TITLE: Navel Gazing
AUTHOR: Vehemently (vehemently@yahoo.com)
SPOILERS: The Red & The Black
DISCLAIMER: Characters and situations metioned herein belong to
Chris Carter / 1013 and no copyright infringement is intended.
SUMMARY: Everybody's born with scar tissue.
NOTES: Un-beta'd, unplanned. It just sort of happened. This
is as close as I get to a Christmas story. With apologies to
the bearers of warm fuzzies.
* * * * * * *
Navel Gazing
by Vehemently
* * * * * * * 

There is a man, of the years which might be called his prime,
sitting in his underwear in a hotel room in Montgomery County 
with his index finger in his belly button. This is not a luxury 
establishment, so there is no mini-fridge for him to raid, and 
it is not safe for him to be seen outside, so he is curtained 
in this room, hungry and bored, waiting for his next scheduled
move. He is not aware of how ridiculous he looks because he is
busy convincing himself that watching hockey on television 
really is fun.

It isn't of course, or not to a man who makes his living spill-
ing blood. In the past he has wondered whether doctors refuse
to watch medical shows or lawyers avoid the law-dramas, but
he has not had the uninterrupted time to watch television with
any regularity so he could not even name any of the current
shows that professionals might avoid. That bothers him vaguely,
as if he knows something might be gleaned from the blow-dried
heads in each separate time slot, but there are so many other
pressing issues which take up his time that cultural catch-up
usually goes unfinished.

*

Somewhere else, a woman is replacing a particularly beloved 
silk blouse which has been destroyed. She is fighting her
way through the chatty Christmas bustle at a distinct disad-
vantage in height. This is not her season and her mood is not
improved by the boots she is wearing against the slushy snow
for which Washington is famous. She stumbles her way past the
perfume desks, the lush red of the decorations clashing 
violently with her own ginger hair, and climbs onto the
escalator. There is little hope, she realizes, of escaping the
department store with any sanity at all.

*

He balances on his chair by flexing his bare toes against the
dresser table and tries to enjoy the flickering television. But
on a Saturday afternoon, in the first week of December, not a
great deal of enjoyment is to be found, or at least not for 
this man. Presently he removes his finger from his belly button
and reaches for the remote, flicking once again through the
nine channels available to him. Nothing.

*

Women's apparel is a dazzling array of dramatic colors in velvet
and cashmere. As she hunts for the petite section, the woman in
question tries apologize to the people she nudges with some
sort of grace. Those who eye her askance are overburdened
with coats and bags and purses, like the overstuffed packages 
that adorn empty display areas. The woman wonders, with a help-
less fatalism, that nobody seems bothered by this weight.

She knows her size and she knows a white blouse can be found
in any season. Frilly details she will leave to chance.

*

For some people solitude is unbearable. He has known those who
become so desperate for human company that they befriend pass-
ers by in a park, or strike up conversations in department
stores. Our man prides himself on not being one of these. He
works hard at it, talking to himself, reading books, engrossing
himself in his work. But right now he has no work except to
wait and he is in great fear of going crazy.

*

She does not want to chat with the girl at the register; she
does not return the rubber smiles of the people standing in 
line behind her, who have inexplicably begun to sing along with
the instrumental versions of carols which exude from the sound
system. She makes her boots work for her as she clomps towards
the exit and into the sleet.

In the rain any time of day becomes the gloaming and she fights
the dimness as she pulls her car into the street. Brown slush
accumulates at the curbs but so far the weather is not accident
-worthy. The array of streetlights and neon signs is dizzying
as she navigates the warren of upper Washington towards George-
town; the old narrow streets, hedged with expensive cars and
darting pedestrians, make her eyes ache and her fingers grow
white on the wheel. She knows to expect such traffic; she knows
her route; she knows that it could be worse. Her knowledge is
little comfort.

*

He leaves the Red Wings brawling in the background as he
stands up, pacing into the tiny bathroom for a look at himself.
he likes what he sees; it is not an inconsequential body that
displays itself to him in the mirror. When he stands in semi-
profile, right shoulder forward, he likes to think he looks like
the Greek statues he has seen in museums. He feels almost
whole. Then he stands four square and scrutinizes the left 
shoulder against the right, trying to see whether the muscle has
withered so far as to make his outline any more uneven. He seems
even enough, if one accounts for the minimizing effect of his
wizened stump on his left.

