot and stuffy and the heat exacerbated the unpleasant smell of Dr. Kitabu’s bargain cologne, stale perspiration, and nicotine. In violation of university code, he frequently took cigarette breaks inside his office. It was a habit that Graham, a lowly lecturer with no hope of ever getting tenure, indulged politely.
“I didn’t realize the shirt was such a big deal,” Graham said truthfully. But now he saw the embarrassment. He looked down at his chest and discerned, rather easily, his brown penny-sized nipples under the flimsy material. However imprudent his choice of clothing was, he did not believe that should be the focus of this discussion.
“So what are we going to do about Mary?” Graham asked.
Dr. Kitabu shrugged. “What can we do? She’s certifiably crazy. We have on file that she sees a psychiatrist. She takes prescribed medications for a variety of psychological disorders. That makes her almost invincible to any legal charges. I will of course report her entrance into the men’s faculty bathroom, just so the university has it on record. But don’t expect anything to happen to her. On the other hand, a professor teaching with nipple exposure is another matter entirely. I suggest you don’t let it happen again.”
Graham promised he’d keep his nipples sufficiently concealed from now on, then drove a mile from campus to Sea Spray apartments so that he could change his shirt.
The complex was a huge metropolis of brown building clusters where any stranger to the premises could easily get lost in its never-ending mazes of cement walkways and quaint cobblestone-lined brooks and fountains. Graham walked up the stairs that led to his little one-bedroom apartment. Inside his kitchen, he tore his shirt off and stuffed it into his garbage bin. Scattered on his kitchen counter was an International Male catalog and several other catalogs geared toward single males. He wondered if he had been spending too much time alone inside his apartment killing the time by scouring all those eye-catching pages of flamboyant clothes, cars, computers, and stereo equipment. He had taken this teaching job in the desert to become a writer but instead he had become a connoisseur of state-of-the-art gadgets and foppery, which had, much to his dismay, become more compelling than his creative pursuits. He felt a tinge of anxiety and threw all of the catalogs inside his overflowing garbage before taking it out to the dumpster by the mailboxes. When he returned to his apartment, he discovered a trail of red ants, at least twice as many as he had seen the day before, climbing along the ceiling and toward the bathtub drain. He kept ant spray, with its smelly residual poison coating the aluminum can, inside his patio closet, which was next to the terrace. He stepped outside, grabbed the ant spray from a shelf concealed by cobwebs, and from his bird’s eye view he saw, standing in the outside dumpster, Scary Mary sorting through his recently-discarded garbage. She was tall enough to simply lean over the fence-enclosed dumpster and sift through the refuse with her spidery fingers. She was apparently keeping her eye out for anything that he had discarded—letters, notes, manuscripts, uneaten foodstuffs, tattered clothing redolent of her teacher’s pungent, irresistible pheromones.
Mary’s methodical movements reminded him of the cold, mechanical way a praying mantis ate her pray, and he was overcome with disgust. He was also repelled by her countenance while she read his junk mail as if the “special offers” were revealing something vital and intimate about him. Her face was skeletal, pale and boney. Her jaw was slightly agape in a way that reminded him of the smiling face of the Grim Reaper. Her mouth was not a full human mouth, but a smudge of cloying black cherry lipstick. She was tall, perhaps six feet, and lumbered awkwardly all year round with white shorts that revealed long, scaly, knobby-kneed legs, the right one wrapped around the knee with a flesh-colored Ace bandage. She wore cheap white tennis shoes with no socks.
Not quite human, not quite nightmare, not quite student, Scary Mary was now half-immersed in the dumpster. Her eyes ablaze with determination, she found his green pirate shirt. She held the delicate fabric to her face and inhaled deeply as if the material were soaked with chloroform or some other intoxicant. Feeling violated, Graham marched downstairs and, standing just outside the dumpster, he demanded that she return the shirt to him at once. She was standing up to her waist in filth when she explained that he had thrown away the shirt and therefore no longer had rightful ownership to it.
“I did not throw it away expecting you to take it as some sort of trophy,” he said. “Now give it back.”
“No, it’s mine now,” she said, holding the shirt to her chest. She bared her teeth at him and he recoiled. Triumphantly, she slogged out of the garbage pit with her sartorial prize, and walked toward her 1967 faded green Mustang parked in the designated guest area. She opened the trunk and tried to stuff the shirt into the back of the car but the trunk was so crammed with junk—old text books, unreturned library books, and reams of notes—that while trying to make room for Graham’s discarded shirt her trunk’s contents spilled on the pavement.
By this time Graham had followed her to the Mustang and discerned among the heap of junk other articles of clothing that had, at one time, belonged to him, including a pair of midnight blue Z. Cavaricci slacks, black velveteen loafers with tassels, and a pair of silk zebra-striped underwear. The Z. Cavariccis, which he had ripped in the ass while bending over to pick up a piece of chalk, and the loafers, which pinched his feet, had been discarded. But the animal-print briefs, which made him feel manly, were something he would never throw away. They had in fact been missing from his underwear drawer, mysteriously, for over a month, and now he surmised that Mary had broken into his apartment.
“Those are mine,” he said, walking toward the zebra-striped briefs. But as he bent over, Mary side-armed him with her huge right palm, whacking him flat against his right eye. The blow was so powerful that he fell backward and as he did so, she landed her other palm against his nose. He almost choked on a gush of his own blood that gurgled up his sinuses and filled his throat. Sitting on the parking lot pavement in unbelievable pain, he watched through blurred eyes while Mary gathered his clothes, crammed them into the trunk, and drove off.
What God-forsaken plans did she have for his clothing? He imagined her being well versed in black magic and using his wardrobe to make a voodoo doll of her English instructor. Any day now he would be wrought with hellish body aches and pains. She may even manipulate the doll to make him crash his car and send him to his bloody death. Whatever her motives, he was not going to take Scary Mary’s abuses lying down. He got up, wiped the blood off his face, and marched toward his apartment where inside his attaché case he found Mary’s most recent essay and exacted the only revenge he could do for now—change the grade from C to an F.
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