Long after I forget the dialogue of
a conversation, I can recall the perfume of the moment. Smells linger. Like the lung-searing rot of cigarettes that
embeds itself into hair. Or the bright
citrus that stains fingers after peeling a fresh orange, resistant even to
soap. And I love body sprays. You find out a lot about person from the
scent they choose to wear. There are
feminine young girls, wearing pink and curling their hair, who douse themselves
in the loud juiciness of fruits – berries, cherries, and peaches. There are sultry adult women, wearing short
cut pin skirts and V-necked silk blouses teasing with one button too low, who
pair their maroon lipstick with the dark allure of black currant and plum. There are the conservative women, quietly hiding
behind thin-rimmed glasses, who dab a touch of vanilla on to each wrist before
hurrying out the door every morning.
There are men with polos and khakis who spritz with the freshness of
white waters and salty beach air, reminding them of their beloved vacation
homes. There are confident young men,
with penetrating eyes and dark, gelled hair who go out smelling of nothing but
the alluring tar of their embellished leather jackets and the slight whisper of
the morning’s minty aftershave. And
there are men who accompany their gold watches and pressed suit jackets with
the richness of amber wood and sage.
I once bought a candle because it
smelled like my best friend’s cologne. A
mix of spicy cinnamon and musky sandalwood.
Each time I lit the wick, I remembered that smell on his t-shirt when I
hugged him. I remembered the faint trace
of it in his hair when he used my chest as a pillow on his parents’ couch. I remembered how the black sheets on his
California King bed rubbed that scent on to me when I spent the night. I remembered the way a slight odor of sweat
tried to mask that scent on his neck when he kissed mine. That candle reminded me of the nights we
snuck up into his room after school and explored each other with our hands and
mouths until his parents came crashing through the door downstairs. When I told Jason I bought a candle because
it smelled like him he laughed at me.
“You’re such a girl,” he
chided. Then followed up with, “I miss
you, too.”
On my dresser still sits the unmelted nub of the candle that remained after that wick refused to light.
On my dresser still sits the unmelted nub of the candle that remained after that wick refused to light.
Beautiful. Absolutely beautiful. You make me feel nostalgic even though I'm not sure what I feel nostalgic about. Haha.
ReplyDeleteThe ending seems a little bittersweet though. Did something happen between you two, or are you guys still together? I'm curious.
But really, this piece blew me away. Fantastic job.
Damn. Well done.
ReplyDeleteI think the voice up top is a little too different from the voice of the accumulating paragraphs. So, listen to "You can tell a lot about a person. . ." and then listen to the way you're rapturously outlining various smells and then the relationship.
Too chatty up top to support the ouija-board lyricism of the bottom?
Maybe.
This is excellent.
Dave
I think this is really well done. I've never really thought about writing with smells, but you pull it off in such a fashion that I'm not sure if I'll ever be able to not use smells when writing. This has been said, but I do notice the break between the two sections, but I only think they are slightly different. The first section we get to see why these people wear these scents, but in the second we are really clued in as to why this guy wears his. I think you could do both, describe why he wears it and why you like it without going overboard. Otherwise, I think this is a very well done piece.
ReplyDelete