He slaps his own hard stomach in approval and goes to look over
his clothes, sitting in a haphazard pile on the end of the bed-
spread, which itself is folded within an inch of its life. He 
has no real reason to go out, and several reasons not to; fed-
eral agents and wanted posters and his own needling sense of 
caution curse at his wanderlust.

But in the end he just can't stay here. It has been spitting
sleet all day, a God-given excuse for him to stay inside, but
contrariness runs hot through him like water for a bath. In
that way December has it will soon be dark, and darkness in
Bethesda is itself a justification for a certain abbreviated
nightlife. He is almost enthusiastic as he steps out of his
room, possessed of mechanical arm and arms, flicking up the
collar of his leather jacket in a move even he recognizes as
cribbed from a movie.

*

Her street is more than ten blocks from M Street, and yet it
too is colonized by cars with Virginia plates. The woman has to
circle the block to find a parking space and wheedle her way 
into it with endless small reversals. She fumbles her way to 
her apartment, and fumbles the keys till she can let herself in,
and promptly drops everything on the floor the moment she is 
inside. It is a fair-sized apartment, as her neighborhood goes,
and appointed in warm neutral colors which under other circum-
stances might have been actively comforting. Instead they prove
merely symbolic of her escape from the outside.

The door securely locked, she lights several lamps about the
house in hopes it will make her feel more at home. Her purchase
is decanted to the kitchen counter, where it slithers on itself
in sinuous shine. She is almost afraid to touch it, as if to
claim it as her own would be to doom it to the same fate as its
predecessor, torn and muddy in a Midwestern state. She does not
doubt she will damage it somehow; her fate seems at times to be
to document disaster without redress. With a shake of her head
she retrieves the blouse and carries it to the bedroom, notic-
ing as she goes that her message machine is flashing.

She does not rewind the tape to find out who it is from.

*

Downtown Bethesda always bustles, even more so on a Saturday.
If the city were more northerly the icy rain would be snow and
the picture of urban shopping idyll would be complete. Our man
indulges his sarcasm even as he looks on, his face pinched and
bitter, at a parcel-laden mother and her chattering child, a 
girl, possibly twelve, long and thin and lovely in that heed-
less way of girls. They duck into another department store, the
girl still chattering, and he decides to follow them. His hand
is on the cold, slick door handle before he realizes that he is
acting like a professional. He wanders through the cosmetics
and the heavy aura of waves of perfume and discovers: he is
stalking these people, these people he saw only for a few
moments under a streetlight. Purposely he detours into the
belts and handbags to lose them in the store.

*

She holds the blouse in front of herself in the mirror and
quickly regrets not doing so in the store. Her taste does not
generally run to ruffles along the neckline. She discards it on
the bed and slumps next to it with the theatrics she denies
herself at work. After a pause she bends to shuck off her boots.
She peels off her socks, and surprises herself by reaching next
for the button of her jeans. Her sweater makes crackling static
as she pulls it roughly over her head.

She looks at herself in the mirror, wearing only a bra and her
unbuttoned jeans, sitting on a well-made bed, and decides to go
all the way. She stands and wriggles out of her jeans, scrutin-
izing the practical white cotton underwear she reveals. Soon
they too join to haphazard pile on the bed and she stands in a
black bra before the mirror, examining her shape. There are
marks on her hips from the jeans, and the seam of her under-
pants, red lines criss-crossing her abdomen. With a snap she
removes the bra, pushing out her lip in an impudence she knows
is unbecoming her age and station. She stands, with a critical
eye, watching as gravity reacquaints itself with her breasts and
pulls them down to rest against her ribs. More red marks, on
her ribcage, on her shoulders. The only color on her body is
the vague pale orange color of her pubic hair and the dim rose of
distended nipples and those red marks, measured across washed-out
pale skin. A frown crosses her features as she twists in front of
the mirror, tracking the play of light and shadow across her
torso.

*

He fingers the couture leather belts regretfully, since he no 
longer can wear belts except those which can be cinched one-
handed. Two years he has been this way and the little things still
capture him like miniature terrorists, demanding full attention
on the fact of his arm's absence. Shoes were an eternity for
him back in the weeks after it first happened, until he managed
to steal a pair of motorcycle boots. Button-down shirts, and
zip-jackets, and weapons which require two hands - everything
re-learned, as the little stump withered inside its plastic re-
placement. He lets out a heavy sigh as he gauges the warm soft-
ness of the leather under his thumb.

The buckle - right here - and his thumb hooks under the button 
on his jeans as if it *were* a buckle, as if he were a cowboy
tipping his hat to the ladies who shop purposefully around him.
He liked his belt, he remembers in an amused flash the time he
tied a man up with it, pulling the leather tight through the
loop around a neck. He liked his belt the way he liked that job,
and when he shot that man he managed to control the splatter 
such that his belt was unstained. He doesn't know what happened
to it after he was found bleeding in the woods. Probably stolen
by someone else as enterprising as he has been.

*

Naked, standing unadorned in her bedroom, the woman in question
purses her lips. Then she lifts her hands to purse the flesh of
her lower abdomen. A touch of pressure - right here - is where
she used to feel Mittelschmerz, before strange experiments and
cancer deprived her body of pattern. She cannot say for sure,
but a sneaking suspicion overtakes her that she has gained 
unflattering weight since before, a time of vague befores when
little details had not the overwhelming significance they have
gained.

Her hands rest on the skin just inside of the crown of her
pelvis - what her yoga teacher called the womb. She has stopped
going to yoga altogether. In profile she can see the outcropp-
ing of her lower belly, a small, high-set pudge which she knows
must have a scientific name. Her mother calls it a woodge; she
remembers the self-reproaching, scandalized feminist tones in 
which her high school friends called it a peter belly. Silly 
name for a pound of flesh, she thinks, but she cannot conjure 
the medical name either. She tries objectively to assess her 
attractiveness; when she catches herself standing hipshot in a 
model pose she stops herself, embarrassed.

*

His jeans sit low on his hips, but not loose in the current 
fashion. His thumb slips, as if it were an independent creature,
up his belly, tickling the hairs there. He can't quite help
thinking about the last time he had sex, about that chilly 
blonde and her wild cries that prefigured her betrayal. His
head shakes itself, as if to knock out the memory, as if his
helpless want and his inability to hide it could be denied. He
reminds himself that he is not one of those desperate people
and when he catches himself at it he blushes in shame.

*

A slouch, and she assesses herself again. She scrubs her
fingers on her skin and the red marks begin to disappear in
what she hopes is a healthy glow. She fingers her navel, noting
the softness of her abdominal muscles, touching her fingernail
to the warm soft curl of her belly button. She has seen the
scar tissue from the inside, avoided slashing it through on a
hundred autopsies with a little off-center cut. She knows that
the ducts which attach to the placenta wither and die after 
birth; she has mapped the puckers of the keloids as the skin
grows together, forms itself into solid tissue without nerve
endings. She knows that when she pokes the shiny scar she is
pressing on her small intestines. A conduit into the warm guts
which constitute all she can call her center.

*

There are lots of things he wants which are forbidden. He has 
learned to live with the strictures, or so he thinks. A shake,
like a mongoose swishing dust out of its pelt, and our man 
notices that his thumb has come to rest in his belly button, 
feeling out the contours of that never-callused skin. He knows
that silken feel of scars; he has touched it a hundred times,
tentatively at first, later brusquely, in the keloids which
stripe his shoulder. Scar tissue, softer skin than the real
thing. He pulls his thumb loose and goes so far as to wipe in
on his thigh, irritated at himself. 

*

It is a long moment in which she realizes she is standing in
her half-dark bedroom, without clothes, plugging her navel with
her finger. Wincing at herself, she strides purposefully
toward her bathroom and turns on the shower. She pushes her
hands through her hair, frowning in the mirror as it steams up,
and remembers that a message is waiting for her. Later, she
tells herself, a time when she will be no more prepared but
more willing to face the driving energy of her partner. She
reaches in to test the hot water, and straightens with a jerk,
wondering why she is taking a shower in the afternoon. She 
rubs her arms as if cold and turns away from the mirror.

*

Our man reorients himself, as is his wont in strange environ-
ments from time to time. He is standing helpless is a busy
department store, too hot and claustrophobic in the cluttered
aisles. With a directional instinct he relies on he heads for
an exit, breathing great lungsful of the cold damp air of the
darkness outside. He knows it was unsafe to go out, and unwise.
He chastens himself steadily as he heads back towards his
hotel, unsuccessful in keeping the falling sleet out of his
collar. He turns his mind back to the waiting he must do and
tells himself to enjoy watching hockey on television.

END

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